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	<title>The Dan Plan &#187; hole by hole &#124; The Dan Plan</title>
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		<title>The most amazing week, continued and finalized</title>
		<link>http://thedanplan.com/the-most-amazing-week-continued-and-finalized/</link>
		<comments>http://thedanplan.com/the-most-amazing-week-continued-and-finalized/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Mar 2015 02:42:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[dan]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Favorites]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hole by hole]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[on the road]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[score round]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thedanplan.com/?p=6857</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The tournament was over and the week was drawing to a close.  It had been a fantastic experience, one that will never be forgotten.  And, there was still one thing left to do&#8230;   Play Pebble! The entire group was super excited about this. One last big blast of an &#8230;]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The tournament was over and the week was drawing to a close.  It had been a fantastic experience, one that will never be forgotten.  And, there was still one thing left to do&#8230;   Play Pebble!</p>
<p>The entire group was super excited about this. One last big blast of an experience that we were able to do together.  All four of us had become very close over the week and it is hard to imagine a better group to play Pebble with.  We all had the commonality of golf tying us together and getting to play one of the most famous courses in the world was something that would strengthen the bond that had already been building between us.  I think that&#8217;s one of the best things about golf:  sharing the experience, both highs and lows, with a group of friends old or new.</p>
<p>At any rate, Pebble was going to be played and we also had the pleasure of playing it the day after the tournament and from the same tee boxes as the pros and to the exact same pin placements.  All they did for the Monday round was pick up the flags, mow and roll the greens and then replace the flags.  It was a good challenge and after seeing how the PGA guys played on Sunday it was also a great yardstick for my own progress.</p>
<p>Tim and I decided to go early that morning as we hadn&#8217;t really hit balls in a handful of days and wanted to make sure we warmed up properly.  We got to the Pebble range at about 7:15 and it was exciting to be the first ones out there:</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-6859" src="http://thedanplan.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/IMG_3678.jpg" alt="IMG_3678" width="1632" height="1224" /></p>
<p>After grooving the swing and short game for about an hour I headed down to the iconic putting green near the first hole in order to get the flat stick in line:</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-6860" src="http://thedanplan.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/FullSizeRender1.jpg" alt="FullSizeRender" width="1632" height="844" /></p>
<p>After that it was just about hearing the rules and getting everyone together (it was a shotgun event so all of the players had to gather on the first hole and get in their carts) before heading out for the round.  And then we were off.  We followed the lead and worked out way to the 15th hole which was where we would start the day.</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-6861" src="http://thedanplan.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/IMG_3680.jpg" alt="IMG_3680" width="1632" height="1224" /></p>
<p>The 15th was a good hole to start on.  You tee off through a shoot of trees and then the hole opens up pretty wide, although there are a number of bunkers throughout the fairway.  It is a forgiving hole, but one where you have to be relatively straight off the tee, although can hit anything from 3-iron to driver.  I decided to give driver a whack and was so nervous on the tee shot that I could tell I was shaking a little.</p>
<p>The thing is, playing Pebble for the first time is like going on a date with someone way out of your league.  I hadn&#8217;t felt anything like this on any of the other hundreds of courses that I have played in my golfing days.  On pebble, you just wanted to please the course and not say/do anything stupid.  I felt like it took a handful of holes to really relax and even then you got up to the tee boxes of some of the iconic parts of the course and it was very hard to calm down and go through a normal routine.  I&#8217;m not sure if I&#8217;ll ever have the chance to play it again, but it&#8217;s one of those courses that take a few rounds under your belt in order to really just play the course.  Just too amazing, truly.</p>
<p>On that first hole I was visibly shaking and nervous, but managed to move the ball more-or-less forward.  I pushed it a little but it was findable in the rough.  After we all teed off we did some poses for a few photos and were already running a bit behind.  Tim parked on the cart path (it was cart path only, but carts were enforced this day) and I ran across the fairway to speed things up a bit just to realize that I had not brought the right club, so had to run back and grab a 7-iron and then run again across the fairway.  My heart had been racing before the round even started and now it was out of my chest.  I squared up and tried to make a good approach shot, but again pushed it and it clanked on the top of the bleachers next to the green.  Probably would have seriously injured someone, but luckily there were minimal observers this day.  The ball bounced off the grandstand and I had a nice pitch up to the green and then just barely missed the par putt.  Started the round with a little bogey.</p>
<p>On the 16th hole I hit hybrid and then an 7-iron which landed about a foot short of the green but was on the pin side so hit a tiny chip to a foot and made the putt, my first par at Pebble.</p>
<p>17 is a classic Pebble par 3.  Longish hole with a very small green.  On this day it was playing into the wind as the clouds and wind had picked up on Monday.  The pin sits on the left side of a kidney shaped green playing right at the ocean and the distance was 188 yards to the hole.  I decided to try and but a 4-iron to take a little off but allow for wind and it landed pin high which was awesome.  What I didn&#8217;t realize was that pin high on the right side of the green was perhaps worse than landing short in the bunker on the left side.  Katie ended up there too and we literally didn&#8217;t have a putt.  If it was the tournament I would have hit a flop shot off the putting green over a hump, but seeing as we didn&#8217;t want to take a big pelt on a Pebble Beach green we both putted and ended up about 20 feet below the hole.  It was literally as good as we could have done for the putts we had.  Two putted from there for another bogey.  Live and learn.</p>
<p>And then there was the iconic 18th.  I was so happy that we didn&#8217;t start on this hole as I wanted to be warmed up and in it by the time we hit the 18th.  Such an amazing golf hole.  Being a lefty with a tendency to draw the ball on this box with nothing but water out to the left was a bit intimidating, but it also forced one to make a good swing.  I cut the ball along the fairway with the ultimate goal of hitting to the tree that&#8217;s 280 yards from the box.  Ended up nicely just through the fairway in the first cut of rough.</p>
<p><iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/8Iyml3TlS_Q" width="560" height="315" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="allowfullscreen"></iframe></p>
<p>I don&#8217;t have a 3-wood with me right now and the thought of going for it with a hybrid didn&#8217;t sound too tempting so I laid up with an 8-iron to a good number: 120 yards.  I had a good club in my hand and a great number in front of me. I wanted to stick it close, but honestly was looking around too much and in the moment just didn&#8217;t focus well and pushed the shot to the left side rough about 2 feet off the green.  It was disappointing as I REALLY wanted to birdie this hole, but it was what it was.  I chipped up to about 4 feet and thought I hit a great putt but it broke the exact opposite way which it seemed like it would and lipped out.  Had to settle with a bogey.</p><div class="wpInsert wpInsertInPostAd wpInsertMiddle" style="margin: 5px; padding: 0px;"><div align="center"><script async src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>
