Welcome to Golf’s Golden Age: How to Make the Most of the Game’s Growth
I’ve been teaching golf for over 15 years, and I’ve never seen momentum like what we’re experiencing right now. The numbers tell an inspiring story: we’re at participation levels we haven’t seen since the Tiger Woods era, more women are playing than ever before, and golf has become recognized as a genuine wellness activity rather than just a recreational pastime. If you’re picking up clubs now or looking to improve your game, you’re joining something special.
But here’s what I want to tell you as an instructor: growth in participation means something important for your development as a golfer. You’re not alone in wanting to improve. The golf community is bigger, more welcoming, and more diverse than it’s ever been. That matters because it means better instruction, more practice resources, and a supportive environment for players at every level.
“Today’s golf economy is broader, more inclusive and more resilient than at any time in the modern era, supported by a multi-channel ecosystem that introduces millions to the game while reinforcing the central role of the golf course as the industry’s front door.”
Understanding Where You Fit In
One statistic jumped out at me when I read the latest industry data: roughly two-thirds of beginners now enter the game with off-course experience. That means simulators, driving ranges with technology, and entertainment venues are creating a pipeline of players who arrive at the course with basic familiarity. If that’s you, you’ve already got a foundation. If you’re coming to golf purely on-course, that’s equally valid—you’re simply taking a more traditional path.
What matters is understanding your starting point. The fundamentals of golf instruction haven’t changed, but how players get exposed to those fundamentals has evolved. Whether you learned your swing on a simulator or at your local range, the principles we’ll work on are identical.
The Mental Game Edge in a Growing Community
Here’s something I tell my students that goes beyond mechanics: golf’s recognized status as a wellness activity—combining exercise, stress relief, challenge, self-improvement and community—gives you permission to approach the game differently than you might have a decade ago. You’re not just trying to hit a good score. You’re engaging in something that genuinely improves your life.
That mindset shift is powerful for your game. When you see golf as a path to personal development rather than pure competition, you become more patient with improvement. You celebrate small wins. You stick with practice routines because they feel good, not just because you feel obligated.
“Tens of millions of Americans now recognize golf’s public health benefit as one of the ultimate wellness activities — combining exercise, stress relief, challenge, self-improvement and community in a uniquely accessible outdoor setting.”
Try this mental checkpoint: Before your next practice session or round, ask yourself what you’re working toward beyond the score. Are you building consistency in your short game? Are you learning how to manage stress on difficult holes? Are you spending quality time outdoors? When you connect your technical goals to these bigger-picture benefits, your motivation becomes intrinsic rather than external.
A Practical Drill for Building Your Foundation
Regardless of where you’re starting from, let me give you a drill that addresses what I see as the biggest gap in most golfers’ practice routines: the disconnect between range work and course performance.
The Nine-Shot Sequence Drill: On the range, hit three balls with each of three different clubs—say a 7-iron, 5-iron, and 3-wood. But here’s the critical part: before each ball, pick a specific target and commit to a complete pre-shot routine. Don’t just swing. Visualize the shot, take your grip, align to your target, and execute with the same discipline you’d use on the course. This takes about 20 minutes, but it builds the neural pathways that transfer to actual play.
Why this works: Most golfers hit 50 balls on the range with the same club, same target. That’s not how golf works. On the course, every shot demands a fresh commitment and target awareness. By rotating clubs and targets, you’re practicing the actual decision-making your game requires.
Course Management for Today’s Golfer
“On-course participation at its highest level since the Tiger Woods–aided peak era of the late 1990s and early 2000s, and total participation (on-course and off) is up 50% over the past decade to more than 48 million.”
With more people playing than ever, courses are busier. That means you need clear strategies for pace and decision-making. Here’s my advice: develop a personal “play-your-game” strategy that emphasizes consistency over heroics. Know your comfortable distances with each club. On tee shots, pick the safest line that still lets you score. On approach shots, aim for the center of the green rather than tucking it close to the pin.
This isn’t conservative golf—it’s smart golf. When you remove pressure by playing within your capabilities, your technical execution actually improves because tension decreases.
Your Path Forward
You’re entering golf at a moment of genuine renaissance. The game is healthier, more welcoming, and more accessible than it’s been in decades. That’s your advantage. Whether you’re working on your first swing or refining a handicap you’ve carried for years, you’re part of a thriving community of golfers committed to improvement and enjoyment.
Focus on fundamentals. Practice with intention. Play the game for all the right reasons—the fresh air, the challenge, the community, and yes, the satisfaction of a well-struck shot. That combination of technical commitment and life-enrichment perspective will accelerate your improvement faster than pure mechanics ever could.
