I'm convinced it's true. I've been thinking about this for some time now, but I'm really just pulling the theory together.
I've been playing golf for about 14 years now. It seems like only yesterday that I was excusing my bad scores by saying, "I've only been playing for a couple of year now." 92 used to sound good when I only started 2 years ago.
I really only started planning regular golf-focused trips about 5 years ago. By no coincidence, that is also when I started paying a little closer attention to the courses and design features. I'm also beginning to think that the fact that it has been 5 years since I broke 80 is no coincidence.
At my best, I made it to an 11 handicap. I've always been one to throw away a few strokes per round due to a lack of focus. Currently, I play to a 15, but I rarely break 90. My adjusted score always supports the 15, but I post too many 7s and 8s to shoot consistently in the 80s. I just bought Dave Pelz's Damage Control, so maybe that will all change!
Here's my theory:
As a golfer that has always struggled with focus during a round, my attention to the course details gives me even more excuse not to focus on my game.
As a mid-handicapper that can hit great shots, but can't execute on demand, trying to incorporate strategy into my game (aiming for certain parts of fairways or greens based on design features) puts me in a worse position that simply aiming down the middle of the fairway and green since the variance associated with my shots is too great to count on hitting it where I want.
I started testing this out last weekend. I played a course I've played before, so I committed myself to not really thinking about the course. I just played golf, and I aimed for the middle on every hole. My score wasn't great, but on the back nine I hit 5 of 6 fairways and 6 greens in regulation. By the end of the round, my swing felt as confident as it has in years. It probably helped that I played only, and I played 18 holes in under 2 hours.
I think I'm on to something. Now I just have to decide whether my interst in GCA wins out against my desire to improve my game!
Have any other mid or high handicappers ever noticed a similar trend? I'm sure that attention to detail would actually help a low handicapper, since they can usually execute.