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<p>This was a common theme out there.  Everyone said the ball breaks towards the water, but without having a caddy help read the putts they were extremely subtle and hard to figure out.  Yet another reason why it would be amazing to play a track like this a handful of times.  Next time I&#8217;m there a caddy will definitely have to be a part of the round as they could have saved me a handful of strokes this day.  We were having a great time and playing an amazing course so it really didn&#8217;t matter, but it would have been nice to make a few of the putts coming up after this hole ;).</p>
<p>We made the turn to number one and my hybrid off the tee pushed left.  I didn&#8217;t have a look at the green so had to punch out, hit the green and two-putted for another bogey.</p>
<p>The second hole is a fun par 5.  I hit a tee shot to the middle but seeing as there was a huge waste bunker before the green I wanted to play it safe and avoid getting in here as Tiffany was:</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-6864" src="http://thedanplan.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/IMG_3689.jpg" alt="IMG_3689" width="1632" height="1224" /></p>
<p>It&#8217;s way deeper than it looks, probably about 20 feet down to the bottom and maybe 50 yards from the green, just a pure tough shot.  I hit a layup but unfortunately went too far even thought I thought I had played it totally safe with an 8-iron.  Ended up blocked by one of the trees and had to punch out and then hit the green and 2-putt bogey.</p>
<p>At this point I was ready to start playing some better golf.  The third hole is one that you can either play it safe and hit a 200 yard shot to the fairway or go over the trees with a driver.  I took the tree route and hit it to about 80 yards.  Finally connected well twice in a row and had a 5 footer for bird.  Miss-read the putt and tapped in a par.  The 4th is an uphill par 4 with bunkers riddled throughout the fairway and ocean on the right side. I hit driver to about 70 yards and then stuck it to roughly 5 or 6 feet and again didn&#8217;t read the putt right and had to settle for a tap in par.  The greens were just tricky.  It made me appreciate both the putting and the caddy-knowledge that goes on Tour.  You have to both be 100 percent confident in the putts you are making and also really know where they are going to fall.  Being my first time on this course I had neither of those things.</p>
<p>The 5th was a long par 3 with a postage stamp sized green which I doubled by not wanting to go in the ocean so ended up going OB down the opposite side and had to re-tee for the double.  Then was 6, 7, and 8, which are some incredible holes.</p>
<p>The 6th is a par five where you tee shot is sent about 80 feet downhill and then the approach shot is the same distance above your head and completely blind to where you need to hit it.  The tee shot is easy enough being pretty wide open as most holes are out there, just don&#8217;t send it in the ocean and you are gold.  Tim and I both hit down the left side thinking the bunkers were out of play due to hitting into the wind, but mine landed about 3 feet short of the bunkers and his bounced in.  From there I tried to hit a 5-iron up the huge hill not really knowing what to aim for but it didn&#8217;t climb enough to get up and ended up in the deep rough 90 percent to the top.  I hit a 9-iron from there, but again didn&#8217;t know what my target line was and ended up pulling it into the green side bunkers.  I hit the stick on my bunker shot and it landed just a couple feet from the pin, made the putt and walked off with par.</p>
<p>And then there was 7.  The shortest hole on the PGA Tour playing just 100 yards and very much downhill.  It&#8217;s a classic and when the wind is howling I hear it can be brutal.  Today was just a little windy, but there are still bunkers surrounding the green as well as ocean on most sides of it.  I punched a half 50 degree that looked right on the hole but the wind kind of knocked it left and it landed bout 5 feet from the hole.  This was another of those holes that you really want to birdie (not that all golf holes aren&#8217;t exciting to birdie, but some are just precious) and I knew it would break &#8220;towards the water&#8221; but there was water on three sides of my so which water&#8230;  I just putted straight for the hole as I didn&#8217;t want to over read anything and it ended up breaking left a hair more than the cup had to offer.  Tap in par, which wasn&#8217;t too bad all things considered.</p>
<p>I double 8 as I duffed my approach shot, which is a 200 yard shot way downhill over a huge ocean gorge and then had to hit it on the green and two-putt for the double.  The 9th was one where I kind of expected to bogey but was pleasantly surprised to make a par.  It&#8217;s was a par 4 playing 481 yards with ocean breeze pushing the ball left.  I didn&#8217;t connect well and poorly pushed/sliced the driver left into deep rough.  From there I didn&#8217;t have a great lie and was about 230 yards to the hole with a gorge and bunker between me and a pin that was tucked into a 8 square foot section of green.  I decided to lay up with a gripped up half swing cut hybrid and hit a good one down the left side. With 50 yards remaining I hit my 58 degree to about 2 feet and finally made a putt.  That was by far the hardest and longest par 4 that I have played to date and I was ecstatic to have made par.</p>
<p>I three-putted the 446 yard 10th for a bogey after hitting a great approach shot that unfortunately ended up above the hole and I miss-judged the pace.  11 is a shorter par 4 that I hit in two and made par on and then the 12th is a 200 yard par three with a green that must just be no more than 5 yards deep.  When I walked with Jason Day and Charlie Beljan I knew it was a tough hole when both of them missed the green, and kind of by far.  I ended up short sided on the left of the green and made a good flop shot, but it rolled out and it took two putts to make the bogey.</p>
<p>The 13th was the first hole where I felt like I finally &#8220;found&#8221; my driver and hit a decent driver shot.  It&#8217;s always unfortunate to find it late, but great to finally have found it!  I hit it right down the middle on this uphill 403 yard par 4 and had a pretty simple 9-iron to the green.  I pushed it a little and the ball bounced on the green and then hopped off and bounded down the hill to a tricky little pitch shot to the elevated green.  Made a good one as well as sank the putt for a par.</p>
<p>Our final hole was a great one to end on. It&#8217;s a 572 yard par five that has such a crazy green I didn&#8217;t seen anyone go for it in two all week.  The part of the green that the pin is perched on is about 10 square feet and to the left is a huge hill of rough, in front of it is a crazy bunker and to the right the green slopes down at least 6 straight feet to another tier. The play is to hit a good drive and layup to your gold number.  I hit a decent drive but then sliced my hybrid far somehow.  I had to then hit an 120 yard shot over some trees to the tiny island of a perched green and thought I hit it masterfully, but it turns out the ball clipped a branch coming down and ended up on the hill of rough.  I chipped it on and the ball rolled down the hill to the lower tier.  I had no clue what the putt was going to do, but somehow managed to get it in the hole.  It was truly blind luck, but an fantastic way to end an incredible day.</p>
<p>Here is my scorecard from the event:</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-6865" src="http://thedanplan.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/IMAG0293.jpg" alt="IMAG0293" width="2368" height="4208" /></p>
<p>I know there is a long way to go from where I am to where I want to be, but after watching these guys and then playing the same course from the same boxes and tees I have a deeper understanding of what I need to do to get to where I need to be.  They definitely do everything better, as they should.  But, if I had the same skill-set test a year or two ago I don&#8217;t think that I could have sniffed the 80s. There is a lot of work to be done and that&#8217;s the whole point.  I, very hopefully, look forward to having similar opportunities in the future as this was a great way to see exactly where I stand compared to the greats.  In comparison, they are still great and exactly why it is so fun to watch professional golf.</p>
<p>Over and out for now.  I have been back in Portland for a few weeks and the season is about to kick off.  My second &#8220;tournament&#8221; (it&#8217;s a team event so still not exactly tourney) is a two-day event next weekend and I will definitely be posting about how it feels to start a brand new golfing season.  I am very excited the winter is ending and the golf is starting back up.</p>
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		<title>An eBook collection of the blog to date</title>
		<link>http://thedanplan.com/an-ebook-collection-of-the-blog-to-date/</link>
