Any club off the tee box. For some reason I step on the tee box and I find a way to screw the pooch. Once off the tee box I can hit most any shot I need to. It's just that there is no telling where that second shot will be coming from, lol.
Course management. I cant even begin to count all the times I have hit a shot and immediately thought, "what the fark was I thinking".
I have however improved at this immensely and this is what I did. I know imagine I am doing a playing lesson for the pros. Before every shot i explain ( in my head of course) to the camera what I am about to do. It has made a world of difference. Doing it in this crazy fashion has helped me consistently remember to do it.
Chips left way short kill me. I have been working on it the last part of last year, however, i'm sure i'll have problems again this coming year.
Second is probably ball striking... inconsistency is sometimes a problem for me.
Third would be putting. Especially lag putting and getting them close, although last year was probably my best putting season yet. It was almost like second nature...scared myself a few times.
I have pretty much taken my fairway woods out of the bag. Not because i can't hit them, but because i just plain never have the situation to use them.
Long par 5's where i could get there in two i just pick a club that will get me the rest of the way in two shots and lay up. The odds of me hitting two OK shots with that iron are far and beyond the odds of me hitting that one perfect shot that would put me on the green in two.
The shortish par 4's that would leave me a half wedge in if i hit my driver, i can usually hit my 5i and leave myself a nice mid/short wedge in...
Really the only time i use them is if i duff it off the tee and need to get it down there off the deck, which i'm not saying that doesn't happen...but they are occurring less and less.
Short putts have been my nemisis the past couple of seasons. I've had round where I can drop everything from 4 FT out to 10 FT out... but miss if I'm inside 2 FT. Nothing more exasperating to have a 2 FT putt for birdie and have the guys say, "Nice par!" and laugh as you call your putter everything but Sweetheart! I worked hard, this winter, in an attempt to ferret out the problem. This past weekend, first time out since the course reopened, I was making the short ones. Same old putter. Different set up over short putts. We'll see if it lasts.
the biggest flaw in my game is maintaining my focus on the course. for some reason I get nervous or dont feel comfortable when im on the course. i just need to figure out how to keep my focus
My biggest problem is getting to cute with greenside shots, always opting to hit the "wow" shot when a simple chip is all that would be required to get up and down. Also, i find myself going for too many pins when i find trouble, a simple punch would keep par on the table but i 9 times out of 10 try to hit a 30yd draw, which sometimes works out and I find myself set up perfectly for birdie (And an astonding WTF from people im playing against) or I leave it out there and have an awkward 30-40yd pitch from a horrible position.
I find 20-80 yard pitch/flop shots are difficult to get close, probably because I don't practice from this range. Give me 100-130 a full swing and I'm bulletproof. Hey Slick watched a program on the golf channel that might help your left hander if your pulling it, in a nut shell too quick with the lower body clearing too far to the left causes your swing plane to shift from down the target line to left of the target line, as soon as he talked and demo'd it I knew thats what was happening to me when I pulled the ball. If you check out the golf channel it's the new instructional guy with the Scottish/English accent