About The Book
The Good Golf Blueprint
“Blueprint” is not just any golf book that is collecting dust on your bookshelf. This one actually goes into the details, such as not only swinging better, but also how not to be such a dismal failure at being able to practice in the first place. Travis does not simply drop tips to you and walk off; he gets into the mental aspect of things (since, as we all know, golf is 70 percent mental breakdown), he gets you thinking about how fit you are, and he even teaches you how to practice without losing your mind.
The book does not preach to pros or merely baby newbies. Whether it means trying to reach 100 the first time or scraping the smallest shreds off your handicap, there is something in here. Those chapters in the book do not simply wander: they take you through the sections of your game that make you normally want to break a club in half: the swing, the short game, putting, etc.
The emphasis on conscious practice is the greatest victory here. You should also have a target, monitor your improvement, and really notice whether you are becoming less awful. It seems to go without saying, but the vast majority of golf books omit that. Travis tells it like it is, tells his bad luck, and leaves you a playbook that is not fluff.
Thus, when you feel sick of the same old visualize-the-ball-nonsense and you are tired of humiliating yourself on the course, you can pick up the book “The Good Golf Blueprint.” You might pay off someday, maybe you might.