Love finds the solution is to turn the brain off

Love has a share of the lead at the Arnold Palmer  Invitational with fellow American J.B Holmes, a situation that  marks a turnaround for the 45-year-old.

Love was endlessly practicing his putting after his round  at the Honda Classic on Sunday when he was given a sharp  reminder.

“Somebody said ‘you’ve been putting for three hours, what  are you doing? You never do that?’“ he said. “I said, ‘You’re  right, why am I doing this?’.

“I realised that I was working too hard. I needed a break.  I took some time off and came back with a fresher attitude that  I’m going to play and quit trying so hard.”

Like several tour professionals, Love uses sports  psychologist Bob Rotella, who told the 1997 PGA Championship  winner to: “Just get away. Just turn it off for a while”.

“If I can just listen to him and keep it simple. I can’t  have him in my head every day, he can’t be out here all the  time, but you need to learn,” Love said.

For Love that meant learning to just let go of his game and  not worry endlessly about his shortcomings.

“At (the SBS Championship in) Hawaii, I didn’t make  anything from five feet to 15 feet. So I … analysed why I  didn’t win, and went to work on it.

“Then you start missing the ones inside of five feet,  because you’re working on your stroke to fix the 10-footers and  then you start working on your swing to hit it closer.

“It’s just the same ball of wax we always get into.

“It’s hard to do what the sports psychologists do and turn  your brain off.”

Love said he found himself bringing his problems home from  the golf course.

“When you’re going good, you just go home and figure out  what you are going to eat and what you’re going to watch on TV.

“But when you miss a couple of cuts in a row or you get  into a bad streak you start saying, I’ve got to fix it.

“The biggest fix for me was to get away from the golf  course and then come back and start over — do the things that  I know how to do”.