		<comments>http://thedanplan.com/an-ebook-collection-of-the-blog-to-date/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Aug 2014 15:53:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[dan]]></dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[stuart]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thedanplan.com/?p=6609</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This has been an undeniably long and rich journey to date and there are a few people who have followed along since the beginning (I love and appreciate the committed readers!), but most people are being introduced to this years after inception and there really hasn&#8217;t been a good way &#8230;]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This has been an undeniably long and rich journey to date and there are a few people who have followed along since the beginning (I love and appreciate the committed readers!), but most people are being introduced to this years after inception and there really hasn&#8217;t been a good way to read the entire journey from day one.  To remedy that I have compiled a <em>slightly</em> edited eBook of all of the blog posts from the original post up until I shot under par in April 2014.  In other words, from being a paid professional photographer who transitions into the world of golf, spends 5,000 hours practicing and eventually breaks the coveted par number.</p>
<p>I was going to make it a pdf download and ask people to contribute what they thought it was worth, but I thought if I put the book up on Amazon&#8217;s website it would be better formatted for all types of digital readers.  If this doesn&#8217;t work after a couple of months I may put a link to the pdf up as well, but for the time being please think about supporting The Dan Plan by purchasing the book here:</p>
<p>Amazon Unites States:  <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00MTC0NJA">http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00MTC0NJA</a></p>
<p>Amazon UK:  <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00MTC0NJA?*Version*=1&amp;*entries*=0">http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00MTC0NJA?*Version*=1&amp;*entries*=0</a></p>
<p>Amazon Australia: <a href="https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B00MTC0NJA">https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B00MTC0NJA</a></p>
<p>Amazon Germany: <a href="http://www.amazon.de/gp/product/B00MTC0NJA?*Version*=1&amp;*entries*=0">http://www.amazon.de/gp/product/B00MTC0NJA?*Version*=1&amp;*entries*=0</a></p><div class="wpInsert wpInsertInPostAd wpInsertMiddle" style="margin: 5px; padding: 0px;"><div align="center"><script async src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>
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<p>Amazon Japan: <a href="http://www.amazon.co.jp/gp/product/B00MTC0NJA?*Version*=1&amp;*entries*=0">http://www.amazon.co.jp/gp/product/B00MTC0NJA?*Version*=1&amp;*entries*=0</a></p>
<p>And most any other country, email me if you want a specific link or search for &#8220;The Dan Plan&#8221;.</p>
<p>I wish to apologize in advance as a few external links did not translate to this format.  One of the most blaring absences are videos.  On a few occasions I talk about watching a video and it&#8217;s just a blank on the page.  Outside of that the content is whole.  I edited out about one third of the posts but there is still quite a bit of content, too much in a lot of ways.  Down the road at some point I will have a professional editor (or a well versed friend, or myself when the amount of time in a day magically doubles) take a gander at the content and polish it up.  For now, this is the story, more or less, word for word from the beginning.  I hope you enjoy and get some value out of the content.</p>
<p>For every book purchased from Amazon almost $5 goes to The Dan Plan.  Thank you for reading and please help spread the word to anyone potentially interested in seeing what it takes to make such a drastic change in one&#8217;s life.</p>
<p>Cheers!</p>
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		<title>A tournament setback and some lessons to learn</title>
		<link>http://thedanplan.com/a-tournament-setback-and-some-lessons-to-learn/</link>
		<comments>http://thedanplan.com/a-tournament-setback-and-some-lessons-to-learn/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Jun 2014 18:50:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[dan]]></dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thedanplan.com/?p=5980</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I have been replaying this one scene in my mind for the past 18 hours.  It was the pivotal point in the most important round of my fledgling career and I can&#8217;t figure out if I made the right call or bungled the decision by trying to do too much &#8230;]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have been replaying this one scene in my mind for the past 18 hours.  It was the pivotal point in the most important round of my fledgling career and I can&#8217;t figure out if I made the right call or bungled the decision by trying to do too much and reacting rather than stepping back and thinking.  I can&#8217;t get it out of my head, which means that it&#8217;s important and something I can learn from.</p>
<p>What I am talking about was my second shot on the 13th hole of yesterday&#8217;s Oregon Am qualifier, but let&#8217;s back it up a bit and start from the beginning.</p>
<p>I had family visit for the five days leading up the tourney and didn&#8217;t get out to the course during that stay as we went to the coast and I took some time away from practice.  I wasn&#8217;t sure how this would affect my game, but when I went out to warm up yesterday morning I felt fresh and clear headed so I knew it was not going to have any negative affect.  This was a relief as sometimes when I step away from the game for a bit it takes a day to get back into the groove.  Yesterday I felt ready to go and my body was ache free, so all was well.</p>
<p>I was nervous, of course.  This was the biggest tournament I had played in and I knew I could make the cut if I had a decent round.  Also, I have wanted to play in the Am for two years but this year was the first time where my handicap was low enough to get into the qualifier.  To top that, a bunch of friends were following my scores online and I knew plenty of people in the field so there was extra incentive to perform well.  I really wanted this and was excited to get the chance to play.  It felt like a reward, or something that I had earned, to be in the field and my goal was to appreciate that I GOT to play, not to assume anything or take it for granted.</p>
<p>With that mindset I headed out on the first hole of Stone Creek Golf Club in Oregon City.  It was a perfect golfing day: overcast with temperatures hitting 70 and a light wind.  The greens were firm and the course was in pretty good shape all-in-all.  Pins were setup in some interesting and tough locations, but everyone played the same course so fair was fair.  I had played the course once about 3 weeks ago and wasn&#8217;t too familiar with the layout, but there were only a couple tee shots that were blind or didn&#8217;t seem obvious from the box.  I was a little worried about reading the greens well, but that didn&#8217;t turn out to be the breaking point of the round and I only misread one green all day.</p>
<p>The first hole is wide open and I hit a great drive right down the middle to position A.  Then after hitting the green from 150 out I made a downhill putt for birdie.  Perfect way to start: one under through one.  On the second hole, par 3, I missed the green with a little pull and ended up exactly where you don&#8217;t want to be on the hole.  The ball bounced down a hill and came to rest 30 yards out to a short-sided pin well above my head.  I pitched on and lipped out the par putt tapping in for bogey.</p>
<p>The third hole has a hazard down the left side and is wide open on the right.  I tried to aim a hair down the right side of the fairway AND hit a draw to go more right, but blocked the shot and it went left hitting a tree, falling on the cart path and then bouncing into a red staked hazard.  This is a crucial moment as I had to make a tough decision whether to punch out or to take a drop.  There was a rules official standing there (he found my ball) and he gave me the ruling as to where I could take relief.  The relief point did not have a clear shot at the green so if I dropped I would then have to punched out and be hitting my fourth shot to get up to the green.  The alternative was to try and punch out from the hazard to the middle of the fairway and then hit on with my third shot.  Seemed like an obvious choice to punch out, but my ball was sitting against a half-inch thick blackberry root jutting out of the ground and over the ball.  My mind thought of a friend, Chan Song, who broke his hand trying to hit off of a root and who told me it was never worth it, even in competition.</p>
