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6 Things All Scratch Golfers Do That You Don't!
Joel Tadman outlines the six things all scratch golfers do with the help of data from Shot Scope

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Transcript
00:00In this video, you will learn the six things
00:02that scratch golfers do that you don't.
00:04Now, I'm not a scratch golfer, I'm very close,
00:07so I've enlisted the help of Shotscape
00:09and its vast aid to set up actual scratch golfers
00:12so that you will learn exactly what you need to do
00:14to get down to scratch.
00:16Should we get started?
00:17Well, the first thing that scratch golfers do
00:30that you don't is they have an intimate knowledge
00:33of how far they hit each club.
00:34They know exactly how far each club sends the ball
00:37in terms of carry distance as well as total distance.
00:40They know how much playing a fade shot
00:42will affect the distance versus a draw shot.
00:45And they also know how far they can get each club
00:48in terms of maximum distance.
00:49They know if they swing as hard as they can,
00:51what are the maximum yardage they can get out of each club.
00:54And actually, if you look at the Shotscape data,
00:56scratch golfers have only a 20 yard gap
00:58between their average distance with each club
01:02and their performance average.
01:03Now, performance average removes things like miss hits,
01:06poor strikes, chips out from the trees.
01:08So it gives you a better indication
01:10of how far you hit each club.
01:11And that 20 yard gap is good for a scratch golfer.
01:14It increases to 27 yards for a 15 handicap golfer.
01:18So clearly getting that gap as small as possible is key.
01:21And actually, if you do use Shotscape products,
01:24you get a really good sense of how far each club goes.
01:26It will tell you what your average is,
01:28what your performance average is,
01:29and also what your maximum,
01:30or your longest shot you've ever hit with that club is.
01:33So it's really good useful information to have
01:36on any particular given shot.
01:37Like I've got here, I've got 165 yards to the flag,
01:40and there's bunkers short left and short right.
01:44So I know that I need to hit a club
01:46that's going to cover those bunkers.
01:48Because the most common miss
01:49that amateur golfers struggle with
01:51is short of the green.
01:52Obviously, because you're misstriking the club
01:54a lot of the time,
01:55and scratch golfers do a better job
01:56of striking their iron shots consistently.
01:59And obviously, if you can strike your clubs
02:01more consistently,
02:02you're going to get more consistent distance out of it,
02:04the other end.
02:05But the most important thing is pick a club
02:08that you know is going to take those hazards out of place.
02:10So I know seven iron here,
02:12I've got 160 yards to cover that bunker.
02:14I know this club is going to be plenty of club
02:17to take those bunkers out of place.
02:19So let's see if we can put that to the test here
02:21with this seven iron.
02:32Pretty happy with that one.
02:33So definitely invest in some technology,
02:36get on a launch monitor,
02:37find out exactly how far you hit each club.
02:40And just like a scratch golfer,
02:41you're hopefully going to be finding more greens
02:43with your approach shots.
02:44Okay, the second thing that scratch golfers do,
02:47which feeds off the first one
02:48in terms of knowing their numbers,
02:50is they pick smarter targets
02:52when they're approaching the green.
02:53And this is a classic example here.
02:55There's a lot going on.
02:56And the three things that scratch golfers do
02:59when choosing a target for their approach shot,
03:02is they veer away from tight flags,
03:05they try and leave themselves an uphill putt
03:07where possible,
03:08and they absolutely know their cover number.
03:11So the cover number,
03:13you know, a lot of golfers work off fronts of the greens here,
03:15but as you can see here,
03:16the front of the green is here,
03:18but then the lip of the bunker
03:19is a lot further on the green.
03:21So you really need to know what your cover number is.
03:23So what is the distance you need to carry the ball,
03:26take all the trouble out of play?
03:28You can see this bunker here, this bunker here,
03:30it's a similar distance up the green.
03:31So if you know you can hit a club
03:33that's going to cover both of those bunkers,
03:36that's going to leave you in a much safer spot
03:38than if you hit a club that's bringing the bunkers
03:41and other things into play.
03:42So again, this is a really good example.
03:45This pin is tucked super tight
03:47to that right side of the green,
03:48and just over that bunker.
03:50So scratch golfers are picking smart targets.
03:53They're veering away from that pin,
03:54they're aiming at the middle of the green,
03:56and they're going to try and leave themselves
03:58an uphill putt where possible.
03:59It's not always possible.
04:00On this particular hole,
04:01you probably want to be just past pin high,
04:04putting back down this way.
04:05So scratch golfers are hitting seven more greens
04:08in regulation on average than a 15 handicapper.
04:11So clearly hitting more greens in regulation
04:13is going to help your scores come down.
04:15So if you can do those three things,
04:16you're hopefully going to leave yourself
04:17far fewer sort of nervy chip shots
04:19or short game shots around the green
04:21that you're not going to be comfortable with,
04:22and you're not going to get up and down that often.
04:24Scratch golfers don't hit perfect shots all the time.
