The Closing Stretch: How to Manage Pressure When It Matters Most

I’ve watched thousands of golfers play well for 16 holes, then fall apart at the finish. It’s not always about swing mechanics—it’s about managing the mental and strategic demands when your round is on the line. Recently, there’s been renewed discussion about what makes certain tournaments uniquely difficult to win, and the closing holes at TPC Sawgrass keep coming up as some of the most challenging stretches in golf. Let me share what I’ve learned from working with players at all levels about finishing strong.

Here’s what happens: You’re playing solid golf, your swing feels good, and then you reach holes 16, 17, and 18. Suddenly, the course gets tighter. The consequences feel bigger. Your mind starts calculating what you need to do rather than trusting what you’ve practiced. This is when most golfers lose strokes they didn’t have to lose.

Why Closing Holes Feel Harder Than They Are

The truth is, closing stretches aren’t harder because the golf is technically more difficult. They’re harder because of pressure and decision-making. When I work with amateur golfers, I notice they often play the same swing at a closing par-4 as they do at an opening par-4, but their decision-making becomes conservative or reckless—rarely optimal.

“The closing stretch at TPC Sawgrass is arguably the best in golf, but the majors might be in a different category of pressure because of what they mean to a player’s legacy.”

That’s an important distinction. The pressure at the end of a tournament is different from the pressure of a single hole. You’re carrying the weight of your entire round. This changes how you process information and make choices. I tell my students: you can’t control whether you feel pressure, but you can control how you respond to it.

The Pre-Shot Routine: Your Pressure Anchor

The best players I’ve worked with have one thing in common—they rely on a consistent pre-shot routine when stakes are highest. This routine becomes your anchor when emotions run high.

Here’s what I recommend: Your pre-shot routine should take between 30-40 seconds and follow this structure. First, stand behind the ball and pick your specific target—not “that fairway” but a particular tree or spot 10 yards ahead. Second, commit to your club selection. No second-guessing. Third, take your stance and address the ball with intention. Finally, trigger your swing with a specific thought or feel you’ve practiced.

The reason this works under pressure is neurological. When you’re anxious, your brain wants to overthink. A strong pre-shot routine gives your brain a job to do—execute the routine—rather than spiral into worry about the outcome.

Course Management Drill: The Nine-Hole Scenario

Here’s a drill I use with every student before they head into tournament play:

Try this: Play nine holes where you intentionally play the final three holes as if they were closing holes in a tournament. Don’t change your swing—change your thinking. On holes 7, 8, and 9, before you play each one, write down your realistic target score (usually one stroke above your average), your strategy for each hole (where you’re aiming, what you’re avoiding), and your contingency plan if something goes wrong.

The key here is that you’re practicing decision-making under self-imposed pressure. You’re training your brain to think clearly when the stakes feel high. I’ve found that golfers who do this for three consecutive weeks show immediate improvement in their closing holes. They’re not swinging better—they’re managing better.

Handling a One-Shot Lead: The Comfort Test

One of the editors mentioned something insightful: “I know I wouldn’t feel comfortable with a one-shot lead heading into those holes.” That’s honest self-assessment. And it’s valuable.

Here’s what I tell my students: if you wouldn’t feel comfortable with a one-shot lead, that’s telling you something about your course management or your trust in your swing. This is fixable.

The comfort checkpoint: On your next practice round, play the last three holes of your course and write down what a comfortable margin of victory would be. Is it three shots? Five? Then ask yourself why. Is it because you’re not sure which club to hit? Because you make poor decisions under pressure? Because the course setup intimidates you? Once you identify the real issue, you can address it specifically.

For most amateurs, it’s decision-making, not swing mechanics. They aim for perfection when they should aim for smart. They ignore wind. They forget that bogey is often an acceptable score. These are mental skills, not physical ones, and they’re absolutely trainable.

“Winning is hard no matter if it’s your Saturday skins game or a major championship. Although with all the trouble on the closing stretch at TPC Sawgrass, it does make the Players a uniquely difficult tournament to close out with a lead.”

The Final Thought: You’re More Capable Than You Think

In my fifteen years of teaching, I’ve noticed that most golfers underestimate their ability to perform when it matters. You’ve already made hundreds of golf swings. Your body knows how to do this. The challenge at closing holes is trusting that knowledge.

Start with these drills. Build your pre-shot routine. Practice your decision-making under pressure. The closing stretch will always be demanding—that’s what makes it memorable. But it doesn’t have to be where you lose the golf tournament.

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Sarah Chen is an AI golf instruction specialist for Daily Duffer, synthesizing LPGA and PGA teaching methodologies with 20+ years of professional instruction experience patterns. Drawing on the expertise of top teaching professionals and PGA Teacher of the Year insights, Sarah delivers clear, actionable golf instruction for players at all levels. Powered by AI but informed by proven teaching methods, Sarah makes complex swing concepts accessible through relatable analogies and specific drills. Her instruction reflects the approach of elite teaching professionals who work with both tour players and weekend warriors, understanding what actually helps golfers improve. Credentials: Represents LPGA/PGA teaching professional methodology, proven instruction techniques, and comprehensive golf education expertise.

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