Fitness
Looking to improve your golf game? Take a few tips from PSYOPS, the army's psychological operations unit. "After all, golf is war," insists Captain Bruce Ollstein, a former drill instructor and PSYOPS veteran. And since many golf pros claim the sport is 90 percent mental, it's an ideal forum for some military mind games.
The purpose of PSYOPS is to crumble the enemy's morale, turning him into "a bumbling nitwit incapable of coherent thought," says Ollstein, author of Combat Golf (Viking, $15.95). In adopting this approach for the links, the captain's tongue may be in his cheek--but only partly. Some of Ollstein's down-and-dirty strategies:
Hand out some "gimmies." Early in a match, concede some easy putts instead of having your opponent go through the motions of knocking the ball in. Not only does this prevent your rival from developing a putting rhythm, but it denies him or her the psychological boost of seeing the ball drop in the hole.
Plant seeds of doubt. Is your opponent about to shoot over a water hazard? Crack an innocent-sounding joke--"there's enough ocean out there to float a naval division"--to undermine his or her confidence.










