Practice routines
How to Structure Practice Routines
Build practice sessions with a purpose, a scoring element, and a clear finish line.

Give the session a job
A good practice routine starts with one question: what do I want to be better at when I leave? A range basket needs a job. Choose range structure, short-game variety, and transfer to the course, then build the session around a small number of reps you can judge.
Inside a practice routine, a useful shape is learn, test, transfer. For routine-based practice, work slowly first, add a measurable challenge, then finish with shots that look like golf.
A simple framework
Shape the routine like this:
- Warm up with easy contact and one shot that matches today’s goal.
- Train the main skill without changing targets too often.
- Test it with a score, target, or consequence.
- Transfer it by changing club or target before you leave.
Leave with evidence
The end of the session deserves a plan. For routine-based practice, if the last thing you did was random and rushed, that is what your brain remembers. End with a clear task you can repeat next time, such as play an imaginary three-hole stretch with one ball.