Golf Is Not a Game of Perfect
Product Details | Similar Products | Customer Reviews![]() | Author: Robert J. Rotella, Bob Cullen List Price: £7.99 Our Price: £4.79 You Save: £3.20 (40%) Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours ![]() |
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![]() | Product Details: Paperback 224 pages Release Date: 07 June 2004 Publisher: Pocket Books ISBN: 0743492471 Rating: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sales Rank: 10355 | ![]() | Look for similar books by subject:
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| ![]() | Customer Reviews:![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() This book is great! (28 October 2008)If you are a keen golfer, this book is for you! I loved reading it and it definitely helped, and helps, with my state of mind on the course. Worth every penny. You can see why he is so popular. Have read a couple of other books, the inner game etc. but they just confused me, giving me too much to think about. Unless you are a complete fanatic and want to play off scratch, this keeps it simple and keeps you focused. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() A Classic (28 August 2008)In a few years this book will probably have become one of the classic golf texts. Bob Rotella who recently helped Padraig Harrington win 2 consecutive Opens (British Open) has a simple message: you will never play a perfect round of golf. Even the best pros will only hit 2 or 3 hots in a round really cleanly. Therefore, the golfer has to accept that the game is about good course management and a sharp short game. This book may change the way you approach golf and will probably stop you beating yourself up over a bad round! A must buy. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sharp, inspirational writing (19 August 2008)I don't play golf, I write speeches for golfers, so I thought I'd read a book to see if it gave me any ideas. Rotella uses golf as a metaphor for life, so I found the lessons that he had to offer could be applicable to writing and any other sport or discipline. There is nothing profound or original about this book, but it is well-structured and easy-to-read. I got out of it, the importance of enjoying yourself when your playing, and not getting too hung-up about mistakes. Change your technique in your own time, just play on the course. Don't allow past disappointments to get you down. Do some 'creative visualisation'. Note that professionals just reduce the number of bad strokes they play to an absolute minimum, they aren't trying to play a winner every shot. (Tennis is a good example of that). Short game is what sorts out the sheep from the goats. I found it a refreshing read, and I got an insight into a golfer's mind. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Good advice but a bit long winded (17 July 2008)I like the Bob Rotella books and find them helpful. The advice can be summarised in just a few pages, but he builds his chapters around the points so that they are a bit more memorable. This will help many golfers and I think it has helped me a bit, but nowhere near as much as improving my technique through mixture of coaching, practice and the odd DVD/technical book. Ultimately if you have good technique the mental side becomes a lot easier as you hit good consistent shots a lot better and think less about your technique when on the course as a result. Also many of the mental lessons are learned through experience anyway eg loosing your temper after a bad shot often affects your next shot if you are not careful and you do not need a book to learn this. Nevertheless, a good read that I still ocassionally refer to as a refresher. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Just Common Sense - probably (07 March 2008)This is an excellent book. I personally have the audio book too which I listen to regularly in the car. There is nothing weird, its not psycho mumbo jumbo. The book is just plain common sense and will just teach you how to execute you golf more thoroughly. Like all things in life the simpler the better and it just sometimes takes someone else to tell you what you already knew. Tom Kite quotes that if you lapse in concentration on 3 or 4 shots per round and if each lapse only costs you 1 shot, that's 12 to 16 shots on a four day tournament and that's the difference between being the all time leading money winner and loosing your card. In amateur land, who wouldn't want to be better by 4 or more shots around just by thinking better? | ![]() |

















