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TaylorMade’s Silly Spoof of ‘A Christmas Story’

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Taylormade's 'Christmas Story' Spoof

The best holiday card every year isn’t from your family, it’s from the folks at TaylorMade. And they sure went above and beyond this holiday season.

The golf equipment manufacturing company got six of its star players – Matthew Wolff, Tommy Fleetwood, Collin Morikawa, Sergio Garcia, Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson – to do a spoof of the famous “triple dog dare” scene from A Christmas Story.

Acting clearly isn’t a strength for some of the boys (we’ll let you decide cough cough DJ), but Fleetwood and Morikawa’s facial expressions mixed with McIlroy’s inability to keep a straight face make this the best one yet.

Well done, TaylorMade, and happy holidays.

This article originally appeared on Golfweek.

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The 5 Most Overrated Golf Tips (And What to Do Instead)

Stop following bad golf advice! The Golf Hacker debunks 5 overrated tips (keep your head down, swing easy, aim left) and shares what actually works for mid-handicappers.

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Bad Golf Advice

Let’s talk about bad golf advice. The golf world is drowning in it. Every magazine, every YouTube video, every well-meaning buddy at the range has a tip that’s supposed to transform your game. “Keep your head down.” “Swing easy.” “Grip it and rip it.” Most of it is garbage. Not because the people giving the advice are trying to mislead you, but because generic tips don’t work for specific problems. What helps a tour pro with a hundred-twenty-mile-per-hour swing speed might wreck a weekend warrior who barely breaks ninety. What fixes a hook won’t help a slice. And yet, we keep repeating the same tired advice like it’s gospel.

I’ve spent years trying every tip, drill, and swing thought imaginable. Some helped. Most didn’t. And a few actually made my game worse. So I’m here to save you some time and frustration by calling out the five most overrated golf tips I’ve encountered—and more importantly, telling you what to do instead. These aren’t just my opinions. These are lessons learned through trial, error, and way too many balls hit into the woods. Let’s get into it.

Why Generic Advice Fails Golfers

Before we dive into the specific tips, let’s talk about why so much golf advice falls flat. The problem is that golf instruction has become one-size-fits-all. Instructors, magazines, and influencers dish out tips without knowing anything about your swing, your tendencies, or your skill level. They’re throwing spaghetti at the wall and hoping something sticks.

But here’s the thing: golf swings are individual. Your body type, flexibility, strength, and coordination are different from mine. Your miss pattern is different. Your goals are different. So when someone tells you to “keep your left arm straight” or “turn your hips faster,” they’re making assumptions about your swing that might not be true. And if the advice doesn’t match your actual problem, it’s not just unhelpful—it can make things worse.

The best golf instruction is diagnostic. It identifies your specific issue and addresses it with a tailored solution. Generic tips skip the diagnosis and jump straight to the prescription. That’s why they fail. So as we go through these overrated tips, remember: the goal isn’t to bash people who give advice. The goal is to help you think more critically about what advice actually applies to you.

A frustrated golfer on the range surrounded by conflicting advice written on notecards, looking confused and overwhelmed.

Overrated Golf Tip #1: “Keep Your Head Down” Ruins Your Swing (Do This Instead)

This is probably the most common piece of golf advice ever given, and it’s also one of the most damaging. How many times have you hit a bad shot and had someone say, “You looked up”? It’s become a reflex. Bad shot? Must have lifted your head. But here’s the truth: keeping your head rigidly down through impact doesn’t help most golfers. In fact, it often hurts.

When you focus on keeping your head down, you restrict your body’s natural rotation. Your shoulders can’t turn fully. Your hips get stuck. Your weight stays on your back foot. You end up with a cramped, restricted swing that produces weak, inconsistent contact. And ironically, trying to keep your head down often causes you to lift it anyway, because your body is fighting against an unnatural position.

Watch any tour pro in slow motion. Their head moves. Not wildly, but it moves. It rotates slightly during the backswing and follows the ball through impact. That’s natural. That’s efficient. The head isn’t an anchor—it’s part of a dynamic athletic motion.

