A buzzz and a beer wrote:The mental game is one of the things that I am working on right now. Recently I have been killing myself mentally on the course. For putting my confindence just isnt there, and I keep getting really frustrated which then effects the end of my round.
Right, I do the same thing. I go to
that place, which is a terrible place to be and takes all the joy out of playing disc golf.
A buzzz and a beer wrote:To deal with this I am currently just working on staying calm and taking my normal amount of time on every shot (rather than rushing cause of being frustrated). The other thing I am doing is just practicing the 20-25ft putts in my back yard.
I often try to practice at the distance where my putting percentage falls off dramatically over a few feet.
My usual practice putting level inside the circle is:
0-12 ft: 100%
12-18 ft: 90%
18-22 ft: 80%
22-26 ft: 40%
26-34 ft: 25%
You can see that my usual falloff is at around 22 ft. So I practice that distance a lot.
My tournament putting level inside the circle is:
0-8 ft: 100%
8-12 ft: 60%
12-18 ft: 40%
18-24 ft: 20%
24-34 ft: 5%
In this case, my falloff begins at around 10 ft. So I thought I would go back to practice putting at 10 ft. I've found that, incredibly, there are times when I can't hit a single putt from 10 ft even during practice, except by sloppy luck! So I stop practicing immediately, and come back later. Then there are times when I hit everything from 10 ft, and consider it a good confidence building exercise, a la Mark Ellis.
I also keep a running statistic on my putting percentages (both on paper and mentally), and of course I can compare what my round score would be like if I could putt in tournaments as well as I putt in practice. I estimate that I would be at least 970-980 rated if my tournament putting were as good as my practice putting, keeping everything else (drives+upshots) the same. Instead I'm at 914, and even shot some rounds under 900 recently, where I was missing 10 ft putts all day.
A buzzz and a beer wrote:I have been working on a new form since last fall...
Yeah, me too, and I often wonder if this is the source of my troubles. I was a very solid putter before I started tweaking things. It probably got me out of my comfort zone. And then when things don't work I tweak them again, and again, and never settle down. This is where I can probably gain a lot of improvement, and as others said, develop my routine and get into the rhythm.