Tee shots

How Tee Shots Affects Ball Flight and Scoring

Understand why the first shot of the hole has such a large influence on the rest of it.

How Tee Shots Affects Ball Flight and Scoring illustration

Ball flight is your strategy report

A tee shot that starts on line and curves predictably gives you options. A ball that starts at trouble and curves farther toward it gives the hole control. Watch the full flight: start direction, curve, peak height, landing, and bounce.

  • High spinny slice: face open to path, often with too much tension.
  • Low pull-hook: face closed early or path too far from the inside.
  • Pop-up: steep contact or tee too high for the delivery.
  • Low heel cut: standing too close, losing posture, or cutting across it.

Scoring is about the next shot

A 285-yard drive in the trees is not automatically better than a 235-yard ball in the fairway. Tee-shot value depends on penalties avoided, approach angle, lie, and whether you can attack or must recover.

Hole feature Tee-shot priority
Out of bounds on one side Start away from it, curve away if possible
Wide landing area Driver can be worth the risk
Tight neck at driver distance Lay back to the wider section
Firm fairway Plan for bounce and roll, not just carry

A confident tee shot is aggressive when the hole allows it and disciplined when the miss is expensive.