Alternate shot strategy

Common Strategic Mistakes in Alternate Shot Strategy

Identify the choices that quietly cost teams strokes and replace them with calmer alternatives.

Common Strategic Mistakes in Alternate Shot Strategy illustration

Mistake: playing your own game

Alternate shot punishes solo thinking. A player may love attacking a back pin, but if the miss leaves the partner short-sided in thick rough, the team paid for that ambition. Every shot should be judged by the next shot it creates.

Mistake: automatic driver

Driver is not mandatory. On narrow holes, a fairway wood or hybrid that leaves a full approach can be smarter. The goal is not to prove who hits it farthest; it’s to keep the ball in a place where the next player can swing freely.

Mistake: vague layups

“Just lay up” is not a plan. Lay up to a number your partner likes. If they love 90-yard wedges but struggle from 55, choose the club that leaves 90. If the fairway narrows at that number, adjust.

Mistake: emotional silence

Some teams stop talking after a bad shot. Others talk too much. Both hurt. Agree on a reset phrase before the round, such as “next good target.” It gives the team a way to move forward without pretending the mistake didn’t happen.

Better alternatives

  • Choose safe sides of greens before approaches.
  • Favor full swings over touchy half-shots under pressure.
  • Club down when the miss with driver is a penalty.
  • Keep encouragement specific and short.
  • Review decisions after the hole, not during the walk to a tough lie.

The theme

Most alternate-shot mistakes come from trying to be impressive. The better strategy is usually less dramatic: leave playable angles, trust the partner, and avoid making one error become three.