You Know You're Bad
When we first began to play this game we ultimately became obsessed with, being so bad
wasnt a problem. We attributed our inept play to the fact that we really had no idea
what we were doing just yet. As time went by, we may have taken a lesson or two, made a
habit of hitting a bucket of balls at least once a week, and even forked over some serious
cash for a "real" set of clubs. Now, its 10 years later and, after all
that, we still suck.
Now, you might consider yourself a so-called "bad golfer" because Moses had
an easier time getting out of the sand than you do but the inability to make shots and
score well are only the tip of the ice berg when it comes to defining a real bad golfer.
We have compiled a check list of sorts from which you can compare yourself to see if
you fit the bill as a real "Bad Golfer."
You know youre a bad golfer if
- You consider a good round one in which you lost only half-a-dozen balls.
- More than once, you have attempted to return a club because "somehow it
snapped."
- You have old, gnarly golf balls in your bag specifically to be used for over water
shots.
- You refer to your driver as the "Big Dog" but hit it like a little puppy.
- You "prefer" to hit an iron off every tee.
- When playing in a club tournament, you get a stroke on EVERY hole.
- You can remember the one good shot you had all day.
- You buy balata balls to "get that extra 10 yards."
- You are told "youre still away" more than twice on the same green.
- You "crush every shot" at the practice range but cant get one more than
10 feet off the ground on the course.
- Your ball retriever is the most often used piece of equipment in your bag.
- There is one hole at your home course on which you can never score below double bogey.
- You and your group have rules for taking Mulligans.
- You have more than the regulation 14 clubs in your bag, including two putters.
- Your playing partners use the term "nice lag" to describe your putts that
never reach the hole.
- You need a sand-blaster to remove the dirt from your clubs from taking divots.
- You blame everything and everyone except yourself for a bad shot.
- A huge sigh of relief occurs when you are chosen as the last one to tee off at the first
hole.
- You buy cheap golf balls because you know you will end up losing most of them.
- You think changing clubs will improve your game.
- You get excited over a deep ball mark created in the green by your approach shot.
- You leave the flag in on an eight-foot chip shot from the fringe in hopes of having it
stop your ball.
- You feel an undue amount of pressure when teeing off with people watching and always end
up hitting a bad shot.
- You have more than three logo balls in your bag and none make a matching set.
- You constantly leave yourself further from the hole after a chip shot.
- You have thought to yourself that if you hole out from 140 yards, you can still make
bogey.
- You shot in the 80s once and have never come within 15 strokes of duplicating that
score since.