Metal-Play or Match-Play, Stick to the Game-Plan

Contrary to many articles written lately, whether you are playing match-play or metal-play your focus should be on the golf course and your game-plan. Golf should not be played against an opponent. It should be “golfer against the course and the elements”.
In Match-play you score by hole and in Metal-play you score by total strokes. The difference in strategy is that in Match-play each hole is a new beginning. In the case of Metal-play, every stroke counts.
But you should still approach the golf course in the same way - what holes play to your strengths and what holes don’t. Keep your focus on the game-plan. It is when golfers start to think about what their opponents are doing that they begin to put added pressure on themselves such as “I have to make this putt to win the hole.”
Match-play is interesting because it is the “Match-play” mind-set that one needs to consider when setting out a game-plan for a particular golf course. By that I mean that you need to set up your approach by how the course sets up for your game. In match-play, you can’t afford to give up holes that play to your strengths. That makes it much more difficult for you when you come to the holes that don’t play to your strengths.
But the same holds true in Metal-play. You still have to set up your approach based on where you can pick up strokes as opposed to where your game is going to be more challenged.
In Match-play, every hole is a new beginning. But if you can get that same mind-set in Metal-play it will help you to stay focused. In fact, in Metal-play, every stroke is a new beginning.
Golfers often talk about “staying in the moment”, “take one shot at time”…but what is really being said is to stay with your game-plan, your strategy, and let everything else take care of itself. When you listen to the better players, they fully understand that the game of golf is a series of ebbs and flows throughout a tournament/throughout a given round and that you need to be patient and let everything evolve. Then by having a well thought-out game-plan or strategy, you will know where you can be aggressive versus where you need to play more conservatively.
The key here is laying out a solid strategy and staying with the plan. And, might I suggest, writing it out for review on every hole. Whether playing Match-play or Metal-play, stay with the plan and play the course and you WILL SEE more consistent results.













