Friday, May 14, 2010
Thursday, May 13, 2010
The book I read was called Your 15th Club by Dr. Bob Rotella. Throughout the book Rotella talks about the mental side of golf. He begins by telling us the truth. No matter what people think, golf is a rough sport not in the way football is. It is more like a war of attrition against your mind and your score, in the end, depends on if your head can stand the constant grinding from the course. Dr. Rotella also talks a lot about your sub-conscience and how it sees you. Your sub-conscience, if you will, is blind. So the only thing it knows is what you tell it. For example, if you tell your sub-conscience that you can never make a three-footer for a birdie on a casual round with friends then you won't be able to make one in crunch time when you need it. Next, is the chapter "Remember to Remember" which was all about taking the good shots you hit in a round and basically downloading them to your brain, but also you have to completely relinquish the memory of bad shots. Rotella then goes on to talk about the problem with trying to reach perfection in golf, he has this to say: "When a an ambitious, driven golfer falls prey to perfectionism, he is at risk in many ways" (61). All that means is that, a great golfer can be just that, a great golfer, without being perfect. It is in the strive to become perfect that a golfer starts he inevitable downfall. Now we move to the more mental aspect of the book. Wednesday, May 12, 2010

For my live interaction I interviewed a former PGA professional, Chris Rigdon. I first asked Chris how he had gotten into golf, he told me that it wasn’t until late in his middle school years that he picked up a club and started to play. Chris told me that when he first started he couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn from five feet away. That led me to ask how did not being able to play effect his emotions. He responded: “When I first started playing being bad didn’t really bother me, mainly cause I didn’t know anything, but as progressed through middle school golf onto high school I saw that there was much more competition and it required me to have to play to my best. And when I didn’t hit a good shot I had to forget about it, I didn’t have time to wallow in self-pity. But this helped me become the best in junior golf. Regardless college golf is a whole new league; even though I was the greatest junior golfer those guys in college whooped my tail left and right. But I continued to get better until I was the one doing the whooping and eventually moved into the professional ranks. Where if you don’t have a great mental game you might as well pack up and leave.” After that I asked how he obtained such a great mental game. He told me that when he played he liked to imagine that it was a large tournament and that if he lost his mental game it would mean he lost the tournament. This helped him keep the mental part in check. This led me to the next question. What do you recommend to a golfer who is looking for a better mental game? He told me: “ If someone wants a better mental game that person has to be able to forget the bad and permanently remember the good; also they have to not talk down to themselves after a bad shot, all that does it tense them up and lower the self-esteem.
From this interview it showed me that even if you start off terrible you can still achieve greatness by hard work and practice. Chris talked about some pretty interesting things in the interview, a good bit that didn’t pertain to golf, but what he did have to say about the sport really opened my eyes. Mainly in part of all the stuff he said not to do, I do. Take for example the forgetting the bad, lets say I birdied the first hole and on my next tee shot I shank the ball into the woods, but it kicks out into the fairway only 215 yards away from the green. In my mind I already think that this hole is going to kill me and I become slightly enraged, forgetting all about the birdie the hole before. Also after I hit a bad shot for some reason I think that de-grading myself in my head will help me hit the ball better, trust me it doesn’t. It only makes me play worse and hit more bad shots, which in turn makes me mad. But I digress, all the things Chris said like forgetting the bad and not talking down to yourself I completely agree on, even though I don’t do them myself but I’m trying.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Friday, April 16, 2010
Friday, April 9, 2010
This week I read the chapter "How Billy Mayfair Rebuilt his Confidence" in the book Golf is a Game of Confidence, by Dr. Bob Rotella. In the chapter Rotella talks about how a struggling golfer, Billy Mayfair, is having trouble being able to score in PGA tournaments. It turns out that Mayfair, in his aspirations to be a better golfer, tried to 'perfect' his swing. And as Rotella says in the chapter: "Athletes who become self-critical perfectionist are flirting with trouble"(142). Rotella then explains how Mayfair got to be on tour; Mayfair, coming from a lower income family, couldn't go out and play like most young golfers do. Instead his mother would drop him off at Papago Park golf course and there Monday thru Friday he would putt and chip till dark. It turned out that his short game is what helped him acquire his tour card and hold on to it. Until he tried to get his swing perfect, thats when he stopped working on his short game to work on his swing. This got him out of his routine and, in turn, he started to play bad in tournaments. He began to doubt himself and his swing causing him to lose his confidence, this was until he stopped worrying about the bad shots of his round and got back in his routine of working on chipping and putting for hours a day. This helped him get back on his game and later went on to win the Tour Championship. Friday, April 2, 2010
I read the chapter called "Attitude" in the book, The Elements of Scoring by Raymond Floyd. In the chapter Floyd talk about how one needs to enjoy the walk, be patient, anger, and getting rid of expectations. First he says that good attitude helps you enjoy the round your playing and lets you have fun. Patience is a must Floyd goes on to say, he says this about patience: "A scorer knows that while golf constantly tempts us with shots that offer a chance for instant gratification, the game over the long haul is best played within one's capabilities"(159). Floyd talks about anger and how it can effect your playing skills, also how it make yourself look like a fool if you were to give into it. Floyd mentions that having a good attitude means being able to control your anger. Also, he says it doesn't mean never get angry. But if you do get angry, then you need to calm down before you hit your next shot. One of the final things Floyd talks about is expectations. He believes that expectations are a dangerous thing to have on a golf course. There are no guarantees in golf. Floyd says instead of having expectations have hopes. Thursday, March 25, 2010
"The Mental Game of Golf"