Amanda J Beeler

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Channel Your Inner Scottie Scheffler This League Season

Apr 06, 2026
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As the azaleas bloom and the gallery roars at Augusta, golfers all over the world feel the itch to get their game in shape.

The Masters doesn’t just signal the start of the major championship season. It also lines up almost perfectly with something closer to home: league season at your local course.

In April, you watch the best players in the world play for a green jacket. In May, your name goes on a cart sign and your scores start going on a board.

The situations are different, but the skills that matter are exactly the same.

One of the biggest? Approach play.
If you can control your distance into the green, you stop playing “hope golf” and start giving yourself real birdie (and par‑saving) chances, especially when there’s something on the line.

Today we’re going to borrow a simple approach formula from Augusta and apply it to your 150‑yard shot so you’re ready for competitive play when your league kicks off.


Today’s Tip: Your 150‑Yard Augusta Formula

Think about a typical Masters broadcast.

You almost never hear a caddie or commentator say, “He’s just trying to fly this all the way to the hole and hope it stops.”

What you hear instead:

  • “He’ll try to land this just short of the hole and use the slope.”
  • “He’ll flight this one down, a little three‑quarter shot to control distance.”

Pros respect how the ball reacts when it lands. You can, too.

If you struggle with your 150‑yard shot, use this Augusta‑inspired formula:

  1. Pick a landing spot just short of the flag

    Instead of trying to fly it exactly to the hole, choose a spot a few yards short and picture the ball releasing toward the cup.

    This instantly takes pressure off you. Your goal is no longer “perfect number, perfect swing.” It’s “solid contact to a safe, smart spot.”

  2. Use a smooth three‑quarter 7‑iron

    Many golfers try to hammer a full 8‑iron from 150. That invites tension and timing mistakes.

    A three‑quarter 7‑iron usually gives you:

    • A lower, more predictable ball flight
    • Better distance control
    • More solid contact when you’re a little nervous

    Imagine you’re taking your normal backswing, but you stop just short of full and focus on a smooth, unhurried transition.

  3. Match your tempo to your target

    Before you swing, look at your landing spot and say to yourself, “Smooth to there.”

    • Smooth takeaway
    • Unhurried downswing
    • Balanced finish, holding your pose for 2–3 seconds

    If you can finish in balance, facing the target, your swing was probably good enough to give you a putt.

This combination is often the ideal Augusta formula: a controlled trajectory, predictable distance, and stress‑free birdie looks.

It’s also a powerful league‑night formula.


Quick Range Drill: Build Your League‑Ready 150‑Yard Shot

Next time you’re at the range, give yourself a 10‑ball Augusta session:

  1. Pick the 150‑yard target.
    If your range doesn’t have exact markers, choose the closest one and commit.

  2. Hit 10 balls with a three‑quarter 7‑iron.
    Use the same routine every time:

    • Pick a landing spot just short of the target
    • One rehearsal swing feeling “smooth”
    • Step in and swing, thinking only, “Balanced finish”
  3. After each shot, rate two things:

    • Contact: 1–5 (1 = heavy/thin, 5 = flushed)
    • Tempo: 1–5 (1 = rushed, 5 = smooth)
  4. At the end, circle your 3 best swings.
    Ask yourself:
    “What did those swings feel like?”
    “What did I tell myself before I hit them?”

Write down a quick note in your phone. That becomes the feel and self‑talk you’ll use on the course.

When league starts in May and you have a 150‑yard shot with your group watching, you won’t be guessing. You’ll be replaying a swing you’ve already rehearsed.


Why This Matters For Your League Season

On TV, big moments happen on the back nine on Sunday. In your world, they happen:

  • On that par 3 where everyone always comes up short
  • On the par 4 where you finally have a good drive and a wedge in
  • On the closing hole when one solid shot can win you the match

League play rewards consistency more than occasional brilliance. A reliable 150‑yard shot:

  • Gives you more looks at par and birdie
  • Takes pressure off your short game
  • Keeps you calm when the round starts to feel like a “real” tournament

You don’t need tour‑level speed for this. You just need a simple, repeatable plan.


Ready For More Tournament‑Season Coaching?

League play is kicking off everywhere, and the players who show up with a plan have a big edge over those who “just knock the rust off” every week.

If you want more advice to play your best golf this major season and head into league with confidence, join my Fairway Finder community.

Inside, you’ll get:

  • Weekly, tournament‑season tips tuned to real‑world golf
  • Simple practice plans you can squeeze in before league nights
  • Personalized feedback from me so you’re not guessing what to work on

Time to get out there and channel your inner Scottie Scheffler.

Play More Golf. But Better.

Coach Amanda

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