What to Do Instead:

Focus on keeping your eyes on the ball, not your head down. There’s a difference. Your eyes can track the ball while your head rotates naturally with your body. This allows for a full, unrestricted turn and proper weight transfer. Practice making swings where you let your head rotate naturally. You’ll feel less restricted, generate more power, and make better contact. If you’re really worried about looking up too early, try this drill: after you hit the ball, keep your eyes on the spot where the ball was for a count of one before looking up. This trains you to stay down through impact without restricting your rotation.

Overrated Golf Tip #2: “Swing Easy” (Why This Advice Backfires)

“Swing easy” sounds like great advice. It’s calming. It’s zen. The problem is that it’s vague and often counterproductive. When most golfers try to “swing easy,” they decelerate through the ball. They get tentative. They lose rhythm and tempo. The result? Weak contact, inconsistent ball flight, and frustration.

The advice usually comes from a good place. Someone sees you swinging out of your shoes, losing your balance, and spraying balls all over the range. So they tell you to swing easy. But “easy” isn’t the same as “smooth” or “controlled.” Easy implies less effort, and less effort in golf usually means less speed, less compression, and worse results.

Tour pros don’t swing easy. They swing smooth. They swing with tempo. They swing with control. But they’re still generating tremendous speed through the ball. The difference is that their speed is efficient and well-timed, not wild and uncontrolled.

What to Do Instead:

Focus on tempo and balance, not effort level. A good tempo is the key to consistency. Try this: count “one” on your backswing and “two” on your downswing. The ratio should be about three-to-one—your backswing takes three times as long as your downswing. This creates a smooth, rhythmic motion that generates speed without feeling rushed or out of control.

As for balance, make it a rule: you should be able to hold your finish position for three seconds after every swing. If you can’t, you’re swinging too hard or too out of control. Work on finishing in balance, and your swing will naturally find the right amount of effort. You’ll generate plenty of speed, but it will be controlled speed—the kind that produces consistent, solid contact.

A golfer demonstrating a smooth, balanced finish position, holding the pose confidently.

Overrated Golf Tip #3: “Grip It and Rip It” (The Truth About Power)

If you slice the ball, you’ve probably been told to aim left (for right-handed golfers) to compensate. This is terrible advice. It doesn’t fix your slice—it just accommodates it. And worse, it often makes your slice worse.

Here’s why: when you aim left, your brain knows the ball is going to curve right, so you subconsciously swing even more across the ball to get it started left. This creates an even steeper, more out-to-in swing path, which produces more sidespin and a bigger slice. You’re not fixing the problem; you’re reinforcing it. And now you’re also dealing with alignment issues that make it harder to hit straight shots even if you do fix your swing.

Aiming left to compensate for a slice is like putting a bucket under a leaky roof. Sure, it catches the water, but it doesn’t fix the leak. And eventually, the leak gets worse.

What to Do Instead:

Fix the root cause of your slice: an open clubface at impact relative to your swing path. The most common reason for an open clubface is a weak grip. Check your grip. When you look down at your hands, you should see two to three knuckles on your left hand (for right-handed golfers). If you only see one knuckle or none, your grip is too weak, and you’re going to struggle to square the clubface.

Strengthen your grip by rotating both hands slightly to the right on the club. This will help you close the clubface through impact and reduce your slice. Pair this with a focus on swinging more from the inside (imagine swinging out toward right field instead of pulling across your body), and you’ll start hitting straighter shots. It takes practice, but it’s a real fix, not a band-aid.

Overrated Tip #4: “Hit Down on the Ball”

“Hit down on the ball” is advice you’ll hear constantly, especially with irons. And to be fair, it’s not entirely wrong—you do want to make contact with the ball before the ground. But the way this tip is usually interpreted causes more problems than it solves.

When most golfers hear “hit down on the ball,” they think they need to chop at it. They get steep. They drive their hands down aggressively. They try to pound the ball into the turf. The result? Fat shots, thin shots, and a lot of frustration. They’re working harder, not smarter.

The reality is that good ball-first contact comes from proper swing mechanics, not from consciously trying to hit down. If your weight is shifting correctly and your swing path is on plane, you’ll naturally hit the ball first and then the ground. The divot happens as a byproduct of a good swing, not as the goal.

What to Do Instead:

Focus on weight transfer and low point control. Your low point—the lowest point of your swing arc—should be a few inches in front of the ball. This happens naturally when you shift your weight properly from your back foot to your front foot during the downswing.