04:27They miss hit shots,
04:28but what they do is they allow for that with their aim,
04:31with the distance they're trying to hit the ball,
04:33and that distance is not always to the pin,
04:36it's to the safest spot on the green.
04:38Now the third thing that scratch golfers do
04:41that you don't is avoid those blow up holes,
04:43those holes that you compound errors,
04:46you go from making a bogey to double bogey,
04:48maybe a triple bogey.
04:49And if you look at the ShotScope data,
04:50you can see there's a big difference
04:52in the number of double bogeys
04:54that 15 handicappers make per se,
04:56versus a scratch golfer.
04:57Scratch golfers are only making 0.2 double bogeys per round.
05:02So clearly, they're managing their misses a lot better.
05:04Because if you look at the driving accuracy data
05:06from ShotScope, you can see actually,
05:08scratch golfers are not hitting many more fairways
05:10than a 15 handicapper, only 3% more.
05:13So clearly, it's not about finding more fairways,
05:15it's about minimizing the risk
05:17with where they hit their tee shots,
05:19and not finding those, that big troublesome hazards
05:22that you get on the course, fairway bunkers,
05:24trees or penalty areas.
05:25Scratch golfers, as you can see from the data,
05:27are much better at hitting fewer tee shots
05:30that land in those situations.
05:32So there's a few things that I think you can do
05:34when it comes to your aim and your strategy.
05:36On a hole like this, particularly one here,
05:38we've got here on the 17th hole,
05:39Fulford Heath Golf Club.
05:41It's very tight, there's trees on either side,
05:43but there's also a penalty area down the left.
05:46So clearly, right is the favored side
05:48that you want to be on.
05:49And obviously with your strategy and how you aim it,
05:51you can try and mitigate that as best you can.
05:53And one way is obviously to aim down the right
05:55and favor that side.
05:56And if you've hit a draw shape, allow for that,
05:59aim a little bit further right.
06:00Or you could really try and curve the ball
06:02away from the trouble.
06:03That's something that's worked for me in the past,
06:05is having a shot shape that you know is going to go one way,
06:08and you can allow for that with your aim,
06:11and move the ball away from the trouble.
06:12That's going to ensure your ball, hopefully,
06:14stays in play.
06:15If you do get in the trees,
06:16you're not trying to take on that miracle shot.
06:18You're taking your medicine, chipping it out,
06:20knocking it on the green, making a bogey at worst,
06:23and you're not making those really penal double bogeys.
06:25So in this particular hole,
06:28I know there's more trouble down the left,
06:29so I'm going to aim down that left side.
06:31I'm going to make a really exaggerated move,
06:34to make sure the ball curves away from that trouble.
06:38And therefore, we should better keep the ball in play,
06:42and avoid those blow-up holes.
06:49There you go, a little gentle fade.
06:51Started on the left side of the fairway,
06:53cut back to the middle of the fairway.
06:54I'm absolutely delighted with that,
06:56and do very well to make a double bogey or worse from there.
06:59Now, another area where scratch golfers are especially good
07:02is on the greens,
07:03and that is, in particular, avoiding three putts.
07:06Three putts are the silent killers on your scorecard.
07:09And if you look at the data from ShotScape,
07:11you can see you can save yourself four shots a round,
07:14just by avoiding three putts through far better distance control from long range.
07:19Obviously, it helps to be pretty solid from that inside six-foot range as well,
07:23but lag putting is the key to reducing three putts.
07:27And there's a few things that golfers can do to improve your lag putting.
07:31Obviously, one of them comes down to reading greens,
07:33but when it comes to reading greens from distance,
07:36really focus on that final third of the putt.
07:38When the ball's slowing down,
07:40it's going to break a lot more than at the start of the putt,
07:42where it's moving faster.
07:43So really focus on the final third of the putt,
07:46look at the slope around the hole,
07:48and see what the ball's going to do when it's slowing down.
07:50The other thing you can do is have a little bit of a system
07:52for controlling your distance.
07:54So I like to use the stroke length to adjust my distance versus things like,
07:58you know, speeding up my tempo.
08:01I think having a system whereby you just change distance by
08:04how far you move the putter is going to give you more consistency in the long run.
08:08So I know that if I move the putter back about 12 inches,
08:11that's going to send the ball 10 foot.
08:13And if I move it back another 10%,
08:15that's going to roll the ball 20 foot,
08:17and another 10% is 30 foot.
08:19So if you've got a system in place for controlling distance,
08:21that's certainly going to help.
08:23But the last thing that I think is going to probably help golfers the most,
08:25is just that consistency of strike.
08:27Scratch golfers don't miss the middle of the putter all that often.
08:31Obviously it helps if you've got like a mallet putter,
08:33a more forgiving putter that's going to mitigate the strike pattern moving around
08:37if you do miss the middle.
08:38But striking the ball out of the middle of the putter phase
08:41is going to give you more consistent distance at the other end.
08:44So a drill that I would thoroughly recommend to all golfers out there watching
08:47is this tee peg drill.
