Visualization

Practical Exercises for Better Visualization

Train the skill with small drills that connect the picture to the shot you actually hit.

Practical Exercises for Better Visualization illustration

Start with short shots

The easiest place to learn visualization is around the green because the landing spot is close enough to see. Pick a towel-sized area, imagine the first bounce, then play the chip. After the shot, compare the picture to the result without judging the whole swing.

Three useful drills

  1. Landing-spot chips: Toss a ball underhand first, then chip to the same spot.
  2. Window wedges: Choose a low, medium, or high window before each wedge.
  3. Nine-ball range set: Hit three fades, three draws, and three straight balls at the same target, even if the curves are small.
Drill Best use What to notice
Landing-spot chips Touch and trajectory First bounce
Window wedges Distance control Height and spin
Nine-ball set Full-swing commitment Start line

Keep score simply

Give yourself one point when the ball starts near the intended line and one point when the finish is playable. That keeps the drill honest without turning it into a mechanics audit.