Here’s a simple drill: place a tee in the ground a few inches in front of your ball. Your goal is to brush the ground where the tee is, not where the ball is. This trains you to move your low point forward, which creates the ball-first contact you’re looking for. You don’t have to think about hitting down. Just shift your weight, let your swing bottom out in front of the ball, and the contact will take care of itself.

A golfer demonstrating proper weight transfer with a tee drill, showing the low point ahead of the ball.

Overrated Tip #5: “Keep Your Left Arm Straight”

The left arm straight tip (for right-handed golfers) is a classic. It’s been around forever, and it’s based on the idea that a straight left arm creates width and power in the swing. And again, there’s some truth to it. But the way it’s taught and practiced often creates more problems than it solves.

When golfers obsess over keeping their left arm perfectly straight, they create tension. Tension is the enemy of a good golf swing. A tense left arm restricts your shoulder turn, limits your backswing, and makes it harder to release the club through impact. You end up with a rigid, mechanical swing that lacks fluidity and speed.

Look at tour pros. Yes, their left arms are relatively straight at address and through most of the backswing. But they’re not locked. There’s a slight bend, and more importantly, there’s no tension. The arm is extended, not rigid. That’s a huge difference.

What to Do Instead:

Focus on extension, not rigidity. Your left arm should be comfortably extended, not locked straight. Think of it like reaching for something on a high shelf—your arm is extended, but there’s no tension. You’re not forcing it.

Here’s a good checkpoint: at the top of your backswing, your left arm should feel extended but relaxed. If you feel tension in your shoulder or elbow, you’re overdoing it. Let your arm bend slightly if that’s what feels natural. The goal is width and control, not a perfectly straight line. A relaxed, extended left arm will give you better rotation, more speed, and more consistent contact than a rigid, locked arm ever will.

How to Filter Golf Advice Going Forward

Now that we’ve debunked five overrated tips, let’s talk about how to evaluate golf advice in general. Because the truth is, there will always be more tips, more drills, and more “secrets” to better golf. How do you know what’s worth trying and what’s a waste of time?

1. Consider the Source

Who’s giving the advice? Is it a qualified instructor who’s seen your swing, or is it a random guy at the range who shoots a hundred and five? Context matters. The best advice is personalized. If someone is giving you a tip without knowing your swing, your tendencies, or your goals, take it with a grain of salt.

2. Ask: Does This Address My Specific Problem?

Generic advice rarely works. Before you try a new tip, ask yourself: does this address a problem I actually have? If you don’t slice the ball, advice about fixing a slice isn’t relevant. If you already have good tempo, being told to “slow down” won’t help. Focus on tips that target your specific weaknesses.

3. Test It, But Give It Time

Golf changes take time. If you try a new grip or a new swing thought, don’t expect immediate results. Give it a few range sessions. But also, don’t stick with something that clearly isn’t working. If a tip makes your ball flight worse after a fair trial, move on. Trust your results, not your hopes.

4. Prioritize Fundamentals Over Quick Fixes

The most valuable advice is usually the least sexy. Grip, stance, posture, alignment—these fundamentals matter more than any swing thought or magic drill. If your fundamentals are solid, everything else gets easier. If they’re not, no amount of tips will save you.

5. Record Your Swing

One of the best ways to filter advice is to see your swing for yourself. Record your swing on your phone. Watch it in slow motion. Compare it to what good swings look like. This gives you objective data. You’ll know if your head is actually moving too much, if your left arm is bending excessively, or if you’re really swinging out of control. Video doesn’t lie.

A golfer reviewing their swing on a smartphone, using video analysis to evaluate their mechanics.

The Bottom Line: Think Critically, Swing Better

Golf instruction is full of well-meaning advice that doesn’t actually help most golfers. “Keep your head down,” “swing easy,” “aim left to fix your slice”—these tips sound good, but they’re either too vague, too generic, or just plain wrong for most players. The key to improving your game isn’t collecting more tips. It’s learning to think critically about the advice you receive and focusing on solutions that address your specific problems.

So the next time someone offers you a tip, ask yourself: does this make sense for my swing? Does it address a problem I actually have? Is it based on sound mechanics, or is it just conventional wisdom that’s been repeated so many times it sounds true? If the answer to any of those questions is no, feel free to ignore it. Your golf game will thank you.

