Thanks Coach. Most of these tips are attainable and with some dedication i could implement 99 percent of the time. That’s a great foundation to start getting myself in a position to play better golf
Excellent stuff, Coach Lockey! Thanks. As much as former joint videos were fun, they were not as much informative gold nuggets as now. Keep up the great stuff! And of course have a laugh every now and then.. these are good!
Very good tips here. We all process things differently and those that are learning and trying to get better are slower to figure things out. A lot of the time I feel rushed on the golf course, there is a four behind me waiting or whatever and I don't feel like I'm able to assess the shot and what and how I want to approach it and take the time I need. Very frustrating.
I do most of your tips now but when I hit off the tee I never know where it’s going, so I just aim down the middle and hope for the best.lol😂 I still have lots of fun though. Guy Canada 🇨🇦 Guy
@@CoachLockey I find myself playing brilliant front 9, like par / birdie 7 or 8 holes but run out of steam and generally lose concentration, like make wrong choice of club in back 9, any tips to improve on that?
I improved my selection of lie on the tee box and reduced the number of lost balls from 12 to 6 per round. I'm looking for the lie as similar to the carpet as flat as possible
I scratch my when my ball goes right along the big curve. LoL🤣 OK, enough joking. All these tips are very useful to keen golfers, indeed. Thanks Coach🙏
I hit my 3 wood or even my 5 wood better than my driver on tight holes. My 3 wood goes about 240yds so its my go to on tight holes, its totally worth the practice i put into it. I shoot 85 on an average day , 82 on a great day and 88 on a day I am not playing very well. Ive noticed as Ive gotten marginally better that the difference between a good day and a bad day is only a few shots. The closer you get to scratch the more difficult it is to make strides in the correct direction, golf is so damn hard, hehe
1. Find flat part of tee box. 2. Pick the correct side of the tee box. 3. Have a safety shot/options if hole looks uncomfortable 4. Line up club face first. 5. Start thinking about your shot as soon as you sight ball (lie, trajectory, distance, danger, wind, swing, landing conditions) 6. Finish assessing your shot once you arrive at your ball - don’t just grab the club that goes the distance to the hole. 6. 7. Know your limits! Play the shots you know you have and learn from mistakes 8. Have a landing spot for every chip. 9. Only play shots in competition that you’ve played/practiced before 10. Emphasise distance control on every putt
Haven't finished the video yet but I think most high handicappers would benefit greatly from focusing on a stock shot that they can hit in any situation.
@@CoachLockey thought I recognised Plymouth sound in the background. Having my 1st ever game this Sunday on the estuary course, going to need all the luck I can get 😂
I’m all about free instruction, but maybe at least announce “sponsored by Callaway?” I know it’s the nature of the beast for golf pros, but it’s really obvious who’s sponsoring you. The clothes, the balls, the clubs, etc. Just asking for a little transparency.
I am scratch but it's nice to be reminded of what works!
Excellent tips coach.
Great tips, thanks Coach!
Thanks Coach. Most of these tips are attainable and with some dedication i could implement 99 percent of the time. That’s a great foundation to start getting myself in a position to play better golf
Fantastic! Good luck 🤞
Thank you
Excellent stuff, Coach Lockey! Thanks. As much as former joint videos were fun, they were not as much informative gold nuggets as now. Keep up the great stuff! And of course have a laugh every now and then.. these are good!
Defensive putting is the mark of a great putter. No 3 putts.
Super tips. Now to remember them!
If I don't like the hole, I go to 4 wood or 4 iron...great video, Cheers Coach!!
Hi thank you for your advice and experience ☺️
Great tips, thanks Coach.
Really great vlog Matt. Best one for ages. Keep it up!
Very good tips here. We all process things differently and those that are learning and trying to get better are slower to figure things out. A lot of the time I feel rushed on the golf course, there is a four behind me waiting or whatever and I don't feel like I'm able to assess the shot and what and how I want to approach it and take the time I need. Very frustrating.
Great tips!!
Glad you like them!
Love this coach ⛳️😎
Very good info,,impressed
Glad you liked it
I do most of your tips now but when I hit off the tee I never know where it’s going, so I just aim down the middle and hope for the best.lol😂 I still have lots of fun though.
Guy Canada 🇨🇦
Guy
What a lovely video, Coach. Thanks for the pro-tips. You're a lovely boy.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Lovely 😀
Love this! Thanks! :)
You're so welcome!
@@CoachLockey I find myself playing brilliant front 9, like par / birdie 7 or 8 holes but run out of steam and generally lose concentration, like make wrong choice of club in back 9, any tips to improve on that?
I improved my selection of lie on the tee box and reduced the number of lost balls from 12 to 6 per round.
I'm looking for the lie as similar to the carpet as flat as possible
Great stuff.
I scratch my when my ball goes right along the big curve. LoL🤣 OK, enough joking. All these tips are very useful to keen golfers, indeed. Thanks Coach🙏
I hit my 3 wood or even my 5 wood better than my driver on tight holes. My 3 wood goes about 240yds so its my go to on tight holes, its totally worth the practice i put into it. I shoot 85 on an average day , 82 on a great day and 88 on a day I am not playing very well. Ive noticed as Ive gotten marginally better that the difference between a good day and a bad day is only a few shots. The closer you get to scratch the more difficult it is to make strides in the correct direction, golf is so damn hard, hehe
1. Find flat part of tee box.
2. Pick the correct side of the tee box.
3. Have a safety shot/options if hole looks uncomfortable
4. Line up club face first.
5. Start thinking about your shot as soon as you sight ball (lie, trajectory, distance, danger, wind, swing, landing conditions)
6. Finish assessing your shot once you arrive at your ball - don’t just grab the club that goes the distance to the hole.
6.
7. Know your limits! Play the shots you know you have and learn from mistakes
8. Have a landing spot for every chip.
9. Only play shots in competition that you’ve played/practiced before
10. Emphasise distance control on every putt
Haven't finished the video yet but I think most high handicappers would benefit greatly from focusing on a stock shot that they can hit in any situation.
im a 7 handicap i do Most of those tips,(8 out of 10) not all, so thank you
Guessing Callaway sponsor you? If not, then they should ~ the number of times we saw their logo lol
What course was this?
Boringdon Park
@@CoachLockey thought I recognised Plymouth sound in the background.
Having my 1st ever game this Sunday on the estuary course, going to need all the luck I can get 😂
The less known ‘flat’ tee surface. Some look like upturned saucers
Matty i am now sh*t at golf confirmed !!! 1.6 handicapp going to tom daley knitting 😂😂
Who stole the legs off your bag Coach?🤣
Do they also eat lots of prawnies
That greenkeeper needs some new boots🤣
😂 high handicappers have one thought: hit the ball.
Do you have "10 habits of a double bogey golfer?" I am still working my way there before heading down to scratch.
How to break 100?
Im just trying to figure out why the ball lies so much. Didn't it's parents ever teach it manners?
I’m all about free instruction, but maybe at least announce “sponsored by Callaway?” I know it’s the nature of the beast for golf pros, but it’s really obvious who’s sponsoring you. The clothes, the balls, the clubs, etc. Just asking for a little transparency.
I’m sponsored by Callaway 👍😂
It’s shameless the amount of product pushing your doing 😂
Callaway, what? 😉