The Hole I Still Managed to Mess Up

There’s a short par 4 on that course I’ve played more times than I can count.

Dogleg left, bunker on the inside corner, wide fairway if you just lay back. I knew it. I’d talked about it. I’d even told other people, “Don’t get greedy here.”

50th time playing it, I pulled driver, tried to cut the corner, clipped a tree, dropped straight down, made double.

I stood there laughing a bit, because at that point I couldn’t blame lack of knowledge.

I knew exactly what I should’ve done.

Knowing the Course Doesn’t Mean You Play It Better

That was one of the biggest things that surprised me.

You’d think that playing the same course over and over would automatically lower your scores. You know the lines, the distances, where the trouble is.

And yeah, it helps.

But it doesn’t fix bad decisions.

If anything, familiarity can make you careless. You stop respecting the course. You start thinking, “I’ve played this hole a hundred times, I’ll be fine.”

That’s when you make the same mistake again.

Patterns Start Showing Up

After enough rounds, you start noticing patterns.

Not just in the course — in yourself.

There were certain holes where I almost always made bogey. Not because they were impossible, but because I approached them the same wrong way every time.

Wrong club off the tee. Too aggressive into the green. Bad miss in the same spot.

Once you see that pattern, it’s hard to ignore.

But here’s the thing — most people don’t actually change anything. They just recognize the mistake and then repeat it next round.

I did that for a long time.

The Course Isn’t Changing, So You Have To

This sounds obvious, but it took me a while to really accept it.

The course is static. Same layout, same hazards, same greens.

If your results aren’t improving, it’s not because the course is tricky. It’s because you’re making the same choices.

I started asking myself a simple question on certain holes: “What usually goes wrong here?”

Then I planned around that.

If I tend to miss right, I aim left. If I always come up short, I take more club. If a bunker is always in play, I choose a target that takes it out completely.

It’s not about playing perfect. It’s about removing your most common mistake.

Distance Numbers Start to Matter More

Playing the same course forced me to actually learn my distances.

Not just “roughly a 7-iron.” I mean knowing how far a solid one goes, how far a slightly off one goes, what happens when I try to swing harder.

Because when you keep hitting from similar spots, you start seeing how far you really carry the ball.

And sometimes it’s not what you think.

I once hit what felt like a perfect 9-iron into a green I’d played dozens of times.

Came up 10 yards short.

That bothered me more than it should have, because I realized I’d been overestimating my distances for years.

That changes how you pick clubs.

You Learn Where You Can Miss

Every hole has a “safe miss.”

But you don’t always see it the first few times you play.

After enough rounds, it becomes obvious.

There’s a green on that course with trouble short and right, but a big open area left. Early on, I kept aiming at the pin and paying for it.

Later, I started aiming left, even if it meant a longer putt.

Scores improved immediately.

Because now my bad shots weren’t disasters.

That’s the key — you’re not trying to eliminate mistakes. You’re trying to make them less costly.

Comfort Can Make You Lazy

This is something I’d argue with anyone about.

Familiarity can hurt you.

When you know a course too well, you stop thinking through shots. You go on autopilot. Same club, same target, same routine.

And if something isn’t working, you don’t adjust — you just assume it’ll fix itself.

It doesn’t.

You still need to approach each shot with intention, even if you’ve hit it 50 times before.

Maybe especially then.

The One Thing I’m Still Not Sure About

There’s this idea that you should always stick to a consistent strategy on each hole.

Same club off the tee, same target, same approach.

I’ve tried that, and it works… sometimes.

But I’m not fully convinced it’s always the best way. Conditions change. Wind, pin positions, how you’re swinging that day.

I think there’s a balance between having a plan and being flexible.

I’m still figuring that part out.

You Start Playing the Hole Backwards

This was a big shift.

Instead of standing on the tee thinking, “How far can I hit this?” I started thinking, “Where do I want my next shot to come from?”

That changes everything.

On some holes, it meant hitting less than driver to leave a comfortable distance. On others, it meant aiming away from trouble even if it made the hole feel longer.

You’re not just playing the shot in front of you. You’re setting up the next one.

That’s how better players think.

The Same Mistake Hurts More the 50th Time

Missing a green in the wrong spot feels different when you’ve done it before.

There’s no excuse.

You can’t say you didn’t know. You can’t blame a bad bounce or bad luck.

You chose it.

And honestly, that’s kind of a good thing.

Because once you take that responsibility, you start making different decisions.

You stop hoping the hole plays differently.

You start playing it for what it is.

And eventually, the course starts feeling a little easier.

Not because it changed.

Because you did.