And remember: the best tips are the ones that work for you. Not for tour pros. Not for your buddy who plays twice a year. For you. So stop wasting range time on overrated advice, start focusing on what actually matters, and go play better golf.

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Why You Don’t Need New Clubs to Play Better Golf

A humorous, honest look at why new golf clubs won’t fix your game—and what will actually improve your scores. Read this before your next gear impulse buy.

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I was standing in the pro shop last Tuesday, holding a driver that cost more than my first car, when I had what you might call an epiphany. Or maybe it was just the price tag that snapped me back to reality. Either way, I put the club down and walked out without buying anything, which might be the most mature thing I’ve done all year. Here’s the thing about golf equipment: we all know, deep down in that place where we keep our honest thoughts, that new clubs aren’t going to fix our slice or magically shave ten strokes off our handicap. But we buy them anyway, because hope is a powerful drug, and the pro shop is the dealer.

The Pro Shop: Where Dreams Are Sold by the Dozen

There’s something almost spiritual about walking into a pro shop. The smell of new grips, the gleam of polished clubheads, the promise of technology that will finally unlock your potential. It’s like church, except instead of salvation, you’re buying the possibility that this driver—this one right here with the carbon fiber shaft and the adjustable hosel—will be the one that turns you into the golfer you’ve always imagined yourself to be.

And look, I get it. I’ve been there. I’ve stood in front of that wall of drivers like a kid in a candy store, convincing myself that the difference between my current game and scratch golf is just a matter of finding the right equipment. I’ve read the marketing copy about “explosive distance” and “tour-proven performance” and nodded along like it was gospel. I’ve handed over my credit card with the quiet confidence of someone who believes that this purchase will change everything.

Spoiler alert: it never does. Oh, the new driver feels amazing for about three rounds. You hit a couple of good shots and think, “This is it. This is the club that’s going to take me to the next level.” But then reality sets in. You still slice it into the woods on the fifth hole. You still chunk your approach shots. You still three-putt from twelve feet. Because here’s the uncomfortable truth that nobody in the golf industry wants you to know: your clubs are fine. It’s your swing that needs work.

A golfer standing in a pro shop surrounded by shiny new clubs, looking mesmerized by the display, with a thought bubble showing them hitting perfect shots.

The Psychology of New Clubs: Why They Feel So Good

Let’s talk about why new clubs feel so good, because there’s actually some interesting psychology at play here. When you buy a new driver or a new set of irons, you experience what psychologists call the “placebo effect.” You believe the clubs will help you play better, so you swing with more confidence, and that confidence actually does improve your performance—for a little while. It’s not the clubs that are making you hit better shots; it’s your belief in the clubs.

There’s also something called the “honeymoon effect.” Everything is better when it’s new. That new driver feels lighter, more responsive, more forgiving. You’re paying attention to every shot, analyzing every swing, because you want to see if the investment was worth it. And that attention, that focus, actually does help you play better. But it’s not sustainable. After a few rounds, the new driver becomes just another club in your bag, and you’re back to your old habits and your old scores.

Here’s the kicker: the clubs you’re using right now are probably perfectly fine. Unless you’re playing with clubs from the nineteen-eighties or your current set is wildly mismatched to your swing, the equipment isn’t your problem. Modern golf clubs are incredibly well-engineered. Even mid-range clubs from five or ten years ago are more than good enough for the average golfer. The difference between a five-hundred-dollar driver and a six-hundred-dollar driver is marginal at best, and it’s certainly not going to be the difference between shooting ninety-five and shooting eighty-five.

What Actually Improves Your Scores

So if new clubs aren’t the answer, what is? I hate to be the bearer of boring news, but the answer is the same thing it’s always been: practice, lessons, and course management. I know, I know. That’s not nearly as fun as buying a shiny new driver. But it’s the truth.

Let’s start with practice. And I don’t mean going to the range and mindlessly hitting balls until your hands blister. I mean deliberate, focused practice with specific goals. Work on your short game, because that’s where most strokes are lost. Spend time on the putting green. Practice hitting different trajectories and shot shapes. The range isn’t just a place to hit drivers and feel good about yourself—it’s a place to work on your weaknesses.

