Learning from the best players in the game is an opportunity that amateur golfers rarely get, but those lessons can be the difference between another mediocre season and playing better golf in 2026.

Fortunately, we had the opportunity to sit down with multiple DP World Tour winner Grant Forrest, who kindly shared his top tour winning tips for improved mentality, strategy and better preparation on the golf course.

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If you’re a 15-handicapper you can’t expect to play like a scratch golfer. It sounds obvious but you don’t need to try to be a hero and take on near-impossible shots.

We all do it still at this level, and you don’t need to. We all turn into optimists when we get on the golf course.

Ask yourself the question, what is a good shot? For your own game, what actually is a good result?

For most amateurs, if you hit the middle of the green, that’s a great result.

A lot of club golfers could benefit from imagining there are no pins and just getting a yardage to the middle of the green and hitting that, especially if the flag is at the front as they tend to underclub.

If you’re aiming for the middle of the green and don’t catch it, it will probably be fine.

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pre-shot routine, so do you have a clear intention on every shot? Often you don’t actually know what you’re trying to do.

Again, and this is crucial, what are you trying to achieve? Whether you execute or not, you are trying to play the right shot.

In terms of swing thoughts, most guys play with something in their head. It can vary day to day and that’s fine.

A lot of it is about reacting to how you feel on a day. Maybe you will hit a couple of shots that you really like and you have a good feel on them. If so, just try and repeat that.

Grant Forrest talking with his caddie while studying course guides before hitting a shot on a DP World Tour event

Preparation is key, so ensure your pre-shot routine is consistent and fit for purpose

(Image credit: Getty Images)

golf warm-up is a practice session and it’s about finding that rhythm and hitting the shots that you’re going to need on the course.

One big thing is to pay attention to what you’re doing in the warm-up. If you’re hitting a draw in your warm-up, that’s the shot that’s there that day. Be comfortable with what you have.

There are so many great players out on tour and they only really stick to hitting one shot shape.

We see a lot of the great players shaping it both ways on demand but the majority of guys, especially with the driver, will have one shot. I draw it and it just suits my eye more. I’ve always played like that and I won’t play around with that too much.