Golf basics for beginners

10 Beginner Mistakes That Slow Down Progress

The habits that make golf harder than it needs to be, plus simple fixes you can use next practice session.

Correct versus incorrect golf alignment diagram

1. Swinging at full speed

Trying to smash every ball usually ruins balance. Fix: swing at 80% and hold your finish for two seconds. Center contact will beat raw effort.

2. Aiming only with your feet

Your clubface starts the conversation. Fix: set the face at the target first, then align your feet and shoulders parallel.

3. Buying unforgiving clubs

Tiny heads, stiff shafts, and low loft make golf miserable early. Fix: choose forgiving irons, a higher-lofted driver, and at least one hybrid.

4. Ignoring short shots

The fastest path to better scores is from 50 yards and in. Fix: chip and putt every time you practice, even for 15 minutes.

5. Changing your swing every video

Online tips can conflict. Fix: keep one main swing thought for a week or two before judging it.

6. Looking up too early

Peeking often leads to thin shots and tops. Fix: listen for the strike before you chase the ball with your eyes.

7. Skipping lessons entirely

Self-teaching can work, but it’s slow when your setup is off. Fix: take at least one beginner lesson to check grip and posture.

8. Playing courses that are too long

Long forced carries and deep rough drain confidence. Fix: start forward or play par-3 courses until contact improves.

9. Getting tight after bad shots

Tension turns one mistake into three. Fix: take one breath, pick a safe target, and make the next swing smaller.

10. Practicing without a target

A pile of range balls isn’t a plan. Fix: choose a purpose: ten balls at a 100-yard sign, ten chips to a landing spot, ten putts from four feet.

For a newer player, FocusGolf is most useful as a pattern finder, not a scorekeeper. The Wear OS, Apple Watch, and Garmin app can detect swings from your watch without club sensors, then show whether rushed swings, tempo changes, or inconsistent speed are showing up again and again. Pair that with shot and distance history in the mobile app and you get a clearer first-year lesson: repeat the swings that feel calm, and stop blaming every miss on mystery.