Why Most Golfers Never Improve and How You Can

Links for Life

Tommy Thompson

November 18, 202555 min
Golf

Why Most Golfers Never Improve and How You Can

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Episode Notes

In this episode of Links for Life, Tommy and Joe unpack one of the most surprising realities in golf: most golfers never actually get better. Handicaps stay the same for years, even decades — not because people aren’t trying, but because most golfers don’t know how to practice in ways that lead to real improvement.

This episode dives deep into the art of practicing well. Tommy and Joe explore why so much effort gets wasted, what effective practice actually looks like, and how intention, experimentation, and honest self-assessment can transform both your game and your enjoyment of it. They break down practical strategies for range sessions, short game work, overcoming weaknesses, and building an off-season plan that sets up a breakthrough season ahead.

Whether you're new to practice or you’ve been stuck at the same scoring plateau, this episode gives you a clear, encouraging roadmap for how to finally start improving.

Takeaways:

  • Most golfers fail to improve because they practice the same habits without intention.
  • Effective practice is purposefultargeted, and fun enough to keep you engaged.
  • Gamifying practice boosts focus and accelerates learning.
  • Experimenting with ball flight and feel on the range teaches more than grinding stock shots.
  • Short game practice is essential — yet it’s the least practiced part of the game.
  • Honest self-assessment helps you identify what’s actually holding you back.
  • An off-season plan turns “winter rust” into real progress.
  • Balancing strengths and weaknesses keeps practice structured and sustainable.
  • Improvement comes from rhythm, reflection, and the courage to face what’s sabotaging your game.
  • Better practice in golf mirrors better practice in life — clarity and intention matter everywhere.

Golf Self-Assessment List (1–10 Scale)

Use this to determine where your practice should go:

  • Putting
  • Chipping
  • Sand play
  • Pitching
  • Half wedges (40–70 yards)
  • Irons
  • Fairway woods / hybrids
  • Driver

Life 360–Style Reflection List (as applied to golf)

Framework referenced by Tommy:

  • Communication
  • Finances
  • Marriage / relationships
  • Parenting
  • Health
  • Work / vocation
  • Personal growth
  • Emotional life
  • Spiritual life
  • Rhythms / rest

Chapters

00:00 The Challenge of Improvement in Golf

02:42 The Importance of Effective Practice

05:48 Mindset and Intentionality in Practice

08:53 Making Practice Fun and Engaging

11:49 The Role of Intention in Practice Sessions

14:50 Experimentation and Learning on the Range<