The Golf Life Cycle: How to Handle Good, Bad, and Indifferent Play with Mark Immelman
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In this episode of On The Mark, Mark Immelman returns from Scotland with fresh insight from a week of Links Golf, the Genesis Scottish Open, and Open Championship week. Mark breaks down Tom Kim's impressive victory at the Genesis Scottish Open and shares what golfers of all levels can learn from his patience, maturity, shot-making, routine, and renewed approach to the game. After a period of searching, coaching changes, and mental clutter, Tom Kim found his way back by simplifying his swing, trusting his process, and accepting that even great work does not always produce immediate results.
Mark also dives into the unique demands of links golf: firm fairways, tight lies, pot bunkers, wind, trajectory control, creativity, patience, recovery, and attitude. Whether you are preparing for a golf trip, watching The Open Championship, or simply trying to improve your everyday game, this episode is packed with practical lessons you can apply immediately.
In This Episode, You'll Learn:
- What Tom Kim's Scottish Open victory teaches golfers about patience and maturity.
- Why good practice does not always guarantee good results.
- How expectations can hurt your performance.
- The "Golf Life Cycle" of good, indifferent, bad, indifferent, and good play.
- Why you should not panic when your game starts trending downward.
- How to identify your strengths, habits, and tendencies as a golfer.
- Why short game and recovery skills are essential when your ball striking is off.
- What Tom Kim changed in his swing to create more consistency.
- How quiet wrists can help stabilize the club face.
- A simple centered pivot drill you can do at home.
- Why "Operation 30" can help golfers stop overthinking.
- How to play firm, fast links conditions.
- Why the chip-and-run is so valuable on tight lies.
- How to vary trajectory and club selection in changing conditions.
- When to use the putter from off the green, and
- How to better understand and manage wind on the golf course.
Key Takeaways:
- Golf improvement is holistic. Fitness, energy, walking endurance, mindset, and swing mechanics all affect performance.
- Links golf rewards patience, creativity, recovery, and smart decision-making.
- Tom Kim's win was a lesson in maturity, patience, conviction, and simplifying the mind.
- When your game gets shaky, return to your fundamentals instead of trying every quick fix.
- Great players make their bad days decent by relying on short game, putting, and smart course management.
- Quiet wrists can help improve club face control and ball striking consistency.
- A centered pivot can help improve contact, especially in wind.
- Doubt creates tension, and tension wrecks golf swings.
- A confident swing with the wrong club is often better than a doubtful swing with the right club.
- Wind hurts more than it helps, so plan accordingly, and
- Practicing different trajectories, uneven lies, and wind conditions can prepare you for real golf.
This podcast is a one-stop shop where you will get game improvement insights, Links Golf insights and a nugget or two on how to deal with the inevitable slumps in golf. Watch it on YouTube - search and subscribe to Mark Immelman.