08:48So I've put two tee pegs just outside the width of my putter here.
08:53And obviously the goal is to swing the putter through the gate and not hit the tee pegs.
08:59That means I know I'm going to be hitting the putt out of the middle of the putter,
09:03and that's going to improve my distance consistency.
09:05So try those few things.
09:07It should definitely help improve your lag putting from distance.
09:10If you're rolling the ball close to the hole from distance,
09:13that should reduce the number of three putts you have.
09:16Now another thing that scratch golfers do that you probably don't
09:19is they treat shots from within 70 yards as a scoring opportunity.
09:24If you look at the data from ShotScape you can see 20 handicappers and above
09:28averaging 5.6 holes where they have to take multiple shots to reach the green
09:33from inside 70 yards.
09:35Whereas a scratch golfer is down at 1.6.
09:37So they very much see, as I said, shots from within 70 yards as a scoring opportunity.
09:42They're getting on the green first time most of the time.
09:45But also when they're getting on the green from that distance,
09:48they're getting it pretty close to the hole.
09:49So they're going to give themselves a chance for a birdie or a par.
09:53So I think there's a few things that I've taken away from this data.
09:56The first is that you really need to practice your pitch shots.
09:59Like not a lot of golfers actually practice pitch shots from between 40 yards and 80 yards.
10:05You see a lot of golfers practicing their putting and chipping before they tee off
10:08and obviously their long game on the range.
10:09But those in-between distances are actually really important.
10:12So it's important, A, you practice them.
10:14But B, if you can practice them, try and practice off grass.
10:17Because when you're hitting off a mat, it can really mask your areas in your ball striking.
10:22If you do catch the ground slightly heavy on a mat,
10:24the club just glides along it and you strike the ball pretty cleanly.
10:27Whereas if you're striking the ball fat on the grass,
10:31you're going to chuck the ball 10, 20 yards in front of you.
10:33So try and practice on the grass where possible.
10:36And the other thing you really need to do when you're pitching
10:39is have a system for controlling distance, right?
10:41So for me, choose your favourite club to pitch with.
10:44For me, it's my 54 degree wedge.
10:47And I like to make three swings to control distance.
10:49So I know with my 54 degree wedge,
10:51if I swing my hands to sort of hip height, that's my 50 yard shot.
10:55If I swing it to sort of belly height, that's my 70 yard shot.
10:59If I swing my hands to shoulder height, that's my 90 yard shot.
11:02And then the full swing goes about 105 yards with a 54 degree wedge.
11:07So have a system that controls distance for you.
11:10And obviously, practice that on the grass where you can.
11:13That should hopefully improve your pitching performance
11:17and your scoring ability from this distance.
11:22Nip that one nicely.
11:24Okay, and the last thing that Scratch Golf was doing,
11:27by no means the least important, is they really lean into their strengths.
11:31Whether that's playing for their favourite yardages,
11:34trusting a certain shape of the tee, they know what they do well
11:38and they build a strategy around that.
11:40And no such example is better here than this particular shot.
11:44They've missed the green, they've really short-sided themselves.
11:48And, you know, probably a Scratch Golfer, a good golfer,
11:51could pull a flop shot off here from a tight lie
11:53on more occasions than most abilities of golfer.
11:56But the percentage play is to play a pretty standard chip shot,
12:01pass the pin and give themselves a putt for the par.
12:04Scratch Golfers, they don't hit perfect shots a lot of the time.
12:06And the reason they're Scratch Golfers is they don't compound errors,
12:10which they clearly have made here by missing the green,
12:12with another error by duffing it in the bunker
12:14or blading it over the back of the green.
12:16They play the percentages and give themselves opportunities to make par
12:19and take the double bogeys off the card.
12:22So in this particular situation,
12:24we're not going to go for that mega high flop shot.
12:26We're going to play it safe,
12:27just play a pretty standard elevated pitch shot,
12:30take our medicine, give ourselves a putt,
12:32coming back the other way,
12:34which we might make for a par, but at worst, a bogey.
12:42So there you go, play it safe, take your medicine,
12:45keep those big numbers off the card,
12:47and more importantly, play a shot you're comfortable with,
12:50under pressure, you know that you can pull it off.
12:52That's going to help your scores come down.
12:54So that concludes our look at the six things Scratch Golfers do that you don't.
12:58If you're already doing some of these already, well done you,
13:01you're already on your journey down to Scratch.
13:03And if you don't, definitely worth giving some of these a try.
13:06It's going to help you lower your handicap,
13:08hopefully over the next few weeks and months.
13:10If you're interested in trying out any of the Shotscape products
13:12that we've featured in this video,
13:14I've put some links in the description so you can get your hands on those,
13:16whether it's rangefinders, golf watches,
13:19anything that's going to help you get more insights
13:21on your play and accurate distances to the hole,
13:23which we've talked about how important that is.
13:25And don't forget to check out all the other videos
13:27on the Golf Month YouTube channel.
13:28There's definitely going to be something there
13:30that's going to help your game.
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