<p>I thought about it for a couple of minutes weighing the pros and cons of the situation and for better or worse decided to hit my 50 degree and punch out of the hazard.  I cut through the root and caught the ball clean.  It bounded out over the fairway and ended up propped up in the rough with a clean-ish shot to the green 150 yards away.  It was a gamble that had paid off.  That said, I hit an 8-iron and the next shot hit a branch and fell down 97 yards short of the green.  I managed a good up and down to save bogey, but it had been a tough hole brought on by a big miss with the driver.</p>
<p>The next hole was a par 5 and much cleaner.  I hit a drive and then laid up to 100 yards with a short iron as the green is very protected by bunkers and the one thing I learned from my only other time playing the course this year is that those are not the bunkers you want to mess with.  Unfortunately I thinned a gap wedge and the ball went over the green; chipped back up and two putted for another bogey.  I was 2 over through 4 and my goal had been to be one over, but not too bad all things considered and I was ready to move on to the next group of four holes.</p>
<p>The fifth hole is pretty wide open, but you don&#8217;t want to miss right as you get blocked by the trees.  So, I pushed the ball again and ended up hitting a tree down the left side dropping it 225 yards short of the green.  I hit a hybrid that landed a foot off the green and then hit a good putt distance-wise but misread the slope and ended up with a 6 footer for par.  Missed that to bogey the hole.</p>
<p>6  is a par 3 with water then bunkers protecting the green.  It was playing 164 yards and the green visual appears small from the tee box.  My memory was telling me not to miss it long, but short is in the bunkers or water.  I really didn&#8217;t know whether I should hit a full 7-iron or try and go with a cut 6-iron.  The wind didn&#8217;t seem to be a factor and the guy I was playing with hit first and went long left.  I decided to go with a 6 to not be short, but my last thought before hitting was &#8220;don&#8217;t be long&#8221;.   I hit it fat and sent the ball into the water.  There wasn&#8217;t a drop zone so I had to re-tee and hit that one fat too but it just barely made it over the water landing in a hazard with a short sided pin.  I had to hit over a bunker with tall grass in my backswing to a green that slopes away from me and I also couldn&#8217;t ground the club as I was in the hazard, but I made a good swing and got it on the green.  I two-putted for a triple.</p>
<p>This was not how I had imagined the first 6 holes of the round going.  I started with a birdie and felt pretty good, but then immediately after hit some off shots and got tight and nervous.  I was now 6 over through 6 holes and knew that I needed to finish around 6 over so had to start playing some good golf.  I loosened up and let go a bit and began to swing more freely.  The next three holes I shot par so turned at 6-over 42.</p>
<p>The back nine is supposed to be the tough nine at Stone Creek and everyone told me that to be safe you need to turn around 38 or 39.  I was a bit behind and needed some catching up.</p><div class="wpInsert wpInsertInPostAd wpInsertMiddle" style="margin: 5px; padding: 0px;"><div align="center"><script async src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>
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<p>I hit a good drive on 10 as it was a wide open hole (something after the round I realized: every wide open tee shot I hit really well, whenever there was trouble down a side I barely managed to get out of the box.  This is something I need to address as it killed me yesterday) and hit the middle of the green on my approach.  I had a long putt for birdie with a double break, but dropped it in the middle of the cup.  On the next two holes I hit the green in regulation and almost dropped a bird both times, but at least managed to get it back to just 5 over through 12 holes.  This was very close to what I was shooting for and I was happy to be back in it with a shot to qualify.</p>
<p>13 was where it all changed.</p>
<p>The 13th hole is a blind tee shot over a hill that has OB down the left side and a creek running through the green around 280 yards from the box.  A driver and even 3-wood will get to the creek as once you hit it over the hill the ball runs hard towards the water.  The guy I was playing with (who was a 2 handicap and a member of the men&#8217;s club at Stone Creek who says he regularly shoots 74-75 out there) hit his hybrid a little left of center.  I remembered when I last played that the ball can kick towards that left OB and you want to be more towards the center or right side of the fairway so aimed for the middle and tried to hit a little draw with my hybrid.  On a related note, for the past few weeks I have really struggled with hitting tee shots with my hybrid again and my confidence level was very low with that club.  But, driver and 3-wood were too much and I didn&#8217;t think 4-iron would get over the hill and the next shot is very long and up a huge hill unless you get down towards the creek.  So, I hit a hybrid and ended up pulling it a little down the right side.</p>
<p>He said I would be fine and maybe just have to punch out at worst and I wasn&#8217;t too disappointed with the shot.  I had made good contact, just pulled it some.  When we got to the top of the hill I saw the rules official walking down towards the creek and started to get worried.  Normally there wouldn&#8217;t be any way that ball made it through the trees and through all of the rough and all the way to the creek, but it must have hit cart path or hard pan as the official said it just kept going.  We found the ball about a foot into the hazard lying in marsh grass 2 feet tall.  It looked like it would be possible to punch out as it was an easier lie than the one I had on the third hole and I could stand on top of a couple of rocks which gave me decent leverage.  There wasn&#8217;t any clean look at the pin and if I had taken a drop I would have had to punch out to the fairway leaving me in the same situation as the 3rd hole where I would have had to hit my fourth shot onto the green.  This approach was up a huge hill and hard enough as it was so I didn&#8217;t want to take the extra stroke and decided to punch out the same as I had before.</p>
<p>I should have asked the official what the ruling was and at least thought about what my shot would have been from a drop.  Instead I went for the punch out.  This time, though, there was a hazard across the fairway and my last thought before hitting the ball was to not send it across into the other hazard.  I swung at it and popped the ball up but it somehow managed to go backwards deeper into the thick rough.  I again decided not to take the drop and then hacked at it again with the same result.  At this point I had to take an unplayable and drop four and punch out with my fifth shot.  I hit a 6-iron up the hill just long of the green with my sixth shot then got an up-and-down for a quad bogey 8.</p>
<p>I had just gone from being in the hunt at 5 over to 2-shots off the cut line at 9 over in one hole.  I can&#8217;t remember the last time I was 4 over on one hole and was a bit in shock from the entire experience.  I have played it over and over in my head since then and just don&#8217;t know what I should have done.  Normally I would have taken the drop and punched out then hit on the green, but I think I was being overly aggressive as I knew I needed to shoot as low as possible to make the cut.  It was an all-or-nothing scenario and I walked away with nothing.</p>
<p>The next hole was a par 3 over a hazard which was playing slow due to the number of balls not hit on the green.  It&#8217;s a short hole playing 135 and we had about 15 minutes to sit on the box and wait for our turn.  The entire time I was trying to rationalize my decision on the previous hole while also trying to get back into the game and tell myself that I still had a shot.  When our turn came up my playing partner hit his in the hazard and I hit a 9-iron just over the green to a backstop but the ball din&#8217;t roll back to the green how it seems like it should.  I had another 5 minute delay on the green while the rules official decided on where my partner could drop and then I had a chance to chip on.  I hit a good one and the ball looked like it was going to hit the cup the entire way but turned just before it and ended up 5 feet past the hole.  I think my mind had wandered as I missed the 5-footer and came off with a silly bogey to now be 10 over through 14.</p>
<p>I was 4 off of what would make the cut and had 4 holes remaining.  The last shot was to birdie out.  There was a hazard on the left side of the 15th hole and I tried to relax, aim for the center and hit my normal draw, but blocked it left and sent the ball into the hazard.  I had to drop at a point where I didn&#8217;t have a clear shot at the green and knew I was out of it for good.  It just wasn&#8217;t my day and a few bad shots really added up and I compounded my mistakes on the 13th hole.</p>
