Executive courses

How to Score Better on Executive Courses

Specific executive-course golf checks that replace guessing with cleaner evidence.

How to Score Better on Executive Courses illustration

Make the check specific

How to Score Better on Executive Courses gets better when the feedback is narrow. Rather than judging the whole game, ask the short-course plan to answer one question and ignore the noise around it.

Better evidence

Use a short comparison built around executive-course golf.

Check What a golfer should learn
Leave uphill putts whenever the green allows it Whether the first executive-course golf choice is reliable enough.
Club down on short par 4s when trouble narrows Whether the short-course round changes when conditions shift.
Treat every tee ball as a scoring decision Whether this executive-course golf idea belongs on the course.

Putting it in focus

Executive courses are ideal places to learn your scoring distances, and FocusGolf can help without slowing the round. On a Wear OS, Apple Watch, or Garmin watch, it tracks shots and distances while also saving session history, so you can see whether your 9-iron, pitching wedge, and half-wedge gaps are honest. The goal is simple: fewer mystery yardages when a short par 3 asks for precision.

Keep the useful part

Keep the part of executive-course golf that holds up after several tries, and drop the part that only looked good once.