How to Stop Blow-Up Holes (Before They Start)
Most golfers don’t lose rounds because they can’t hit good shots.
They lose them because one hole gets away, and everything unravels after that.
A bad drive.
A rushed recovery.
One decision made out of frustration instead of clarity.
Suddenly, a playable
round turns into a number you don’t even want to write down.
The truth is, blow-up holes aren’t caused by bad swings.
They’re caused by breakdowns in decision-making, emotion, and structure — especially under pressure.
That’s exactly what How to Stop Blow-Up Holes is built to
fix.
This isn’t about swinging better.
It’s about keeping control when things don’t go perfectly — because they never do.
Inside, you’ll learn:
- Why most blow-up holes actually start before the first bad shot
- How to limit damage after a miss instead of compounding it
- The decisions that quietly add 2–3 strokes without you realizing it
- How to stay aggressive when it’s smart — and
conservative when it saves strokes
- A simple framework for recovering mentally and strategically mid-hole
The goal isn’t to play safe golf.
The goal is to play smart golf when it matters most.
Golfers who eliminate blow-up holes don’t magically hit it straighter.
They just stop making the one extra mistake that turns bogey into double… or worse.
If you’re tired of rounds
being defined by one or two holes, this is where the change starts.
👉 How to Stop Blow-Up Holes
One hole shouldn’t control your entire round.
This shows you how to take that control back.