<p>There is a ton to learn from the experience and simply by playing in the tournament I learned a lot about the state of my game and what I need to work on.  Two things jump out immediately:  hitting tee shots when there is a hazard in play and knowing when to take medicine and when to be aggressive.  I think the latter comes with experience and I gained some of that yesterday; the former can be worked on with deliberate practice and is exactly where my focus needs to be right now.</p>
<p>Luckily, I was just invited to play the Royal Oaks Invitational Tournament this weekend.  It&#8217;s a 3-day event this Friday through Sunday on one of the best tracks in the area.  I&#8217;m excited to have three more tournament rounds already on the books and coming so soon and will be thinking about and adjusting my game accordingly after yesterday&#8217;s setback.</p>
<p>It was in no means one of my better tournament rounds to date and I know I could have made the cut, but when you hit 4 balls into hazards in 18 holes it&#8217;s hard to shoot a good score.</p>
<p>I am very bummed, and even somewhat mad at myself, about yesterday, but am going to take that energy and bring it to practice today.  There is a lot to work on and now I have a better idea of exactly what that is.</p>
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		<title>BAM!!  Shot under par for the first time!</title>
		<link>http://thedanplan.com/bam-shot-under-par-for-the-first-time/</link>
		<comments>http://thedanplan.com/bam-shot-under-par-for-the-first-time/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Apr 2014 03:37:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[dan]]></dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thedanplan.com/?p=3442</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This feels great!  For the first time in my life I played a round of golf under par.  It was an unexpected treat and I feel ecstatic and, in a way, a bit relieved for finally crossing that threshold.  The more I think about it the more I realize that &#8230;]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This feels great!  For the first time in my life I played a round of golf under par.  It was an unexpected treat and I feel ecstatic and, in a way, a bit relieved for finally crossing that threshold.  The more I think about it the more I realize that this is a pretty huge milestone and in a way much bigger than passing the 5,000 hour mark last week.  It seems like just yesterday that I broke 80 for the first time.  In actuality, that happened on April 23, 2012 and almost exactly two years later I bested that record round by 9 strokes and broke par by two strokes.</p>
<p>I have been under par deep into rounds (3 under for 14 holes, 2 under after 15, etc) but had yet to manage to bring it all the way home; until today, that is.  I felt the wheels come off a bit when I three-putted on the 16th hole for a bogey, but got it back in gear and finished strong shooting a 70 on a par 72 course.</p>
<p>The course was Heron Lakes&#8217; Greenback track which was fitting as it was the first course I stepped a foot on during this journey and Heron is where I began my golfing practice 4 years ago. I also got to play with some of my golf friends who I have known from the beginning and then celebrate afterwords with a bunch of regulars who were sticking around to watch the basketball playoffs.  And, my first swing coach, Christopher, happened to be on the putting green when I finished so I got to share the round with him and catch up on everything he has been doing in the past 1.5 years since we last crossed paths.</p>
<p>Here is what the scorecard looked like:</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3444" alt="Screen Shot 2014-04-20 at 5.45.29 PM" src="http://thedanplan.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Screen-Shot-2014-04-20-at-5.45.29-PM.png" width="742" height="386" /></p>
<p>It was a day where ball striking was pretty good, chipping was on when needed and I was putting well.  All of these aspects added up to the difference between shooting today&#8217;s 70 and a much more commonplace (for my current game) 76.  That said, there are always shots that didn&#8217;t quite go in and I had a handful of near misses to go with what did go well.</p>
<p>Here is how it breaks down:</p>
<p>1. Driver in the fairway and laid up short of some fairway bunkers with a hybrid.  I had 110 remaining and hit a gripped up 50 degree wedge to about 15 feet.  The putt was tracking the hole the entire way, but veered off an inch before the cup to be tapped in for a par.</p>
<p>2. Pushed the driver but it ended up in the middle of the fairway, albeit it pretty short.  I had 168 to the pin and hit a 6-iron into a slight breeze but caught it fat and the ball came up just short of the green.  Chipped it up with a wedge and made a 4 footer for par.</p>
<p>3. Hit an 8-iron to this par 3 which was playing to a short pin about 155 yards from the tee box.  It landed pin high but about 20 feet to the right of the pin.  Made a good putt that was tracking just like on the first hole and veered off at the end again.  I realized I need to start putting a bit more pace on putts and not rely on them dying in the hole as if the cup isn&#8217;t perfect it sometimes loses track at the end.  Tapped in for par.</p>
<p>4. Hit the driver and was trying to draw it from the left back to the fairway over, but the shot went pretty much dead straight and smacked into a tree hard.  It kicked back out to the fairway and was 143 yards to the pin but behind a medium sized tree.  I hit a 9-iron to get it up and over the tree but caught it fat like on the second hole (didn&#8217;t warm up on the range so was finding my swing on the course) and it came down 50 yards short.  Pitched up with a 58 degree and it landed but bounced through the green as it was coming in from the rough.  Chipped back on and made an 8 footer to save bogey.</p>
<p>5. Hit a good drive on this 500 yard par 5 then hit my 3-hybrid from 225 yards out and the ball landed pin high.  I had a long eagle putt, perhaps 40 feet, and missed it by a foot then knocked in the birdie putt.</p>
<p>6. Crazy hole.  Tried to hit a high draw drive over the fairway bunkers but closed the face and hooked it hard. The ball hit a tree solidly and shot back almost all the way to the red tees.  I had 230 yards to the middle of the green but it was slightly with the wind so hit the 3 hybrid which came down just short of the green but plugged into the face of a green side bunker.  Got my sand wedge on it well and popped the ball out to about 6 feet from the hole and made the par putt.</p>
<p>7. Hit a 5-iron pin high on this 197 yard par 3.  Two putts for par.</p>
<p>8. Drove it through some trees and back out to the fairway and had 115 yards to the pin.  Hit a 50 degree wedge a bit short and two-putted for par.</p><div class="wpInsert wpInsertInPostAd wpInsertMiddle" style="margin: 5px; padding: 0px;"><div align="center"><script async src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>
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<p>9.  A 3-wood down the middle and then stuck my 8-iron to about 3 feet from 151 yards.  Made the birdie putt to turn one under par.</p>
<p>At the turn we switched things up. On the front it was Eric, Brian and I playing in a 3-man skins game and then the assistant pro Nick joined up with us on the 7th hole so at the turn we needed to play a different game.  We decided to play a team game on the back and it took about a full hole to figure out what pops each person got.  We ranged from a plus 1 handicap to a 7.  It didn&#8217;t really matter though as we were all trying to just play good golf.</p>
<p>10. Pulled the drive low and down the right side fairly short.  Hit a 7-iron to try and get back out to the fairway and in scoring range and pulled that a bit too.  Had 124 remaining so hit a full 50 degree wedge pin high but a bit left.  Made a 15 footer for birdie.</p>
<p>11. Hit a good drive down the middle.  Had 118 left so hit a 50 degree a bit easy and was hoping it would land and release towards the hole but it checked up short.  Made a great putt that I thought was going to drop but it veered off at the last second again.  Tapped in for par.</p>
<p>12. Pushed the drive slight right into the rough and then had to hit a hard fade 7-iron around some trees to the green.  Got a hold of it well and it went long over the green.  Chipped back on and then made a 7 footer for par.</p>
<p>13. Pulled the drive low and short into the rough.  Laid up before some water with a hybrid as it was 300 to the stick and I didn&#8217;t have a club that could carry that far.  Had 100 remaining and  hit a half 50 degree that landed and spun back some.  Another good putt right at the hole turned at the last second and I then tapped in for par.</p>
