Clubface control
Beginner vs Advanced Approaches to Clubface Control
How clubface control priorities change as players move from basic contact to tighter shot windows.

Same topic, different job
Beginners need a broad, playable version of clubface control: make contact, start the ball reasonably near the target, and learn what the face feels like. Advanced players need tighter windows, different trajectories, and the ability to adjust without panic.
What to prioritize
| Golfer | Main goal | Practice cue |
|---|---|---|
| Newer player | Predict the start line | Slow swings with centered contact |
| Mid-handicapper | Reduce the big miss | Pick one curve and own it |
| Competitive player | Control windows | Vary height, curve, and yardage |
The mistake is borrowing the wrong priority. A 20-handicapper doesn’t need a tour-player window; a scratch player can’t live on vague feels.
Keep the ladder moving
Move up only when the current skill shows up on the course. A range draw, a flighted wedge, or a cleaner transition counts when it survives a sidehill lie and one chance.