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Golf Lessons Versus Practice: Which To Choose?

Golf Lessons Versus Practice: Which To Choose?

In almost 30 years of teaching golf, I’ve seen the same pattern repeat itself: golfers throwing money at weekly lessons while never touching a club between sessions while other golfers hit bucket after bucket of balls, just perfecting their slice.

Last week, a guy told me he’d been “practicing every day for months.” When I watched him hit, he was grooving the same over-the-top move that had been destroying his drives since day one.

Most golfers think it’s about putting in the time. Wrong. It’s about knowing when you need someone to show you what’s broken versus when you need to go fix it yourself.

Why most golfers stay frustrated

Many golfers make this mistake, whether they’re picking up clubs for the first time or trying to make cuts on the local mini tour. They treat lessons and practice like they’re the same thing.

When you absolutely need an instructor

Just starting out? Forget YouTube University. An instructor can teach you the proper grip, setup and basic swing mechanics in one session that would take you months to stumble across on your own.

Been shooting the same scores for months? You’ve built compensation moves that feel normal but cap your potential. You’ll beat balls until you’re blue in the face and never find them.

Something hurts when you play? Your mechanics are damaging your body. No amount of practice fixes a swing that’s wrecking your back or elbow. Get help before you’re out for months with a really serious injury.

Keep making the same mistakes? You need fresh eyes. What feels like a tiny adjustment to you might be exactly what you need, but you’ll never know it by practicing alone.

When practice beats lessons every time

Working on stuff from your last lesson? You need at least five to 10 range sessions minimum before booking another lesson. Lessons teach concepts. Practice makes them stick.

Building consistency with something you already know how to do? That’s pure repetition work. You can’t build muscle memory in a one-hour lesson. It takes hundreds of good reps.

Learning your home course or managing your misses? No instructor can teach you how your ball reacts to that dogleg-right on number seven or what happens when you get nervous over water. That’s earned through rounds, not lessons.

Money’s tight? One lesson, plus 10 practice sessions, can yield better results than three lessons with no practice every single time.

What actually works

Smart golfers cycle between instruction and practice. They take a lesson to learn something new or to fix what’s broken, then practice intensely for two weeks. After that time, they check their progress with their instructor to see if they are improving and to determine if any adjustments are needed.

To turbo-boost this process, consider hiring a coach. A coach differs from an instructor in that they constantly check in with the student and maintain an open line of communication between in-person sessions. Coaches encourage and support and always offer feedback. Instructors tend to be cheaper as you pay by the session, while coaches usually cost more due to the increased amount of time spent helping students.

This concept isn’t complicated but most golfers mess it up because they seek shortcuts or are afraid to ask for help when they need it.

The thing that kills both approaches

Expecting quick fixes? Golf doesn’t work that way. Even with perfect instruction and dedicated practice, you will have rough patches and plateaus.

Real swing changes take weeks to feel natural and months to show up consistently in your scoring.

Allow yourself at least a month to decide if something is working for you. Anything less and you’re just chasing your tail.

Stop wasting time and money

Be honest about what you need. Don’t know what’s wrong? Get a lesson. Know exactly what to work on but haven’t put in the reps? Hit balls.

The golfers who improve fastest get this: lessons show you what to practice and practice makes those lessons permanent. If you nail that balance, you’ll leave everyone else in the dust.

The post Golf Lessons Versus Practice: Which To Choose? appeared first on MyGolfSpy.

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