Next, lessons. I know, lessons aren’t sexy. They’re not as immediately gratifying as walking out of the pro shop with a new club. But a good teaching pro can identify the flaws in your swing and give you specific things to work on. One lesson can be worth more than a thousand dollars in new equipment. And here’s the thing: once you fix your swing, your current clubs will suddenly feel a lot better. It’s amazing how much more forgiving your seven-iron becomes when you’re actually hitting it on the sweet spot.

Finally, course management. This is the most overlooked aspect of improving your scores, and it’s also the easiest to implement. Stop trying to hit hero shots. Play to your strengths. If you can’t carry the water hazard, don’t try. Lay up, hit a wedge, and move on. Accept that you’re going to make bogeys, and focus on avoiding double bogeys. Golf is a game of minimizing mistakes, not maximizing brilliance. The sooner you accept that, the better you’ll score.

A golfer taking a lesson with a teaching pro on the range, with the pro using video analysis on a tablet to show swing flaws.

When New Clubs Actually Do Make Sense

Now, before you think I’ve gone completely anti-equipment, let me be clear: there are times when new clubs do make sense. If you’re playing with clubs that are fifteen or twenty years old, an upgrade will probably help. Golf technology has improved significantly in that time, especially in terms of forgiveness and distance. If your clubs are too long, too short, or too heavy for your swing, getting properly fitted can make a real difference. And if you’re a beginner playing with a hand-me-down set that doesn’t fit you at all, then yes, investing in a decent starter set is a smart move.

But here’s the key: if you’re going to buy new clubs, do it for the right reasons. Get fitted by someone who knows what they’re doing. Don’t just buy the clubs that look cool or that your favorite tour pro uses. And for the love of all that is holy, don’t buy new clubs thinking they’re going to fix your swing. They won’t. They can’t. Only you can fix your swing, and you do that through practice and instruction, not through retail therapy.

Also, consider buying used clubs. I know, it’s not as exciting as buying new ones, but you can get incredible deals on barely-used equipment. Golfers are constantly upgrading their clubs, which means there’s a thriving market for high-quality used gear. You can get last year’s model for half the price of this year’s model, and I promise you, you won’t be able to tell the difference. The only thing you’ll notice is the extra money in your bank account.

The Zen of Playing with What You Have

Here’s where I’m going to get a little philosophical on you, so bear with me. There’s something liberating about accepting that your clubs are fine and that the only thing holding you back is you. It removes the excuses. It forces you to take responsibility for your game. And paradoxically, once you stop blaming your equipment, you often start playing better.

Best Golf Balls For Average Golfers

I’ve played some of my best rounds with clubs that were ten years old and a putter I found in a garage sale. I’ve also played some of my worst rounds with brand-new, top-of-the-line equipment. The clubs don’t make the golfer. The golfer makes the golfer. And the sooner you internalize that truth, the sooner you can focus on what actually matters: enjoying the game, improving your skills, and spending time outdoors with people you like.

Golf is a journey, not a destination. It’s a game you can play for your entire life, and part of the beauty of that is that there’s always something to work on, always room for improvement. But that improvement doesn’t come from the pro shop. It comes from within. It comes from the hours you spend on the range, the lessons you take, the rounds you play where you focus on course management instead of trying to bomb every drive.

A content golfer walking down a fairway with an older set of clubs, smiling and enjoying the game, with beautiful scenery in the background.

The Gear Trap: A Cautionary Tale

Let me tell you about my buddy Steve. Steve is a classic gear junkie. Every year, he buys a new driver. Every year, he convinces himself that this is the one that’s going to unlock his potential. He’s got a garage full of clubs, each one representing a moment of hope and optimism, and each one now gathering dust because it didn’t deliver on its promise.

Steve’s handicap has been stuck at eighteen for the past five years. Not because he doesn’t have good equipment—he’s got the best equipment money can buy. But because he spends all his time and money on clubs instead of lessons. He’d rather buy a new driver than spend an hour with a teaching pro. He’d rather tinker with his equipment than work on his short game. And as a result, he’s trapped in a cycle of buying hope and being disappointed.

