The IMAGEN Golf Podcast

Why You Need A Stock Shot, It's Your Superpower!


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Welcome back to The IMAGEN Golf Podcast, everyone. I'm your host, Daniel Guest, and it is great to be with you. You know, we spend a lot of time on this show talking about the perfect swing, the latest technology, and drilling those technical points. But today, I want to talk about something that is fundamentally more important to your score than any of that: Your Stock Shot.

That's right. The one shot shape, the one flight, the one trajectory that you can hit under pressure with 80% confidence. It is your ultimate, reliable superpower on the course. And I'm going to tell you why having it and, crucially, committing to it, is the biggest needle-mover in amateur golf.

🎯 What Exactly IS a Stock Shot?

First, let's define it. Your stock shot isn't your best shot. It's your most consistent shot.

  • Is it a 2-yard fade? Great.
  • Is it a 5-yard draw? Fantastic.
  • Is it a low-flighted stinger with your long irons? Perfect.

It’s the shot that feels most natural to your body's movement. It's the one you don't have to think about; you just have to execute. When the pressure is on—the 18th hole, you need a par, the pin is tucked—what is the shot you go back to? That's your stock shot.

đź§  The Psychological Advantage: Decision-Making

This is where the magic really happens. Golf is a game of managing misses and making decisions. When you step onto a tee box, if you are equally trying to hit a straight shot, a draw, or a fade, your decision-making process is slow, stressful, and loaded with complexity.

But if you have a stock shot, everything simplifies:

  1. The Target is Clear: If your stock shot is a fade, you're not trying to hit the ball straight down the middle. You're aiming down the left side of the fairway and allowing the ball to move back to the center.
  2. Less Self-Talk: You eliminate that crippling voice in your head that asks, "Should I try to draw it here?" The answer is always: No, hit your stock fade. You save mental energy and build confidence by sticking to the plan.
  3. Pressure Relief: When you know your tendency—let's say you always miss with a push-fade—you can strategically use that knowledge. You aim for the left rough knowing your stock shot will likely correct itself back into the fairway. You've turned a potential disaster into a manageable situation.
Remember, consistency is not about hitting the ball perfectly; it's about hitting your shot shape reliably.🛠️ How to Find and Commit to Your Stock Shot

So, how do you find this golfing superpower?

1. Analyze Your Misses, Not Your Pures

Go to the range. Hit 30 balls with your 7-iron and truly observe the shape of the shot. Don't look at the three perfect ones; look at the 25 others. Is the majority shape a pull-draw or a push-fade? Don't try to fix the shape; embrace it. Whatever the majority shape is, that is your natural tendency and what you should adopt as your stock shot.

2. Master the Miss (The IMAGEN Principle)

Once you've identified your stock shape, your practice should focus on narrowing the window of your miss. If you hit a draw, you're not practicing how to hit a fade. You are practicing how to:

  • Make your draw smaller (tighter curve).
  • Make sure your draw starts on the right side of the target line.

The great players don't hit the ball straight; they hit the ball with a very predictable curve.

3. Change Your Aiming Strategy

This is the commitment part. You must stop aiming at the center of the target.

  • Draw Players: Aim at the right edge of the target (or even the right rough) and allow the ball to work back.
  • Fade Players: Aim at the left edge of the target (or even the left rough) and allow the ball to work back.

Commit to this strategy on every single full swing—driver, iron, hybrid. This is how your stock shot becomes a routine, not a lucky outcome.

🔑 The Bottom Line

Your golf swing is an athletic movement. You cannot force your body into an unnatural position under pressure.

By adopting a stock shot, you are doing two things:

  1. You are cooperating with your natural golf swing.
  2. You are injecting certainty into a game defined by uncertainty.

You will make clearer decisions, you will manage the golf course better, and I guarantee you, you will lower your scores.

Stop chasing the mythical straight shot. Identify your curve, embrace your curve, and use that curve to dominate the course.

That's all the time we have for today. Thank you for tuning into The IMAGEN Golf Podcast. Now, get out there, find your stock shot, and start playing your best golf.

🎯 Grooving Your Stock Shot: The IMAGEN Practice System

Alright, listeners, you’ve identified your stock shot—let’s assume it’s a fade or a draw. Now, we need to groove it so it's automatic under pressure. This three-point system moves you from hitting the shape occasionally to hitting it reliably.

1. The Gate Drill: Defining Your Starting Line

This drill is all about controlling the most crucial element of your stock shot: the start line. Your stock shot must always start on the opposite side of the target line from where you want it to finish.

Setup:
  • The Club: Use a mid-iron (6, 7, or 8 iron).
  • The Gates: Place two alignment sticks (or even two tees) on the ground, forming a small "gate" about 18 inches in front of your ball. The gate should be angled to ensure the ball starts where you want it to.
    • For a Draw: The gate should be aimed a few yards right of your target (or $5^\circ$ open to the target).
    • For a Fade: The gate should be aimed a few yards left of your target (or $5^\circ$ closed to the target).
Execution:
  • Hit 20 balls. The goal is simple: The ball must pass through the gate without touching the sticks.
  • The shot shaping doesn't matter yet; the focus is 100% on controlling the clubface at impact to ensure the ball starts on the correct line. This locks in your path and face relationship.
2. The Curve Commitment: Controlling the Magnitude

Once you can consistently start the ball on line, we work on controlling the amount of curve. We want the curve to be small, predictable, and repeatable—that perfect 2 to 5-yard movement.

Setup:

Place one alignment stick on the ground, pointing directly at your target. This is your desired finish line.

  • Take your stance and aim your body/feet parallel to your required starting line (right for a draw, left for a fade).
Execution:

  • Hit 20 balls, focusing on visualizing the ball landing on your target stick.
  • Draw Focus: Feel the clubface slightly closed to the path, promoting that leftward curve.
  • Fade Focus: Feel the clubface slightly open to the path, promoting that rightward curve.
  • The Key Metric: Track where the ball lands relative to the center line. If the curve is too big (too far off the center line), focus on making your path and clubface closer together on the next swing. We are seeking a narrow corridor of movement.

3. The On-Course Stress Test: Play the Shot, Not the Hole

This is the final step, translating the range work to the course. We need to create consequence and commitment.

Setup:

  • Play 9 holes, or just focus on 5 driving holes.
  • Before every tee shot, verbally commit to your stock shot. For example: "I am going to aim at the bunker on the right and let my 4-yard draw bring it back to the center."
Execution:

  • The Rule of Three (Non-Negotiable): Before you step up to the ball, you must define:
    1. Start Target: (e.g., the right edge of the water hazard)
    2. Finish Target: (e.g., the center of the fairway)
    3. The Curve: (e.g., 3 yards of draw)
  • No Straight Shots: Even if the hole is dead straight, you must aim off-center and commit to your stock shape. This builds the routine and trust.

By consistently executing these three steps, you move beyond "hoping" you hit a good shot to "knowing" the shot shape you will produce. That is the essence of low-score golf.

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The IMAGEN Golf PodcastBy Daniel Guest