Cast your eye down the following list of golfers.
- John Daly
- Trevor Immleman
- Lee Janzen
- Chris DiMarco
- Mike Weir
- Anthony Kim
- David Duval
- Bill Rodgers
- Yani Tseng
- Ian Baker-Finch
What do the above golfers all have in common?
They all scaled the heights to become one of the world’s best, including winning major championships, only to see their game vanish over-night.
Not a fun place to be I would imagine. But it’s something that happens to all golfers, whether it’s through age or lack of play, as life and everything else gets in the way.
At first you don’t notice it, it’s just a gradual deterioration.
You don’t quite play as well as you used to. The good rounds are few and far between and when you do play well you never score quite as well as you used to.
Might only be two or three strokes here and there, but it’s enough.
And that’s the thing with this game, it keeps telling you you’re nearly there. If only I had just hit a couple more fairways, if I’d just been a bit better with my lag putting.
But you weren’t. That’s the thing and the rot could have set in.
Now granted some of the above golfers suffered injuries which put paid to their careers, but for most it was a complete decline in form which saw them fall from the leading lights.
And you want to know the number one way to ensure you don’t suffer a slow, gradual decline in form which can lead to a game that’s worse than Chinese water torture?
By implementing the things I talk about in my e-book “9 Ways To Lower Your Handicap & Shoot Your Best Round Ever”, it’s all right here for you to get by clicking this here link.
Bob James PGA