Warum du nie konstant Golf spielst!

Do you sometimes play really well on the golf course – and then it all falls apart again? In this video, you'll learn why your golf game constantly fluctuates between "one minute great" and "one minute terrible," and why true consistency often doesn't begin with your swing, but with your behavior after the last shot. Consistency in golf doesn't mean hitting every ball perfectly. No golfer plays flawlessly. What's crucial is how quickly you regain your composure after a good or bad shot. Many golfers lose their consistency not because of a single mistake, but because of the reaction to it: A bad drive leads to a repair shot. A good score leads to a protective shot. A missed putt lingers in your mind and influences the next tee shot. This is precisely how this familiar pattern develops: one hole great, the next terrible. In this video, I'll show you why your golf game remains so inconsistent and how you can use the three-shot test on the course to determine whether your consistency is truly failing due to your swing – or what happens between your shots. Many golfers lose their consistency not because of a single mistake, but because of the reaction to it. In this video, you'll learn: • why consistency doesn't mean playing flawlessly • why you shouldn't become "a different player" after every shot • why repair shots make your game unstable • why protective shots often take away the very freedom that made you good • how to recover more quickly after mistakes • why a bad shot doesn't automatically mean a bad hole • how to develop more stability on the course with the three-shot test • why true golf performance happens between shots The key takeaway: Consistency doesn't mean you don't make mistakes. Consistency means you don't disappear after a mistake. If you want to play golf more consistently, especially under pressure, then this video is for you. Golf Performance Weekend in Westendorf At my home club, Golfclub Kitzbüheler Alpen Westendorf, I'm not offering traditional mental training weeks for groups this year. Instead, I work individually and directly on the course – over an extended golf performance weekend from Friday to Sunday. We work on the areas where consistency is built or lost: • after a poor tee shot • before an important putt • with a good score • after an unnecessary mistake • on tight fairways • when making difficult decisions • in moments where old patterns usually take over. The goal is no longer theory. The goal is implementation: clear routines, better decisions, and more stability on the course. If you are interested in the individual golf performance weekend at GC Kitzbüheler Alpen Westendorf, send me a short email with the sentence: "I am interested." Email: [email protected] You will then receive further information about the schedule, dates, and options.