STRATEGY · MYTHS
The Ten Biggest Senior Golf Myths — Data-Checked.
„You automatically get worse with age.” „Putting suffers with age.” „The driver is the most important club.” Three sentences every senior golfer knows – and all three are demonstrably false. Here are the ten most persistent myths – and what the data really shows.
IAt 65, I thought my golf game was a matter of distance. If only I could hit it 15 yards further, my old scores would return. Three years and a launch monitor later, I know: distance wasn't the problem. My problem was a collection of myths I mistook for knowledge. I've said all ten of these things about my game -- and every one of them cost me strokes until I stopped believing it.
Senior golf has its own folklore. Many phrases taken for granted in clubs don't stand up to data-based scrutiny. USGA studies, PGA Tour stats, MyTPI research, and Strokes Gained analytics have for years shown a picture that deviates significantly from the cocktail bar wisdom in many senior rounds. These ten myths are the most common misconceptions—and at the same time, the biggest score levers when corrected.
Myths 1 to 5 — the most popular
Myths 6 to 10 — the more stubborn ones
What all ten myths have in common: They replace data with habit. Most senior golfers don't play what they could, but rather what they've always played.
— Mark Broadie, Author of “Every Shot Counts”
Three patterns run through all ten myths. Those who understand them have the greatest leverage on their game—not through practice, but through a different perspective on their data.
Emotion trumps analysis
Bag configuration, tee choice, club selection on the hole: Senior golfers usually decide based on feel, not data. The 3-wood off the tee feels like giving up — even if it goes measurably further.
Routine beats reflection
Someone who has been playing the same setup for 30 years no longer sees it as a choice. It's the reflection on the familiar that unleashes improvement—not the next new striking training.
Feeling beats measurement
„I know my distances.” In reality, almost no one knows their own median carry without a launch monitor. The feeling stores the best of the season. Data shows the median — the realistic club.
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What data cannot replace
Senior golf remains a game, not a spreadsheet. The myths debunked here don't replace the fun on the course, the routine with the old driver, the experience on the tough hole. Data is a tool—it shows the levers. Whether you use them is another question. But those who ignore them are leaving strokes on the course that they could have saved with little effort.