You want to know what getting better at golf looks like? What it actually looks like? This. This is what it looks like.

What’s going on here, you ask? Well, it’s the practice routine of PGA Tour player Jimmy Stanger, who works with Golf Digest Best in State Teacher John Scott Rattan.

Stanger shared this picture on Instagram. It caught my eye, so I reached out and asked him: What’s going on here? It was all about “intentions”, Stanger says. Making sure he has a clear intention for every single golf ball he hits.

https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2022/IMG_3447 (1).PNG How Stanger’s practice structure works

You’ll see in the picture above that the golf balls are separated into rows. Each row has four batches of three golf balls – 12 golf balls per row.

2150149775
Photo: Chris Graythen

Stanger says each three-ball batch required a specific intention:

  • 3 balls backswing intention
    • For three golf balls, Stanger would focus on hitting the positions he wants on the backswing.
  • 3 balls downswing intention
    • During the next three balls, he’d shift focus solely to executing a feel on his downswing.
  • 3 slow swings (hitting ball)
    • Next, he’d combine both backswing and downswing moves “into one feel”.
  • 3 balls full speed (tournament mode)
    • Finally, three balls at full speed, as if he were in a tournament.

After he finished a row, he’d put that club away, and repeat with the next one. Stanger said he does this for every club in his bag.

It’s a pretty tedious way to practise – it’s much easier to just bang balls thoughtlessly – but this is how you actually make changes. Focusing intently, then going slow, before going faster, is how you get the good stuff to stick in your golf swing. You won’t hit as many golf balls, but you’ll hit many more good golf shots. And your game will be better because of it.