Iron play
How to Practice Iron Play Under Pressure
Create range games that make iron practice feel more like the shot you face on the course.

Pressure needs a score
If you can rake another ball over every time you miss, your practice has no teeth. Pressure practice gives each iron shot a consequence. That doesn’t mean punishment; it means a clear result you care about.
Try the green-light game
Pick a target that represents a green. Hit one ball with your full routine. If it would finish on the green, you earn a green light. If it misses in a playable spot, yellow. If it would be short-sided, in trouble, or out of play, red. Play nine shots with different clubs and total the colors.
Add course situations
Practice these scenarios:
- 150 yards, water short, safe miss long-left
- 125 yards, back pin, wind helping
- 180 yards, front bunker, center green target
- 95 yards, partial wedge after a perfect drive
Quick recap
Pressure practice teaches commitment. Choose a target, accept one ball, score the result, and learn whether your iron game holds up when the shot means something.