There’s a new putting trend coming in
golf, and since it truly is revolutionary,
it promises to help the largest percentage
of the 30 million golfers who play golf
in America and whose handicaps remain
high owing to poor putting skills. This
new system for teaching putting will also
come to the rescue of Golf Magazine’s
3.5 million subscribers, who I’m told putt
just as poorly as they did when I was
senior instruction editor, and surveys
back then showed that 60 percent of our
subscribers three-putted an average of
five times per round.
And, from what I have heard through
my contacts, true golf insiders who follow closely the
teaching scene and what the top tour pros are up to,
students who visit golf schools across the country and
pay too much attention to the power game and too little
attention to their real nemesis – putting,
the department of the game that has more
to do with scoring than any other – will
show improvement, too, as a result of
this paradigm shift in putting instruction.
What’s more, players who have failed
to break into the single-figure handicap
bracket, and also those who cannot seem
to improve just enough to go from a one
or two handicap down to scratch, will
also turn in lower scores and accomplish
their dream goals thanks to this new
putting trend involving equipment and
technique.
In thinking about the state of the
information age, computers, and the golfer’s limited
leisure time due to the economy, I continue to stress
the importance for all of us to learn to crystallize our
instructional messages down to fewer words. Taking
this cure, let me get to the point about the dramatic shift
coming in putting instruction and what I recommend to
start teaching your students.
1.
It is now thought by many that the same putter cannot be used to hit
short putts and long putts without manipulating the stroke, and that
these stroke adjustments almost always lead to trouble. You might
think of encouraging students to carry two putters: An upright
model, for putts fifteen feet or less, and a putter featuring a
flatter lie for putts over fifteen feet.
2.Many realize that the same type
putting stroke should not be used
for all putts, and this holds true
whether that one stroke is the upright,
straight back-straight through method
deemed the best by Dave Pelz, or the flatter, insidesquare-
inside method that short game guru Stan Utley
promotes. The player needs to employ one stroke for
short putts and one stroke for long putts.
SHORT
PUTT TECHNIQUE
The upright lie will encourage the
player to swing the putter along a straight
back-straight through square-to-square
path, which is something Tom Watson
did better than anyone during his heyday
when he seemed to knock in every
pressure putt inside fifteen feet and was
winning lots of major championships.
Tom only started getting in trouble when
he began experimenting with employing
the same flatter stroke he used on long
putts on short putts.
John Daly and Phil Mickelson tended,
naturally, to swing the putter on a flatter inside-inside
path on short putts, but both superstars found out that
this type of stroke tends to impart such over-spin on the
putt that from short distance the ball will tend to spin
out, even when it hits the back sides of the cup. Daly
won the British Open after switching to a more upright
putting stroke on short putts. Phil started winning majors, too, after changing strokes. What’s more, you’ll
be surprised to hear that “Lefty” is the player setting
the two-putter trend. The press has kept this quiet, but
the insiders I stay in touch with have assured me that
Phil has played numerous rounds with two putters in
his bag, and has improved dramatically when using the
upright putter on short putts, and the “flat stick” and
flat path stroke on long putts.
Encourage your students to stand closer to the ball
than normal on short putts, with their eyes directly over
the ball, and to control the square-to-square along-thetarget-
line stroke with the big muscles in their arms
and shoulders. Because standing tall at address raises
the player’s center of gravity, and in response also the
position of the hands, the tendency is to elevate the
putter at the end of the backstroke and hit up on the
ball slightly in swinging through impact, with the latter
increasing the effective loft of the putter. For best result,
then, recommend the player play with a putter featuring
only 1-2 degrees of loft built into the clubface.
LONG
PUT TECHNIQUE
When teaching students the address position for
putts over fifteen feet, particularly really long ones,
encourage the player to stand farther from the ball,
with the hands lower and the eyes a couple of inches
inside the target line, as Ben Crenshaw always did
when sinking long “bombs” on Augusta’s tricky greens enroute to two Masters championships.
A putter with a flatter lie will help promote the
desired open-to-shut putting stroke
that you can best picture by imagining
a door opening, as the putter-face
should ideally do on the backstroke,
then closing slowly but steadily on
the through stroke, with the face of
the putter returning to a square yet
slightly hooded position at impact;
square to the ball and square to the
hole, in a similar way that the door
starts closing and finishes in a position
that’s square to the wall.
This type of open-to-closed stroke
encourages the ball to hit the ground
sooner after being struck, rather than
“skidding” or going airborne just
after the putter-face strikes the ball,
and makes for a purer roll with good
distance control, provided the student golfer
uses a putter with four to six
degrees of loft, as the added loft in the
putter will counter the effective loft of
the putter being reduced dramatically
at impact due to the nature of the
stroke.
In working out things in the
putting department with your student,
encourage him to experiment
with various loft putters in the
aforementioned range, just as any good
teacher does when recommending a
driver that is fitted to the player’s new
swing and changes in trajectory of
shots hit with the “big stick.”
Back
to Main Articles
Copyright © 2011 United States Golf Teachers Federation, All Rights Reserved. Reproduction of this article in any kind is strictly prohibited.