JUNIOR GOLF SCOREBOARD | COURSE MANAGEMENT & ANALYTICS
- susanpetefish
- 4 days ago
- 4 min read
You’ll Never Get the Most Out of Your Game Without This
Utilizing strokes gained and course management aren’t just for the pros - they’re the secret weapon every junior golfer needs to take their game to the next level.
Let me ask you something. After your last round, did you walk off the 18th green knowing exactly why you shot the score you did? Not a guess. Not a feeling. Knowing the specific shots, the specific decisions, the specific holes where strokes slipped through your fingers?
Most junior golfers can’t answer that question. And that’s not a knock on them. Most golfers can’t answer that question. It’s a system problem. We’ve built a junior golf culture that rewards range time, obsesses over swing mechanics, and isn’t taught how to truly play the game of golf. We are ignoring the factors that predict scoring improvement better than almost anything else: strokes gained analysis, course management, and discipline.
I’m Chris Petefish from Course of Action Golf, and I’ve spent years playing golf at the highest levels and working with players at every level. The gap I see most consistently between juniors who plateau and juniors who keep improving has more to do with course strategy and discipline than anything else. I was that junior/amateur golfer that plateaued and wasn’t getting any better.
"The best junior players I’ve coached didn’t just work harder. They worked on the right things and Strokes Gained told them exactly what those things were."

What Is Strokes Gained and Why Should a Junior Care?
Strokes Gained (SG) is a statistical framework originally developed by Columbia Business School professor Mark Broadie and adopted by the PGA Tour. At its core, it measures how many strokes you gain or lose compared to a baseline either the Tour average or a benchmark for your specific playing level.
Instead of telling you that you hit 9 of 14 fairways, Strokes Gained tells you whether those drives actually helped your score. Instead of counting putts, it tells you whether your putting is genuinely costing you shots relative to other players at your level.
Here’s why this matters so much for junior golfers specifically: you’re still developing your game. Every hour of practice is an investment. Strokes Gained tells you exactly where your return on that investment is highest. Are you practicing putting when your putting is already your strength? Are you grinding on your driver when your approach game is costing you four shots a round? Without the data, you’re guessing. With it, you’re building a roadmap.
Course Management: The Other Half of the Equation
Strokes Gained tells you what. Course management tells you where you throw away shots.
Course management is the discipline of making smart decisions on the golf course decisions that maximize your expected score, maximize your talent. And for junior golfers, poor course management is one of (if not) the single biggest sources of unnecessary dropped shots.
Great course management is built on simple principles such as play the percentages. When you combine that principle with Strokes Gained data, something powerful happens. You start to understand which risks are worth taking. Build an awareness for where your competition loses the most shots and have a plan to minimize them. You start to get the most out of your rounds even the ones where you don’t feel great about your physical game. I have beaten a lot of people who had prettier golf swings than me, but I knew how to play the game better than they did.
The Long Game: Building a Data-Driven Junior Career
The junior golfers who arrive at college programs or wherever their game takes them with years of Strokes Gained data have an enormous advantage. They know their game. They can tell a college coach exactly what they’re working on and why. They’ve learned to practice with intention, not just put in hours.
More importantly, they’ve developed the mental framework that separates good players from great ones: self-awareness and discipline. They know where they’re genuinely strong and where they’re genuinely weak. And they’ve learned to trust the process of improvement because they can see the numbers move, instead of being a puppet to their results and emotions.
Golf is a long game in every sense. The junior who picks up Strokes Gained analysis at 14 and uses it consistently through their development years isn’t just going to shoot better scores next month. They’re building a competitive edge that compounds over time and that’s what real improvement looks like.
"Every shot on the course is a data point. The question is whether you’re paying attention to what the data is trying to tell you."
The Bottom Line
You can hit a thousand balls on the range. You can spend every evening working on your putting stroke. You can buy the best equipment, hire the most expensive swing coach, and play every day of the summer. But if you don’t know what’s costing you shots, if you don’t understand your own game through the lens of real data then you are leaving improvement on the table.
Strokes Gained and course management aren’t complicated. They’re not just for Tour players or coaches with fancy software. They’re for any junior golfer who is serious
about getting better and willing to be honest about where they are.
The data is waiting. The question is whether you’re ready to look at it.
About the Author
Chris Petefish is a professional golfer, former top 300 player in the world, and founder of Course of Action Golf. He works with junior golfers to build data-driven practice plans and on-course decision-making skills. You can contact Chris at chris@courseofactiongolf.com or http://www.courseofactiongolf.com
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