Greens in regulation

Using Greens In Regulation to Build a Better Practice Plan

Turn greens in regulation into targeted practice instead of guessing what went wrong after the round.

Using Greens In Regulation to Build a Better Practice Plan illustration

Turn data into range time

Start with the round where you struck the ball solidly but still made few birdies — GIR data often explains that gap. In an 8-iron from 145 that misses pin-high left, the score may feel random, but the card usually shows a pattern. Maybe the GIR misses were all short from a specific distance, or always to the same side, or from rough lies where the approach had no real chance.

Build practice like this:

  • One distance band: identify the yardage range where most GIR misses cluster.
  • One target zone: practise approaches from that range, tracking miss direction rather than result.
  • One course test: on the next round, aim to the centre of the appropriate zone rather than directly at the pin.

Keep score differently

For one session, track only whether each approach lands in the zone that leaves the easiest putt — not just whether it hit the green. That distinction changes the practice target completely.

Putting it in focus

FocusGolf turns the GIR number into a fuller picture. When the app runs on your Wear OS, Apple Watch, or Garmin during a round, it tracks shot distances and club history automatically — so a GIR miss at 165 yards comes with context about which club was used, where in the session it happened, and how consistent the carry was that day. That detail takes the GIR number from a verdict to a starting point.