Don’t be like Steve. Steve is a cautionary tale. Steve is what happens when you believe the marketing instead of the fundamentals. Steve is a good guy, and I love playing golf with him, but he’s never going to get better until he realizes that the answer isn’t in the pro shop—it’s in the practice facility.

What to Do Instead of Buying New Clubs

So you’ve got the itch to spend some money on your golf game. That’s great. Golf is an investment, and there are plenty of smart ways to invest in your improvement. Here are some alternatives to buying new clubs that will actually make a difference in your scores.

First, invest in lessons. Find a good teaching pro and commit to a series of lessons. Work on your fundamentals. Get your swing on video and analyze it. This is the single best investment you can make in your golf game, bar none.

Second, invest in your short game. Buy a good wedge if you don’t have one. Get a quality putter that fits you. Spend money on practice aids like alignment sticks, a putting mirror, or a chipping net for your backyard. The short game is where you’ll see the fastest improvement, and it’s also where most golfers lose the most strokes.

Third, play more golf. Instead of spending five hundred dollars on a new driver, use that money to play ten extra rounds. The more you play, the better you’ll get. Experience is the best teacher, and there’s no substitute for time on the course.

The Mental Game of Golf

Fourth, consider a club fitting—not to buy new clubs, but to make sure your current clubs are properly fitted to you. Sometimes a simple adjustment to your lie angle or grip size can make a big difference. A good fitter can also tell you if your current clubs are actually holding you back or if they’re fine as they are.

A golfer practicing their short game in their backyard with a chipping net and practice balls, showing dedication to improvement.

The Bottom Line: It’s Not the Arrow, It’s the Indian

There’s an old saying: “It’s not the arrow, it’s the Indian.” In golf terms, it’s not the clubs, it’s the golfer. I know that’s not what you want to hear. I know you’d rather believe that the solution to your golf woes is waiting for you in the pro shop, wrapped in plastic and smelling like new rubber grips. But it’s not. The solution is in the mirror.

Your clubs are fine. They’re more than fine. They’re probably better than you deserve, if we’re being honest. What you need isn’t a new driver—it’s a better swing. What you need isn’t a new putter—it’s better green-reading skills. What you need isn’t a new set of irons—it’s better course management.

And here’s the beautiful part: all of those things are within your control. You can improve your swing. You can get better at reading greens. You can make smarter decisions on the course. None of those things require spending hundreds or thousands of dollars. They just require time, effort, and a willingness to be honest with yourself about where you need to improve.

A Final Thought

The next time you find yourself in the pro shop, mesmerized by the latest driver or the newest irons, ask yourself this question: “Am I buying this because I genuinely need it, or am I buying hope?” If the answer is the latter, put the club down and walk away. Take that money and invest it in something that will actually make you a better golfer. Take a lesson. Play an extra round. Buy a dozen range balls and spend an hour working on your wedge game.

Golf is a beautiful, frustrating, humbling game. It’s a game that will test your patience, challenge your ego, and occasionally reward you with a shot so pure that you forget about all the bad ones that came before it. But it’s not a game that can be solved with a credit card. It’s a game that requires dedication, practice, and a willingness to accept that improvement is a slow, gradual process.

So embrace the clubs you have. Learn to love them. Work on your swing. Take some lessons. Play more golf. And most importantly, enjoy the journey. Because at the end of the day, that’s what golf is really about—not the equipment, not the scores, but the experience of being out on the course, challenging yourself, and spending time in the great outdoors.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m going to go hit some balls with my ten-year-old driver. It’s not the newest or the fanciest, but it’s mine, and I’ve learned to make it work. And that, my friends, is the secret to golf—not finding the perfect clubs, but learning to play with the ones you have.

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The Etiquette Guide Every Golfer Needs (But Nobody Teaches)

Learn golf etiquette in this friendly, non-judgmental guide. From tee box behavior to pace of play, discover the unwritten rules that make golf enjoyable for everyone.

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Let me tell you about my first round of golf on a real course. I was nervous, excited, and completely clueless about the unwritten rules of the game. I didn’t know when to walk, when to talk, or where to stand. I felt like everyone was watching me, judging my every move. Looking back, most of that anxiety was in my head, but I wish someone had pulled me aside and explained the basics in a friendly, non-judgmental way. That’s exactly what I’m going to do for you today. Consider this your friendly guide to golf etiquette—the stuff that makes the game more enjoyable for everyone, including you.

