Most golfers practise by hitting ball after ball with the same club, and then wonder why the course feels different. Real improvement comes from practising with a little purpose. These guides show you how to make range time actually help, how to keep a calm and happy head over the ball, and how to build a simple weekly routine that lowers your scores. Small, smart steps — that is the whole game.
How to practise at the driving range (so it actually helps)
The driving range is where most golfers waste the most time. Not because they are lazy — the opposite. They hit ball after ball, a full bucket, feeling good, and then on the course nothing holds up. Here is the honest fix: practise less like a machine and more like real golf. Change your club, pick a target, use a routine, and hit fewer balls with more attention. That is the whole secret, and I will show you exactly how.
Read guide →The mental game: pre-shot routine and staying present
Golf is often said to be 90% mental, and once you play your first full round, you feel why. On the range everything is easy. On the course your hands shake a little on the first tee, one bad shot follows you to the next hole, and your good swing seems to hide somewhere. Good news: the mental game is a skill, just like grip or posture. You can learn it. Let me show you the few things that really matter.
Read guide →A simple weekly practice routine to break 100
Breaking 100 is closer than you think. Fewer than half of recreational golfers do it regularly, so this is a real milestone, not a beginner box to tick. The good news is that you do not need a perfect swing to get there. You need a little structure, a lot of short game, and smarter decisions on the course. Let me show you a weekly plan that works.
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