TRAINING · SHORT GAME
Short Game Routine — 60 percent of practice time on the practice green.
Senior golfers who maintain their handicaps practice their short game 55 to 65 percent of the time. Senior golfers who lose strokes, however, spend only 15 to 25 percent of their practice time on it. One hour on the practice green is 5 to 10 times more valuable than one hour at the driving range—those who implement this fully compensate for lost distance.
EFor a year now, I've consistently started every practice session with 30 minutes of the practice green — before the range. Chips from the rough, pitches 30 to 60m, lag putts 9 to 15m. My scoring average dropped by 3.8 strokes. Half of that came from wedge approach shots, the other half from avoiding three-putts. No one sees it — but everyone feels it in their score.
The short game is by far the most efficient score lever—but it's also the most avoided practice area. Range practice is visible, sounds good, feels productive. Practice green practice is unspectacular, tedious, not photogenic. This very asymmetry is why most senior golfers practice too much on the range and too little on the putting green—and thus forfeit the biggest score lever.
Why 60 Percent Practice Green is the Right Ratio
The Short Game Routine in Detail
Driving for show, putting for dough. The cliché is true — and senior golfers ignore it more than any other group. Change that, and your handicap drops.
— Dave Pelz, Short-Game Coach (Phil Mickelson, Tom Kite, Lee Janzen)
Three principles make short game training effective — and three mistakes make it useless.
Consistency beats volume
A 45-minute session twice a week is more effective than a 3-hour session every two weeks. Short game touch is a matter of frequency, not volume. Consistency builds the motor patterns.
Conditions beat repetition
100 putts from 2 meters are worth less than 30 putts with varying slopes, lengths, and green speeds. Variability trains adaptability – exactly what matters on the course.
Pressure beats relaxation
Three-circle drill with points and consequences (e.g., an additional 5 putts if under 60 percent) trains pressure resistance. Senior golfers without pressure training often collapse in competition—even if they are good on the range.
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What Short-Game Practice Cannot Replace
60 percent practice time on the putting green is the biggest single training lever—but it doesn't replace course management or bag optimization. Someone with a perfect short game who plays with tees that are too long and misjudges their wedge distances will only reclaim a portion of the possible score advantage. Short game practice is the lever—but not a miracle cure. It works in combination with strategy and bag data.