We played the #11 course in the world this past week, Barnbougle Dunes Golf Links, and its sister course, Barnbougle Lost Farm...and what a game changer they are! If you don't change your game on this course you're going to have a long day!
First and foremost, throw your flop shot away. If you find you need one, you're definitely in the wrong place. These courses demand that you use a putter from off the green, and sometimes a hybrid to chip with.
Why? Because these courses have very thin-bladed grass cut -- or naturally grown -- very short. VERY difficult to hit the ball high off these lies. Sometimes you can't tell where the green even starts! In 4 days I either chipped a hybrid or putted -- no conventional chip or pitch shots. I even putted one from 50 yards out to 6 feet!
Bottom line? If you're on a tight lie and faced with a flop or high pitch, you're in the wrong place. Either putt it, chip it, or chip a hybrid. Don't try the 1 in 20 shot... get out of trouble!
#11 Barnbougle Dunes and Barnbougle Lost Farm are in Bridport, Tasmania, Australia. Put 'em on your bucket list!
Bob Duncan, PGA
Please visit golfecoach.com
Deep Play is Play of the Game which is lost to players who focus only on swing mechanics. Deep Play is essential on-course play.
Monday, March 31, 2014
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
What is Lost to Players?

But what does that mean -- what are they losing?
It's funny - the teaching industry has gone hog wild trying to optimize performance and consistency by advocating -- and perhaps mandating -- a 'square' position at impact with proper angles of attack and path. Or even allowing for a 'one-way miss' of a fade or draw.
But this 'one optimal impact' will fail as soon as the player encounters a slope. A clubface 'square' to the target will fail to deliver a solid and straight shot on a slope.
Somehow the Play of the Game is lost to the 'one optimal impact' crowd. Slopes have a bearing on performance. Slopes are found on the golf course. Above your feet should pull or hook, and below your feet should push or fade.
So direction 'loss' may not be due to an inability to make a consistent swing.
What is the answer? The answer is not to correct for the direction loss -- it is to allow for and predict direction loss. Players who search for, accomplish, and adhere to a mechanically sound swing only are setting themselves up for failure when they least expect it. They are not playing the game.
Playing the game is adapting to things on the course, using them to the player's advantage rather than assuming a mechanically sound swing will always produce the same ball flight.
Deep Play is accessible by players if they know what to look for...Watch the launch at golfecoach.com.
Bob Duncan, PGA
Monday, March 3, 2014
OYE OYE OYE!
These 2 courses are ranked in the top 100 worldwide, and in
the top 10 in Australia. These 2 courses
are what I would call ‘modern’ links courses, built on the dunes on the
north-east tip of Tasmania. By that I
mean that you need to worry about your ball almost as much after it lands as
while it is in flight. There are
definitely some slopes in your landing area to be negotiated!
And speaking of golf in Australia, Aussies are pretty
serious about it. They are just now in
the process of updating their handicap system to a ‘slope’ system. They are very well versed in the mechanics of
the swing, and the Golfer Positioning System is primed to take many of them to
new levels of understanding and performance....
And have some fun while we're at it!
OYE OYE OYE! AUSSIE
AUSSIE AUSSIE! Cheers, mate!
Monday, February 24, 2014
G P S -- Smile More!

Is it that one dead-solid perfect shot (because it happens so seldom)?
Is it a well-executed draw or fade?
Is it a good shot from a difficult lie?
Or is it a great recovery shot?
If you are a golfer, only #1 applies, but for a player it's all of the above and more!
You see, golf is a game played on a course that changes with every shot -- that's pretty obvious. Golfers try to work the ball straight, but players work the course.
What does that mean? It means that not every shot should be hit solid and straight. Hey, the course is not flat. When the ball is above your feet it's supposed to pull or draw, and below your feet it's supposed to push or fade.
But they don't always.
Grass gets in the way. Or it doesn't.
Wind happens. Or it doesn't.
The ball bounces. Or it doesn't.
Golfers? Well, they keep trying to hit it straight...
Players know these things, and they use them to their advantage.
Let's start playing the game... and if we do we'll smile more!
Bob Duncan
GolfeCoach.com
contact golfsavvy@msn.com
Monday, February 17, 2014
Mis-Hits? Something You Can Use!
