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Story By Aksh Gupta

You know the feeling before the round even begins. You arrive early, warm up well, and feel like today could be solid. Then you notice who you are playing with. The swing looks effortless, the tempo unhurried, the confidence unmistakable. A single digit handicap has a way of changing the atmosphere before a ball is struck. You tell yourself it is a good learning opportunity, but somewhere underneath that thought sits a quieter one.
Do not embarrass yourself.
From that moment, the round is no longer just about the golf course. It is about how you look while playing it.
Most golfers believe they can simply play their own game regardless of who they are paired with. In theory, that sounds reasonable. In practice, it almost never happens. Golf is played alongside other people for hours in near silence, with long walks and long waits that give the mind too much room to wander. When the player next to you is clearly better, those empty spaces fill up with comparison. Without realising it, three forces begin to influence every decision you make.

Ego creeps into club selection, speed interferes with rhythm, and comparison rewrites how you judge your own shots.
Ego rarely announces itself.
It appears quietly when the better player pulls a smooth seven iron and you find yourself holding the same club, even though you normally hit an eight from that distance. You do not want to look short, so you convince yourself to swing a little harder, just this once. Golf punishes that logic every time. The swing you trust becomes a swing that is trying to prove something, and while nothing looks dramatically wrong, the results slowly drift away from control. Ego does not cause disasters. It causes small compromises that add up over eighteen holes.
Speed follows soon after.
Better players move efficiently. They decide quickly, walk briskly, and rarely seem flustered. Watching that, you begin to feel slow. Your routine shortens without you noticing. You stop taking the extra second to settle your feet or breathe before the shot. What feels like keeping up is actually abandoning your own tempo. Rhythm in golf is personal, and borrowing someone else’s pace almost always leads to rushed swings and poor decisions, especially under pressure.
Comparison does the most damage because it changes how you interpret outcomes.
The better player misses a fairway and still makes par. You hit the fairway and walk away with bogey. Suddenly your good shots feel ordinary and your mistakes feel amplified. You stop playing the hole in front of you and start playing an invisible match that was never agreed to. Golf was never designed for side by side benchmarking. It is a private negotiation between you and your limits, and the moment you start asking why you are not as good, you stop doing what makes you better.

The irony is that the better player is not thinking about you at all. They are not judging your swing or tracking your score. They are dealing with their own problems, just at a higher level. While you are carrying your expectations, their reputation, and a future score that has not yet happened, they are simply focused on the next shot.
This dynamic often affects good amateurs more than beginners or elite players. Beginners expect to struggle. Elite players expect to perform. Good amateurs sit uncomfortably in between. They want validation, and playing with someone better threatens that sense of belonging. So instead of accepting the gap, they try to erase it immediately. Golf does not reward catching up. It rewards staying honest.
The most useful shift you can make when playing with better golfers is to stop trying to compete. Your goal is not to be impressive. It is to be repeatable. Choose boring targets, make boring club selections, and commit to boring decisions. Let them hit the shots that draw attention. Your best rounds were never exciting. They were calm, patient, and controlled.
The next time you are paired with someone clearly better, remind yourself before the first tee shot that your only competition that day is your patience. Not their swing. Not their score. Just your ability to stay within yourself. Playing with better golfers does not expose a lack of skill. It exposes your relationship with expectation. Fix that, and their presence stops hurting your score. In some cases, it might even help it.
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