<p>14. This hole can be a round changer for the worse if you are not too careful.  It was playing about 190 today and the green is protected by bunkers with water down the left side.  I hit a 6-iron as it was down wind and I would rather be a little short than long and the ball landed a few feet to the right of the green in the rough.  Chipped up to about 3 feet and made the par.</p>
<p>15. Shorter par 4 with water down the entire left side.  Hit a hybrid to 110 yards and then hit a 50 degree close to the pin, but it spun back about 10 feet.  Another near miss then tap in par putting scenario.</p>
<p>16. Water carry par 3 that was playing 162 yards today.  The pin was at the very front of the green just 4 yards from the water so you couldn&#8217;t be under the hole without serious threats to a water bound ball. I hit a 6-iron into the wind to be safe and landed about 25 feet past the hole.  The green sloped away from me all the way to the hole and then to the water and I let that get into my head leaving the ball about 5 feet short.  I took the next putt a little too lightly and just missed it leading to a 3-putt bogey.</p>
<p>After that putt I had a flashback to past rounds where I was under par so deep just to let it slip through my fingers.  Instead of playing &#8220;defensive&#8221; golf and trying to par out I decided to keep playing my game, which tends to be more aggressive, and stay focussed on aiming for birdies.</p>
<p>17. Hit a drive that was a nice draw but a bit low and it actually landed in a fairway bunker but then got a lucky hop and bounced through landing in the rough with a wide open shot at the green.  I had a downhill lie about 96 yards to the pin and knew it would come out pretty hot so hit a punch 54 degree. The result was nice with the ball ending up about 6 feet above the hole.  Made a good putt knocking in the birdie.</p>
<p>I was really happy about that and despite how much I had been trying to not focus on score through the round I knew that I was under par going into 18.  The best I had previously been was one over par at that point, but today I knew that I was two under and all I needed to do was double bogey or better to shoot par for the first time.  That didn&#8217;t mean it was any easier to hit a relaxed driver or approach shot, though, and even after sticking the green in 2 I was pretty nervous standing over a long putt.</p>
<p>18.  Just wanted to make good contact and finish strong, but got a little quick and pulled the drive some.  I had a clear shot to the pin but it was tucked behind a bunker some 150 yards from where I stood.  I pulled an 8 and was aiming to get close to the stick, but it came out of the rough hot and landed on the back of the green about 40 feet from the hole.  I wanted a birdie for a 69, but also at this point wanted to make sure I at most 2 putted.  Hit it and came up about 4 feet short, then took my time and made a good par putt.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s it, shot a 70!  Looking back I made a couple good saves and putted well, but also had plenty of opportunities to go lower.  I could have shot a 65 today and I could have just as easily shot a 75.  That&#8217;s the way this sport is and today I landed solidly under par with what did actually happen.  Who knows what the future holds, but just two years ago I barely broke 80 for the first time ever.  Hard to say where this path will be taking me over the next two years or the two that will follow that.  Whatever happens it&#8217;s going to be pretty darn exciting.</p>
<p>ps.  Thank you Schuyler and Richard for the donations based on this occasion.  Truly appreciated!</p>
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		<title>A new record and a short golf trip</title>
		<link>http://thedanplan.com/a-new-record-and-a-short-golf-trip/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Mar 2014 14:25:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[dan]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[hole by hole]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thedanplan.com/?p=3352</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I wasn&#8217;t really in the mood to play a round yesterday and when I got a text about a tee time early in the morning I disregarded it for about an hour.  The time had just changed and I didn&#8217;t get to sleep especially early so the morning came a &#8230;]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I wasn&#8217;t really in the mood to play a round yesterday and when I got a text about a tee time early in the morning I disregarded it for about an hour.  The time had just changed and I didn&#8217;t get to sleep especially early so the morning came a bit quicker than expected and I had been hitting a ton of balls through the week so a large part of me was screaming to either take a day off or at least to take it easy.</p>
<p>But, I was coerced by the texts to join my normal Sunday group out at Heron Lakes.  Showing up about 30 minutes early I hit enough balls to loosen up my back and then headed for the first tee.  I hit a decent drive there to the middle of the fairway leaving me a wedge to the hole.  Knocked it tight and dropped the 3-footer for bird.  You can&#8217;t birdie them all if you don&#8217;t birdie the first.</p>
<p>On the second hole my drive pulled hard right, but it was a par 5 so I laid up with a hybrid to 90 yards and then stuck my approach to about 9 inches.  I thought this one had a chance of going in.  The third hole was similar in that I hit my tee shot to exactly 90 yards and then landed the approach a few feet from the pin.  I made a little downhill slider putt for the third bird in a row.</p>
<p>Three birdies in a row is the most that I have ever made.  Walking up to the fourth hole I was aware of this fact, but tried to disregard it and just think about the shot at hand.  It was a par 3 with total water carry and I decided to club up and hit a knock-down shot instead of going for a full swing.  I executed it well and watched as the ball landed about a foot past the hole.  Tapped it in for the fourth birdie of the round and to start four under par.</p>
<p>This felt great.  No matter what the rest of the day held I had set a new personal record and now know that better golf is definitely possible.</p>
<p>The rest of the round was pretty solid through the 14th hole.  On the 15th I have a mental block on this 150 yard par 3 water carry for some reason and for the second time in a row hit a bad tee shot leaving the ball in the water.  I also hit a poor chip on 17 ending in a bogey and then pulled my tee shot on 18 into the water for a final bogey.  Not going to think much about the finishing holes outside of the fact that I need to drink more water, eat more food and stay focussed for a full 18.</p><div class="wpInsert wpInsertInPostAd wpInsertMiddle" style="margin: 5px; padding: 0px;"><div align="center"><script async src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>
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<p>After this we all played an additional 9 holes and I shot one over for those total.  That&#8217;s 4 over for 27 holes which is also a new personal record.  Very good things were happening and outside of a few holes of sliding backwards this is the type of golf that I want and should be playing right now.</p>
<p>Here is the scorecard:</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3353" alt="Screen Shot 2014-03-10 at 7.01.09 AM" src="http://thedanplan.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/Screen-Shot-2014-03-10-at-7.01.09-AM.png" width="741" height="515" /></p>
<p>For the next couple of days I am heading out of town.  Today I will be playing a golf course in Salem, OR and then am going to go to Bend for Tuesday and Wednesday morning.</p>
<p>If anyone is in Bend and wants to tee it let me know.  Also, I have never played in central Oregon so if there are any recommendations of courses to play please tell me.  There are so many incredible golf facilities there, but if you could just play one what would it be?</p>
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		<title>Shot by shot round and a record in the books</title>
		<link>http://thedanplan.com/shot-by-shot-round-and-a-record-in-the-books/</link>
		<comments>http://thedanplan.com/shot-by-shot-round-and-a-record-in-the-books/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Feb 2014 03:56:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[dan]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[hole by hole]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[score round]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[state of my swing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thedanplan.com/?p=3321</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve been trying to do something since last June and finally accomplished my goal today, 4 months and 3 days before my deadline. Namely, to shoot my age on a 9.  I&#8217;ve done it before, but it was at a course where the back side was par 35.  What I &#8230;]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;ve been trying to do something since last June and finally accomplished my goal today, 4 months and 3 days before my deadline.</p>