Most players are led to believe that they can and should hit the ball solid and straight from just about anywhere.
They can't. Bear with me here - this makes sense...
Consider the images on the right - the ball lies on a 'tight' lie, tight to the ground. This is not an optimum position, so you won't get optimum results... unless you change your definition of 'optimum'!
As you can see, the chances are strong that you will strike the ball below the sweet spot. The 3rd and 4th images show about where the sweet spot or center of gravity is...
Many pros teach an impact technique with excessive forward lean of the shaft to try to hit the sweet spot. Difficult to do...
What happens when you contact the ball low on the face like this? It goes lower, shorter, and may fade.
Or, think about what it would take to hit the ball on the sweet spot: The clubhead would need to be lower to achieve that, which would put the sole of the club underground! The result? A fat shot!
So, what should you do? Accept the impact characteristics of a tight lie and play for them to happen! Lower, shorter, fade...
But Bob, that means the ball might not stop on the green. Or the landing zone calls for a draw shot. Uh-huh, that's right. If so, it means that 1) you're adding risk by trying something else that is less likely to happen, 2) maybe you're in the wrong place to begin with, and 3) you received a Rub of the Green that resulted in the tight lie.
Not every shot can be hit from every lie.
As my very Scottish Dad used to say: "So what? Deal with it!"
Bob Duncan, PGA
GolfeCoach.com
email golfsavvy@msn.com
Saturday, February 8, 2014
Swing Practice, or GAME Practice?
One phase of Game-Specific Training - GolfeCoach.com |
Have you heard that one before? Swing coaches around the world have preached this massive over-training of the golf swing for years, and there's no sign of letting up. Even the title of swing coach is so specific and limiting that it's no wonder golfers are not getting better. This is swing-specific training.
Swing-specific training is like practicing the piano, and the piano teacher says play Billy Joel's 'Piano Man' song until your hands bleed. Then he says go out and play Beethoven on the deck of a pitching sailing ship. You might get some of the notes right....but you're no 'Piano Man'.
So what of only hitting balls until you 'groove your swing' and get the impact and ball flight exactly right? Too bad it only happens on the range. If you just want to hit it straight, stay on the range.
Instead, players will benefit from a new concept called GAME-Specific Training. GST is training under game-playing conditions, understanding that on the course your ball flight will change!
GST - Game Specific Training is a concept I've developed after years of studying on-course performance. Everything is game-specific and must transfer to the golf course. In fact, if I don't SEE it happen for you on the course then I'm not doing my job!
It stands to reason: What it takes to hit a high draw on the range is NOT the same as what it takes to hit a high draw from a tight lie slightly below your feet. So practicing only on your swing practically insures that your desired ball flight will occur only sporadically on the course.
Practicing GST takes an open mind and an understanding of choice - a perfect model swing will fail on the course when you most depend on it and least expect it to...
...Which is when you're under pressure and you choose to depend on your swing and ignore 5 of the 6 ball flight influences that occur on the course....
Bob Duncan
GolfeCoach.com
contact: golfsavvy@msn.com
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
What's your PLAY?
120 yards? No problem (shakin' in my boots!) |
How do I FIND the darn thing after I hit it?
All of these enter your mind on this diabolical par 3 at Barnbougle Dunes in Tasmania. Known for the gentle (HA!) breezes off the Bass Strait, Barnbougle is a spectacular course to go immediately on your bucket list.
But what of the "play" on this hole? The day we played the breeze was 'UP', and I hit a knock-down 6-iron (!) with no tee that missed the green 10 yards right, then putted up to 2 feet and made a 3. The key in this shot was TRAJECTORY, with a 'secondary miss' to the right of the green. Sometimes knowing where you can 'miss' and still play is just as important as where you can hit it to.
And where are the locations to be avoided? Short and left -- avoid at all costs! Which makes the miss to the right even more important.
Could I have hit a 9-iron that far? Maybe on my best day, but hitting it that high would have been ridiculous in the wind. It was not about making a model swing - it was about how to PLAY!
Oh, did I say my shot ricocheted off a pullcart AND a player in the group in front of us? (No, I didn't play for that...) Sometimes you get good bounces... ;)
Bob Duncan
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