Lesson Notes: Offense Strategies for Intimidating Tee Shots
The Goal: To make tight, hazard-lined driving holes approachable by altering your physical alignment on the tee box, refining your target focus, and eliminating arm tension.
Step 1: Strategic Tee Box Positioning
Avoid the Default Spot: Many golfers routinely step off the golf cart and tee up their ball directly next to the path. On holes with trouble down that side, this positioning exposes your ball flight straight to the hazard.
Change the Angle: Move over to the opposite side of the tee box. This simple shift alters your visual perspective, allowing you to aim and shoot diagonally away from the danger zone. Match your side of the box to how the fairway curves and your typical ball flight.
Step 2: Lock in a Specific, Positive Target
The Overcompensation Trap: When a major hazard like water is visible, golfers often think, “just stay away from that,” and aim excessively far in the other direction. This severe shift disrupts the connection between your brain and body, frequently resulting in a poor swing because you sub-consciously don’t want to hit it that far offline.
Pick a Small Target Zone: Instead of focusing on what to avoid, select a hyper-specific feature in the distance—such as the exact top of a distant tree or a small landing window—and commit your focus purely to that line.
Step 3: Commit to a Free-Flowing Swing
Tight fairways cause players to get protective, which leads to guiding, steering, or forcing the clubhead through impact. Steered shots rarely go straight. Use this checklist to maintain an uninhibited tempo:
Relaxed Practice Swings: Make a practice motion emphasizing a free-flowing, smooth tempo that feels loose and loose in the arms.
The Pre-Shot Routine: Stand over the ball, take a deep, calming breath, and waggle the club face. Waggling relieves structural tension in your hands and upper body just before you start the backswing.
FAQ
Q: How do I know which side of the tee box is best for my specific ball flight?
A: As a general rule of thumb, you want to tee up on the side of the trouble if you want to fade or draw away from it, or tee up on the safe side to create a wide angle away from the hazard. Experimenting with different spots during practice rounds will show you which view gives you the most comfortable visual runway down the fairway.
Q: Why does a club waggle help so much when I feel anxious over the ball?
A: Anxiety causes your muscles to freeze and tighten up, particularly in your hands, wrists, and forearms. Keeping the club head in motion with a light waggle prevents this static freezing, keeping your muscles relaxed and ready to transition into a smooth, unforced takeaway.