<p>Namely, to shoot my age on a 9.  I&#8217;ve done it before, but it was at a course where the back side was par 35.  What I wanted to do was to shoot a 34 on a par 36 9.  Today, I finally reached that mark and still have until late June to do it again, and again.</p>
<p>It took some solid realizations before the round with my putting and ball striking and it also came after shooting 5 over on the front.  When I made the turn I was determined not not have any more blow-up holes and to play solid golf.  Here is what the scorecard looked like:</p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-3322" alt="Screen Shot 2014-02-24 at 6.48.02 PM" src="http://thedanplan.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Screen-Shot-2014-02-24-at-6.48.02-PM.png" width="740" height="514" /></p>
<p>I would like to do a hole-by-hole recap as I have not done one of those in ages and might as well on one of the better rounds like today.</p>
<p>Before I start, though, the realization I had with my putting was that I was doing it too much with my hands and not rocking my shoulders enough, which had been leading to slight pushes and pulls that were keeping the ball out of the hole from anything over about 6 feet.  I also found a &#8220;feel&#8221; in my swing which on the range was producing longer and straighter shots, although my irons were still far from consistent today and a focal point in the immediate future.</p>
<p>The round:</p>
<p>Hole 1, par 4:  Straight away hole.  I pulled the drive to the right side rough and was blocked by a large tree that didn&#8217;t allow for a line on the green.  I punched out to a good number then hit my 50 degree from 110 yards to about 6 feet.  Made the putt for par.</p>
<p>Hole 2, par 4:  Tried to hit a baby fade on this dogleg left hole but the wind was cutting across and it ended up clipping a tree and landing short left in the rough.  I had to hit a low shot under some branches with a lot of cut, so from 185 yards I pulled my 3-hybrid and stuck the green, two-putting from 20 feet for par.</p>
<p>Hole 3, par 4:  Hit one of my better 3-wood shots drawing down the middle of this dogleg right and had 104 yards remaining.  I hit a good 54 degree wedge that landed about 10 feet short of the pin, but the green slopes from back to front and I caught it clean so it zipped back about 10 more feet.  Two-putted for par.</p>
<p>Hole 4, par 3:  The pin was tucked behind a bunker and about 190 yards away.  I tried to fade a 3-hybrid into the green with the goal being to stick it in the middle, but made a bad swing and it over-cut into a tree on the left.  The ball came straight down and landed at the base of the tree without any shot for the green.  I had to punch out backwards then hit a flop shot from 30 yards over the bunker.  The shot landed where I wanted it to but rolled out to about 12 feet.  Lipped out the bogey putt and had to tap it in for double. Total bummer.</p>
<p>Hole 5, par 5:  Dogleg left.  Driver went down the left side ending up about 2 feet from the fairway but in the rough.  I hit a good 3-wood to 60 yards, which is the perfect distance for a half 58 degree, but I caught it a little fat and it ended up just short of the green.  I chipped up to the hole then tapped in the par putt.</p>
<p>Hole 6, par 5:  I tried to fade it on this 90 degree hard dogleg left but made a bad swing and pushed it deep into the trees.  On the next shot I tried to hit an 8-iron to get over some trees and back into the fairway, but it clipped the top branch and fell straight down with about 150 yards remaining to the hole.  I was blocked by one tree and had some overhanging branches so attempted a low cutting 6-iron that would run up to the green.  Unfortunately, it hit a branch hard and came straight down with about 140 yards remaining.  I had to hit the same shot or punch out so decided to take my medicine (finally) and punch out.  The ball ended up 40 yards from the green and I flopped it on then proceeded to 2-putt from about 20 feet.  I had tried to play it smart with the 8-iron to start, but sometimes things just don&#8217;t go the golfers way.  Another double.</p>
<p>Hole 7, par 3: Hit a 5-iron pin high, but about a foot off the green in the rough.  Chipped to a foot and made the par putt.</p>
<p>Hole 8, par 4: Finally hit a fairway with the driver.  This is a longer par 4, especially when the ball plugs and into the wind so I had about 185 remaining.  I hit a 3-hybrid that faded too much into the rough, but it was an easy flop-chip and an even easier tap-in putt for the par.</p><div class="wpInsert wpInsertInPostAd wpInsertMiddle" style="margin: 5px; padding: 0px;"><div align="center"><script async src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>
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<p>Hole 9, par 4:  I pushed the driver pretty hard left into the trees and had to punch out to 115 yards.  I tried to hit a small wedge to lessen the winds effect and it came down a bit short.  2-putted from 20 feet for the bogey.</p>
<p>I turned at 41, or 5 over, and was not a happy camper.  It was really two holes that were keeping me from a decent round and I vowed at this point to not have any more blow-up holes.  I walked pretty slow to the 10th tee, to allow myself to refocus, and then was ready for the back side.</p>
<p>Hole 10, par 5: Slight dogleg right.  My drive came down on the left side a little short, popped it up some and had 300 yards remaining.  I hit a 3-wood as ever since I got the new one it has become my go-to club and ended up in the middle of the fairway with 70 yards remaining.  Determined to not leave it short I hit a nice little 58 degree to 5 feet and hit a solid straight birdie putt.</p>
<p>Hole 11, par 3: Riding the confidence from the tenth hole I had envisioned a hole-in-one here, but the ball landed just short of the hole 150 yards away and spun to the left (I tried to hit an easy cut 7 to hold up against the wind).  I made another 5 foot birdie putt, which got me pretty excited.</p>
<p>Hole 12, par 4: This hole is a hard dogleg left and from the tees if you hit a driver straight you end up OB long, so I pulled the 3-wood and cut it nicely, matching the shape of the hole.  I then had 148 yards remaining so pulled the 7-iron again and tried to put on the same swing as the previous hole: a little knock down cut.  I swung with only arms, though, and ended up drawing it into the rough on the right side.  My chipping was solid today and the ball landed about 4 feet from the hole.  Made the putt for the par.</p>
<p>Hole 13, par 4:  This is a shorter hole with a decent dogleg right.  I pulled the driver and made a good swing at it and ended up with just 130 to the back pin.  I tried make an easy comfortable swing with the 9-iron, but pulled it slightly and the ball landed pin high but plugged in a bunker lip.  This was a gnarly spot to be and I didn&#8217;t really know what to do but to try and blast it out.  I got very lucky and the ball popped out and also ended up just 12 feet from the hole.  It was a straight putt and I made it for the par.</p>
<p>Hole 14, par 4: A bit longer dogleg right hole.  I hit a good driver but it rolled into the right side rough.  I had 146 yards to an elevated green, but felt like 8-iron was the right stick so made a full swing and drew the ball around some trees ending up just 10 feet from the pin.  I read the putt for about a minute then made a good stroke and it fell for birdie.</p>
<p>Hole 15, par 5:  A fun par five with water on the approach shot. I hit a decent drive that ended up in the right rough about 240 yards from the pin.  To clear the water I needed to carry it 200 yards.  I decided 3-wood was the stick rather than laying up and playing safe as I was feeling it today.  I hit a good one that plugged about a foot from the green.  It&#8217;s a huge green with quite a bit of undulation and I made a good chip, but it checked up a hair more than I thought leaving me 12 feet of putt.  I read some left to right break and made a good stroke but the ball kept its line and lipped out on the high side.  Tapped in for par.</p>
<p>Hole 16, par 4: Another fun hole that doglegs 90 degrees right and a driver can go long into the water past the fairway.  I hit a 3-wood right down the middle and had 104 yards remaining.  I let the wind get a little too much into my head and since it was slightly behind me I decided to hit an easy 54 degree and let the wind take it.  It landed a bit short and then, to my surprise, spun back about 15 feet.  I two-putted from 25 feet for par.</p>
