Tracking your stats is like tracking your diet and exercise when you’re trying to lose weight and get in shape. If you aren’t tracking, it’s nearly impossible to figure out what’s helping you toward your fitness goals (and what isn’t). The same goes with golf! If you want to improve your golf game and shoot lower scores, you need to know what to work on. Unfortunately, most golfers struggle and shoot in the 90s or 100s and never improve because they work on the same things at the range. Instead, you need to spend 80% of your practice time on the parts of your game that are holding you back! But if you never track your stats, you will never know what to practice. The cool thing is that the numbers don’t lie. After a few rounds of tracking your game, you’ll quickly realize your strengths and weaknesses. This will help you understand what to practice and how you can improve. This golf journal has space for: Date - Location - Course - Time - Round - Type (checkbox) 18 holes 9 holes - Player Name - Handicap - Time - Club - Course - Purpose - Tee - Weather conditions includes Weather Temperature Wind velocity - Hole score 1-18 - Summary includes Tees played Eagles Birdies Par Bogeys Double Putts Final score - Course rating includes Difficulty Condition Green fee Overall rating - Notes - Blank lined page for writing prompt or journal This golf journal has the perfect places for you to record all the important information that you need to keep track of your progress, your good and bad moments, and of course to remember every round you play.