Why Golf Etiquette Actually Matters

Golf etiquette isn’t about being stuffy or following arbitrary rules from some country club handbook. It’s about three simple things: keeping the game moving, showing respect for your fellow golfers, and taking care of the course so the next group can enjoy it too. That’s it. When everyone follows these basic principles, golf becomes more fun, less stressful, and way more welcoming for players of all skill levels.

Here’s the truth: nobody expects you to be perfect, especially if you’re new to the game. We’ve all been beginners. We’ve all hit bad shots, lost balls, and felt overwhelmed by the pace of play. What matters is that you’re making an honest effort to be considerate and keep things moving. That’s the spirit of golf etiquette, and it’s something anyone can do regardless of their handicap.

A diverse group of golfers of different ages and skill levels enjoying a round together on a beautiful golf course, showing camaraderie and respect.

Tee Box Etiquette: Starting Your Round Right

The tee box is where every hole begins, and it sets the tone for the entire experience. The first rule is simple: whoever had the best score on the previous hole gets “honors” and tees off first. On the first tee, you can decide honors by flipping a tee or just agreeing on an order. It’s not a big deal—just pick something and stick with it for the round.

While someone is teeing off, stand quietly to the side or behind them. You don’t need to be silent like you’re in a library, but avoid talking, moving around, or standing directly in their line of sight. It’s just common courtesy. Once they’ve hit their shot, feel free to offer a quick compliment if it was a good one, or a supportive “you’ll get the next one” if it wasn’t. Golf is hard, and a little encouragement goes a long way.

One more thing about the tee box: be ready when it’s your turn. Have your club selected, your ball teed up, and your glove on. You don’t need to rush, but you also don’t want to be fumbling around while everyone waits. Think of it like being ready to order when it’s your turn at a coffee shop—just a little preparation that keeps things flowing smoothly.

Fairway and Green Behavior: Respect and Awareness

Once you’re off the tee, the key to good etiquette is awareness. Pay attention to where other players are and what they’re doing. If someone is hitting a shot, pause and give them space. If you’re looking for a lost ball, don’t spend more than a couple of minutes searching—the rules allow three minutes, but honestly, if you haven’t found it in two, it’s time to drop another ball and keep moving.

When you get to the green, that’s where things can feel a bit more formal, but it doesn’t have to be intimidating. The basic principle is to avoid stepping on someone else’s putting line—the imaginary path between their ball and the hole. Walk around it, not through it. If you’re not sure where their line is, just ask. Nobody will mind.

Mark your ball with a small coin or ball marker when you’re on the green, especially if it’s in someone else’s way. This is just good manners and helps everyone see their lines clearly. And when you’re done with the hole, replace the flagstick carefully and move off the green promptly. The next group is probably waiting, and they’ll appreciate you keeping things moving.

A golfer carefully marking their ball on the green with a ball marker while another golfer lines up their putt in the background.

Cart and Course Care: Leave It Better Than You Found It

If you’re using a golf cart, follow the cart path rules posted at the course. Some days it’s “cart path only,” which means you drive on the path and walk to your ball. Other days you might have “90-degree rule,” where you can drive out to your ball but must return to the path at a right angle. These rules exist to protect the course, especially when it’s wet or the turf is stressed.

Course care is one of those things that separates thoughtful golfers from careless ones. Always replace your divots—those chunks of grass you take out when you hit a shot. Most courses provide a sand-and-seed mixture in the carts, or you can replace the actual piece of turf if it came out cleanly. Either way, take five seconds to fix it. The next golfer who lands in that spot will thank you.

On the greens, repair your ball marks. When your ball lands on the green, it often leaves a small indentation. Use a divot repair tool (or a tee in a pinch) to gently lift the turf back to level. This takes about ten seconds and makes a huge difference in the quality of the greens. If you see another ball mark nearby, fix that one too. It’s good karma, and it helps the course stay in great shape.

A golfer using a divot repair tool to fix a ball mark on the green, demonstrating proper course care.

Pace of Play: The Golden Rule of Golf

Let’s talk about the elephant on the course: pace of play. This is the number one complaint among golfers, and it’s also the most misunderstood aspect of etiquette. Here’s the deal: you don’t need to play fast, but you do need to play efficiently. There’s a difference.

