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Holiday Markdowns on Wedges — While They Last!

A New Year’s Resolution List for Golfers (That You’ll Actually Keep)

A New Year’s Resolution List for Golfers (That You’ll Actually Keep)

Every January, golfers make the same promises:
I’ll practice more.
I’ll get better.
I’ll finally lower my handicap.

And by February, most of those resolutions are gone.

The problem isn’t motivation — it’s that golf resolutions are often too big, too vague, or too focused on outcomes instead of enjoyment. The best golf resolutions blend improvement with pleasure, practice with play, and structure with flexibility.

Here’s a New Year’s resolution list designed to make you a better golfer — and help you love the game even morealong the way.


🎯 1. Resolve to Win the Scoring Zone

If you do only one thing differently this year, make it this:

Get better inside 100 yards.

You don’t need a perfect swing overhaul. You need:

  • fewer wasted wedge shots

  • more predictable chips

  • more confident putts inside 8 feet

Resolution idea:

  • Spend twice as much practice time on chipping and putting as you do on full swings.

  • Track up-and-down attempts, not just scores.

Better short game = immediate scoring improvement.


2. Play More Golf — Even If It’s Less “Perfect”

Many golfers wait for the ideal day, the ideal foursome, or the ideal amount of time.

This year, resolve to:

  • play 9 holes instead of waiting for 18

  • walk when possible

  • sneak in twilight rounds

  • play solo when schedules don’t align

Golf doesn’t have to be a production to be meaningful.

More rounds = more joy + more learning.


🧠 3. Practice with Purpose, Not Guilt

Instead of promising to “practice more,” promise to practice better.

A great resolution:

  • 30 focused minutes beats 2 unfocused hours.

  • Have one simple goal each session: distance control, contact, or touch.

Short-game-only sessions count. Backyard sessions count. Putting mats count.

Consistency matters more than volume.


🏌️4. Learn One New Shot This Year

Not ten. Just one.

Examples:

  • a low-running chip you trust

  • a standard greenside bunker shot

  • a go-to wedge distance you can hit on command

Learning one reliable shot builds confidence across your entire game — especially under pressure.


🌅 5. Enjoy the Walk, Not Just the Score

Golf is one of the few sports that gives us:

  • quiet time

  • fresh air

  • movement

  • perspective

This year, resolve to notice:

  • the first tee shot at sunrise

  • the sound of a pure strike

  • the feeling of a good walk

  • the people you share rounds with

Scores fade. Experiences don’t.


👫 6. Play with Someone New

New playing partners change how we see the game.

Play with:

  • someone better than you

  • someone newer to the game

  • someone you haven’t teed it up with in years

Golf has a way of creating connection — and sometimes the best rounds are about conversation, not competition.


📓 7. Measure Progress — Not Perfection

Instead of chasing a specific handicap, track:

  • fewer three-putts

  • more up-and-downs

  • better distance control

  • calmer decisions around the green

Improvement shows up in small wins long before it shows up on the scorecard.


The Best Resolution of All

Resolve to keep golf fun.

Laugh at bad breaks.
Appreciate good shots.
Accept the misses.
Stay curious.

Golf is hard — that’s why it’s rewarding.


Key Takeaway

The best New Year’s golf resolutions don’t demand perfection. They invite consistency, curiosity, and enjoyment.

If you commit to:

  • owning the scoring zone

  • playing more often

  • practicing with purpose

  • and appreciating the moments

you’ll finish this year not just as a better golfer — but as a happier one.


Next Week in Inside the Scoring Zone

We’ll break down one simple short-game habit that can immediately lower your scores — no swing change required.

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