For Golf Parents
How to Praise a Junior Golfer the Right Way
Praise shapes how a junior golfer relates to the game long after the round ends. Here's the difference between praise that builds resilience and praise that quietly adds pressure, with exact lines to use.
For Golf Parents · Updated July 6, 2026
Why praise is trickier than it sounds
Praise seems like the easy part of parenting a junior golfer, the encouraging half of the job compared to discipline or correction. In practice, praise is where a lot of unintended pressure gets built, quietly, one well-meaning comment at a time. The problem usually isn’t a lack of praise. It’s praise aimed at the wrong thing, repeated often enough that a kid learns exactly what earns your approval and adjusts their whole relationship with the game around it.
The fix isn’t praising less. It’s praising differently, aimed at what a junior actually controls rather than the number a scorecard produces.
Process praise versus outcome praise
Youth-sports coaching guidance draws a consistent line between two kinds of praise. Outcome praise is tied to the result: the score, the placement, the win. Process praise is tied to what a junior actually did to get there: effort, decision-making, composure, a specific improved skill. Both feel like encouragement in the moment. Only one of them builds a kid who handles adversity well.
| Outcome praise | Process praise |
|---|---|
| “You shot a 74, amazing!” | “You stayed patient through that stretch on the back nine.” |
| “You won! You’re the best out there.” | “Your decision-making off the tee today was really sharp.” |
| “Great round, that’s a career low!” | “I liked how you committed to that chip on 15.” |
Outcome praise isn’t forbidden, and celebrating a genuinely great round is natural and fine. The issue is when outcome praise is the only kind a kid hears, because then the message they absorb is that the score is what matters to you, not how they got there or who they were along the way.
What to say after a good round
A good round is a real chance to reinforce process, not just celebrate the number. Lead with something specific and process-based before, or alongside, any mention of the score: “I loved how focused you were on every shot today” or “You handled that rough patch on the front nine really well, that mattered more than the score shows.” Naming a specific behavior teaches your junior what to repeat. Naming only the number teaches them what to fear losing.
It also helps to ask a question instead of only delivering a verdict: “What part of today felt best to you?” This hands your junior the chance to identify their own process wins, which sticks better than anything you could hand them yourself.
What to say after a bad round
This is where praise matters most and is hardest to get right, because the instinct is to either console with empty reassurance or slide into analysis of what went wrong. Both miss the moment. What works better is warmth with no immediate content attached: “I love watching you play” costs nothing and asks nothing in return.
If you do praise something specific after a tough round, aim it at process that held up even though the score didn’t: “You didn’t let that double bogey wreck the rest of your round” or “You kept your routine together even when things weren’t going your way.” That’s a real, honest observation that doesn’t require pretending the round was good. For the fuller version of this moment, including what to avoid saying entirely, see the car ride home rule.
Praising effort without adding pressure
Even process praise can go wrong if it’s delivered as an expectation rather than an observation. “You need to try harder” and “I noticed how hard you worked on that” sound similar but land completely differently. The first is a demand aimed at the future. The second is a fact about what already happened, and facts don’t carry the same weight of obligation.
Effort praise can also backfire if it becomes the new scoreboard, where a kid feels they now have to visibly try hard at all times to keep earning your approval. Keep praise varied and specific rather than repeating the same phrase after every round, and let some rounds go by without any formal commentary at all. Not every round needs a verdict.
Common praise mistakes parents make
- Score-only praise. Praise that only ever shows up after good numbers teaches a kid your reaction depends entirely on the scorecard.
- Comparisons to other kids. “You beat so-and-so today” frames success as relative to a leaderboard rather than to your junior’s own growth.
- Talent praise instead of process praise. “You’re a natural” feels nice but attributes success to something fixed and outside their control, which can make a kid more fragile when a natural gift alone stops being enough.
- Public praise that embarrasses. Loud praise in front of other families or teammates can feel like pressure or exposure to a kid rather than support, even when it’s well-intentioned.
- Praise that’s really disguised criticism. “Finally, a good round” carries an implied judgment about every round before it. If praise starts with a jab, it stops functioning as praise.
Building the habit over a season
None of this needs to be perfectly scripted every time. The habit that matters most is noticing something true and specific about your junior that has nothing to do with the final number, and saying it often enough that it becomes the normal texture of your conversations about golf, not a special exception you reach for only after a loss.
Over a season, that consistency compounds. It’s one of the clearest, lowest-cost ways to keep a junior’s relationship with the game healthy through the ups and downs that every competitive season includes. If you want to track whether that’s translating into real improvement over time, our guide to tracking junior golfer improvement covers measures worth watching beyond the scorecard, and the parent hub has the rest of what supports a healthy competitive career.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the difference between process praise and outcome praise?
- Outcome praise is tied to the result, like the score or the win. Process praise is tied to what a junior actually did, like effort, decision-making, or composure under pressure. Youth-sports coaching guidance consistently favors process praise because it builds resilience, while outcome-only praise ties a kid's self-worth to results they can't fully control.
- What should I say to my junior golfer after a good round?
- Lead with something specific and process-based, like noting their focus or a particular good decision, rather than only celebrating the number. Asking what part of the round felt best to them also works well, since it lets your junior identify their own wins.
- What should I say to my junior golfer after a bad round?
- Keep it warm and simple, without immediate analysis. A line like 'I love watching you play' works because it isn't conditional on the score. If you do praise something specific, aim it at process that held up despite the result, such as how they stayed composed after a rough hole.
- Is it bad to tell my junior golfer they're a natural talent?
- Talent praise isn't harmful occasionally, but relying on it teaches a kid that success comes from something fixed and outside their control. Process praise, focused on effort and decisions, tends to build more resilience because it points at something the kid can keep doing.
- How often should I praise my junior golfer?
- Often enough that noticing something true about their effort or approach becomes normal conversation, not a rare reward reserved for good scores. It's fine for some rounds to pass without formal commentary at all; not every round needs a verdict.