Playing efficiently means being ready when it’s your turn, making decisions quickly, and not wasting time between shots. It means walking with purpose, not dawdling. It means having a plan for your shot before you get to your ball. You can still take your time over the ball and make a good swing—nobody is asking you to rush that part. But everything else should keep moving.

If you’re playing slower than the group behind you and there’s open space in front of you, it’s courteous to let them play through. This isn’t an admission of failure or a sign that you’re a bad golfer. It’s just being considerate. Wave them up, step aside, and let them pass. They’ll appreciate it, and you’ll feel less pressure to hurry. It’s a win-win.

One practical tip: if you’re new to golf or still learning, consider playing from the forward tees. This makes the course shorter and easier, which naturally speeds up play. There’s no shame in this—it’s actually the smart move. You’ll have more fun, hit more greens, and keep pace with the group in front of you.

Bunker Etiquette: Rake Your Mess

When you hit out of a bunker, always rake your footprints and the area where you took your swing. The rake is usually nearby, either in the bunker or just outside it. This takes about fifteen seconds and ensures the next golfer doesn’t have to deal with your mess. Enter the bunker from the low side when possible, take your shot, rake thoroughly, and exit. Simple as that.

Some golfers debate whether the rake should be left in the bunker or outside it. Honestly, it varies by course, and there’s no universal rule. Just put it back where you found it or in a spot that makes sense. The important thing is that you used it.

Sound and Distractions: Keep It Chill

Golf is a game that requires concentration, so be mindful of noise. You don’t need to whisper, but avoid loud conversations, phone calls, or music when others are hitting. If you want to listen to music in your cart, keep it low enough that it doesn’t carry to other groups. And please, put your phone on silent. Nobody wants to hear your ringtone echo across the fairway.

That said, golf is also a social game. Enjoy the company of your playing partners. Share a laugh, tell a story, celebrate good shots. Just be aware of timing. There’s a time for conversation and a time for quiet focus. You’ll figure out the rhythm pretty quickly.

A group of golfers walking together down the fairway, chatting and enjoying the social aspect of the game.

What to Do When You Make a Mistake

Here’s the most important thing I can tell you: everyone makes etiquette mistakes. You’re going to forget to replace a divot, accidentally step on someone’s line, or take too long on a shot. It happens. When it does, just apologize briefly and move on. Nobody is keeping score of your etiquette errors, and most golfers are incredibly forgiving, especially if they see you’re making an effort.

If someone corrects you or offers advice about etiquette, don’t take it personally. They’re trying to help, not criticize. Say “thanks for letting me know” and adjust your behavior. That’s how we all learn. I’ve been playing for years, and I still pick up new etiquette tips from time to time. It’s part of the game.

The Spirit of Golf Etiquette

At its core, golf etiquette is about kindness and consideration. It’s about recognizing that you’re sharing the course with other people who love this game as much as you do. It’s about leaving the course in good shape for the next group. It’s about keeping the game moving so everyone can enjoy their round. And it’s about creating an environment where golfers of all skill levels feel welcome and respected.

You don’t need to memorize a hundred rules or stress about doing everything perfectly. Just focus on being considerate, staying aware of your surroundings, and making an honest effort to follow the basics. That’s ninety percent of golf etiquette right there. The rest you’ll pick up naturally as you play more rounds and observe other golfers.

A Final Word for New Golfers

If you’re new to golf, please don’t let etiquette anxiety keep you off the course. Yes, there are unwritten rules, but they’re not complicated, and they’re not designed to exclude you. They exist to make the game better for everyone. Most golfers are incredibly welcoming and happy to see new people taking up the game. If you’re making an effort to be respectful and keep pace, you’re doing just fine.

Bookmark this guide and review it before your next round. Bring a divot tool and a ball marker. Be ready when it’s your turn. Fix your ball marks. Rake your bunkers. Keep moving. That’s the foundation of good golf etiquette, and it’s something anyone can do.

Golf is a wonderful game with a rich tradition of respect and sportsmanship. By following these simple guidelines, you’re not just being a good playing partner—you’re becoming part of that tradition. And that’s something to be proud of. Now get out there and enjoy your round. We’ll see you on the course.

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