Tim Lee has a message for golfers preparing to take in the Canadian Open
this weekend: practice how you play. Lee says the trick to truly becoming a
better golfer - or acquiring any new motor skills - is to plan, execute and
evaluate. Credit: Michelle Donovan
When it comes to golf, practice doesn’t necessarily make perfect – but
perfect practice might.
Fans of the game are preparing to
take in the Canadian Open at the Hamilton Golf and Country Club this weekend.
Tim Lee, a professor of kinesiology who researches motor control and learning,
says most of them don’t practice in a way that’s similar to how they play.
“Think about a typical driving
range,” he says. “The lies are flat, you start with the ball in a spot that’s
favourable, you grab a bucket of balls and hit 20 shots in a row with a 7-iron.
What could be more different from the way you play the game?”
Lee regularly speaks to golfers
looking to improve their game, and tells them about the “three Bs” of practice:
biomechanics, behaviour and brain. It’s the last B, he says, that is often
overlooked.
“You should prepare for a shot in
advance, execute it and then evaluate it. Practice, and therefore learning,
takes some mental effort,” he says. “Repetition, in the absence of planning and
evaluation, will probably do very little for you.”
Lee also says instructional
feedback from others is also important to becoming a better golfer, but that
too much feedback can be a bad thing.
“You need to be able to evaluate
your own swing,” he says. “If something is going wrong, you need to be able to
understand what it is and how to fix it. You’re not always going to have
someone standing over your shoulder telling you how to play, so you shouldn’t
when you practice, either.”
Lee, a golfer himself, has found
that common wisdom – even when endorsed by famous golfers such as Tiger Woods
or Jack Nicklaus – isn’t always correct.
In 2008 he found that golfers who
keep their heads perfectly still while putting – as Woods and Nicklaus say you
should – may actually be doing themselves a disservice.
With the help of an infrared
tracking system, Lee and his team found that both expert and less-skilled
golfers move their heads the same amount during putts. The difference, however,
is in the direction: less-skilled golfers tend to move their heads in the same
direction and with the same timing as the motion of their putter.
The experts, on the other hand,
move their heads in the opposite direction to the putter, and reverse when the
putter reverses.
Lee suspects the experts
counteract the destabilization caused by the putter’s backswing with a forward
motion of the head.
Although putting is the most
frequently used stroke in golf, Lee says the most common question he is asked
is about changing strokes altogether.
“The number one question I get
is: Is changing a swing different than learning a swing for the first time? In
other words, if you have someone who has never played the game, do you teach
them differently than someone who has learned, but learned incorrectly?”
He says players trying to change
their swings have to be aware of the bad habits they have picked up over time.
“Those new to the game have
nothing to fall back on,” he says. “But otherwise, the role of practice and
feedback is pretty much the same. There’s no real difference in the process of
learning something new versus changing what you’re already doing.”
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