<p>Hole 17, par 3:  150 yards over water into the wind.  I hit a 7-iron as I thought the wind would knock it down but the ball landed 45 feet past the pin.  I gave it a little too much umph.  Two putted from that distance for par.</p>
<p>Hole 18, par 4:  I really wanted to shoot a 32 at this point.  Really wanted it.  I hit a low drive down the middle and ended up with 140 yards remaining.  My irons hadn&#8217;t really been directionally &#8220;on&#8221; today, but I thought an easy 8 towards the pin would be simple enough, definitely a better idea than going after a 9.  But…  I made one of the worst swing of the day: didn&#8217;t post up, rotated way too much through the swing and shut the face.   Everything was not well with that swing, by any means.  I pulled it to the right about pin high, but also 10 yards off the green.  I hit a decent chip that ended up 4 feet from the hole, but with a little downhill slider of a putt.  After reading it for a bit I hit a soft little tap that didn&#8217;t break quite as much as I thought and rolled right past the hole.  Had to knock it in for a bogey.</p>
<p>Despite the small mishap on 18, I am still very proud of the back side today.  It took me from a disappointing 41 on the front to my best Riverside round to date 75.</p>
<p>A similar thing happened score-wise yesterday.  I shot a 43 on the front of a different course then got it together and carded 38 on the back.  Not nearly as fun as today, but it is making me wonder what I have to do to score better right out of the gate rather than wait until I have to pull myself together.</p>
<p>That is what I will work on figuring out next.  I have a feeling there is some good visualization drills out there that can help get things started on the right foot.  I&#8217;ll be working on that and getting my irons back in check.</p>
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		<title>Good signs abound, but never make assumptions</title>
		<link>http://thedanplan.com/good-signs-abound-but-never-make-assumptions/</link>
		<comments>http://thedanplan.com/good-signs-abound-but-never-make-assumptions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Sep 2013 01:40:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[dan]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[coaching]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[goals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hole by hole]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[score round]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[state of my swing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[swing aspects]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thedanplan.com/?p=2989</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A few days ago, my coach, Bruce Furman, and I played a round together for the first time.  In retrospect, I am kind of surprised that it has taken us this long to tee it up together, but we both have a bust schedule and plans for rounds in the &#8230;]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A few days ago, my coach, Bruce Furman, and I played a round together for the first time.  In retrospect, I am kind of surprised that it has taken us this long to tee it up together, but we both have a bust schedule and plans for rounds in the past were shelved as something came up on one of our ends.  Regardless, it was great to get out there with him and play some golf.</p>
<p>His brother was visiting from Texas and I met them on the 7th hole as I had to bring the kids to school and couldn&#8217;t make it down to Langdon until about 10.  Teeing it on the 8th I pushed the drive into the weeks and then teed it again and pulled the drive to the 9th fairway.  It&#8217;s about how the driver has been going and it was good for Bruce to see the real state of my game.  On the next hole I pulled it again then on 10 I managed to top the ball.  The rest of my game was playable, but the driver was holding me back as always.  On 11 he had me grip down and keep my whole turn more &#8220;one piece&#8221; and I hit it down the middle.  Same thing on 12, 13 was a par 3 that we all hit and then on 14 I managed to hit another fairway.  It was like some sort of miracle and I realized how impressive a good coach is.  He could watch a few drives and know exactly what I needed to hear to get them going straight again.  Really amazing.</p>
<p>The next day I played a match play round with Country Club and started down 4 holes with a string of bogeys.  I remembered what Bruce told me and started hitting some fairways and greens and before I knew it we were on the 18th tee box and I was just one hole down. It&#8217;s been ages since our match play rounds have come down to the 18th hole as I have been playing erratic and he has had a solid summer as a sub-2 handicap.  On 18 we both hit the fairway then I pushed my 6-iron a bit into a trap and he landed his shot short of the green, spinning it back down a slope ending up 35 yards short of the pin.  Seeing as he was out, he hit first.  I knew that I had to win the hole to push it to a playoff and was completely ready to hole out my bunker shot.  As fate would have it, Eric holed out for a birdie closing the door on my chances to push the playoff.</p>
<p>I didn&#8217;t win the match, but at least made it a match for the first time in countless weeks.  It felt good to be able to put some pressure on him and I could tell my game was moving in the right direction.  I just need to play more G as he says.</p>
<p>The next day I headed out to Heron Lakes to play as there was a tourney at Riverside.  I walked on and played with some strangers and hit the ball better than I have since January.  I hit 9 fairways and 11 greens in regulation.  Unfortunately, I didn&#8217;t make a putt all day, ending up with 33 putts (including one hole that I chipped in) and shot a 77 with one double bogey on a 187 yard par 3 that I pushed into the water.  It was a solid round that made me very happy.  I am pretty sure that it is the first official &#8220;new swing&#8221; sub-80 round which is awesome.  The past couple of months have been a scoring struggle, so it&#8217;s good to see a decent number on the board once again.</p><div class="wpInsert wpInsertInPostAd wpInsertMiddle" style="margin: 5px; padding: 0px;"><div align="center"><script async src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>
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<p>Today I met with a man who is helping me redesign thedanplan.com in the morning and then headed to Riverside to play a Riverside match play match.  The match started on the same note as yesterday&#8217;s round:  I was 3 up through 4 holes with solid shots and good short game shots, but then hit an errant drive on the 5th hole.  I lost that one and then on 6 I was still 2 up and my playing partner hit his tee shot OB.  I thought &#8220;I have this&#8221; and tried to hit a slight fade to suite the hole, but strangely topped the ball into the water.  I teed it up again and topped it again.  The third ball I sent hard left into the water.  It was as if something had un-clicked and all of a sudden I felt like I wasn&#8217;t sure how to hit a drive again.  Easy come-easy go.  I lost the next two holes to go one down and then pushed the 9th.  After the turn my driving struggles remained and I lost the 10th and 11th.  I hit a decent one on 12 and won that hole to get back to 2 down, but hooked and sliced the next two to go back to 3 down.  On 15 I simply tried to hit the ball solid and pushed it into a tree which dropped the ball just 100 yards from the tee, leaving me with 400 to the hole (par 5).  I layed up and then hit the green, but my opponent made a birdie shutting the door on the round.</p>
<p>It was very disappointing to lose after starting with such a great feeling about the game, but it reminded me of why I have decided to play more golf and spend less time on the range right now:  because I need to learn how to find it while out there.  On the range you can drop another ball and figure out what you are doing wrong, on the course you do not have that luxury, nor do you have a coach standing behind you telling you what you are doing wrong, rather you have to be able to self-adjust accordingly.</p>
<p>These are great experiences and I am excited for this next stage of the project.  The new swing still needs some tweaks, but it is finally good enough to bring to the course and when I remember to do it correctly, and make some putts, I can truly push to the next level in my game.</p>
<p>This weekend I am playing in a two-day tourney for the first time since April of this year.  It&#8217;s been far too long since I competed in a stroke play event and I am excited to get after it again.  Last year I totally butchered this event, which is the Forest Hills Am.  This year my goal is to beat my two-day total from last year by at least 15 strokes.</p>
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