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Meet the master putter-maker

Face-to-face with Bob Bettinardi, soon to launch a new range of putters for Mizuno


Posted: 22 June 2006
by Golfmagic correspondent

’Bob
Bob Bettinardi – master putter-maker for Mizuno

Breakthrough technology and Tour pro backing have made American Bob Bettinardi one of the world’s hottest putter designers. Golfmagic meets the man who decided to put a honeycomb pattern on the face of his putters – and worked out a way to flatten that face to within a thousandth of an inch.

You once said: ‘A putter should give you a warm and fuzzy feeling inside’. What did you mean by that?

Simply that you should be able to pick up a putter and think "Wow, I could hole some putts with this". That’s based on appearance. My whole concept on putters is based on looks. I was in a pro shop the other day, and there were about 30 putters. Only two looked good to my eye. Mentally, that has to go through your head. If it looks good to you, it’s probably going to feel good.

So should we choose more on looks than science?

Absolutely. Too many of us select putters based on the technology. I would like to see that reversed. People will read an article that says ‘This putter has the biggest Moment of Inertia you can find.’ They’ll buy it without even looking at it. But you can put it down behind the ball and get no confidence from it. It could look like a brick on the end of stick.

But the technology still needs to be there.

Yes, but you don’t have to compromise on style. My one-piece putter design is a good example. Most putter makers weld the putter’s hosel to its head using heat. Any time you apply heat to metal you are affecting its purity, its integrity. The feel is not going to be quite there.

When I started out making putters, I questioned why we had to use welding. Why couldn’t we not make head and hosel from one piece of metal? We set our hi-tech CNC (computer numerical control machinery to work on a single block of carbon steel, effectively sculpting head and hosel from it. When we tested the result, there was such a huge difference in feel and solidness of strike. So now all our putters are one-piece head and hosel. The technology is there, but it doesn’t affect the looks of the putter.

Who uses your putters?

Currently, Nick Price, Bill Andrade, Lee Janzen, Bob Tway, Charles Howell III, Rocco Mediate and Olin Browne are using Bettinardi models. Jim Furyk used one to win 2003 US Open and Vijay Singh followed suit at the 2004 US PGA.

My putters have been used for 40 Tour wins; Phil Mickelson has used one to win at the Colonial, while Luke Donald has used one on-and-off for the past eight years.

What are the principles behind your putter designs?

Precision, performance and excellence. My background is mechanical engineering. That world is all about high tolerances, quality and precision. I simply transferred those values into building my putters.

How did you get in to creating putters?

In 1990, before I designed any putters, I ran my own metal manufacturing business. I had a mechanical engineering degree, and had also learned about metals from my dad, who made small metal products for several industries.

One day I saw a poster for a Callaway putter in a pro shop. It showed this picture of an ancient milling machine. I found myself asking: ‘Why would they make that putter with this old machine? Why wouldn’t they make it with the modern machines that we have?’

’Mizuno
One-piece head and hosel and distinctive milled face

At this time, in my factory we were using high tolerance CNC (Computer Numerical Control) milling machines – huge, powerful and precise – that cost around $350,000 a piece. They carve and sculpt metal using motors and computerised equipment. Maybe Callaway just didn’t know this new technology was available. I spoke to R&D (research and development) departments at Cleveland and Callaway and convinced them to let me build them a putter. It took us three months to do it but they loved the end product.

How did you get Bettinardi putters on the map?

Jesper Parnevik helped a lot here. In our first week out on Tour, at Greensboro in 1999, Jesper asked if he could use one of our putters. He won, shooting 23 under par, with 99 putts for four rounds. He then won the Bob Hope Classic, shooting 27 under. That gave me the credibility for Bettinardi putters. When you have players who win with your product, that’s the stepping stone.

Why is there a honeycomb pattern on your putterfaces? The pattern comes from the unique way the putter’s face is milled. We discovered that running the mill horizontally across the face caused a little bit of a concaveness, a dishing effect. So we played around with alternative milling techniques, eventually applying the cutting mill ends vertically from above like a sewing machine needle. It sounds odd, but we got the face flat to within .001 of an inch - a 200 per-cent improvement on existing putters. The honeycomb effect was a by-product of this milling technique. I didn’t care what the face looked like. I just wanted it flat.

Why did you decide to team up with Mizuno to make your latest putters?

Our mindset is the same; there is an emphasis on quality and precision. Plus we are both manufacturers, designing and building our own products. I believe my products fit in well with Mizuno’s brand values.

What is the inspiration behind your new ranges of Bettinardi Mizuno putters, which will be launched just before The Open Championship at Hoylake?

We wanted to present golfers with a clear choice. So we have the A series – two mallet headed putters made from aluminium – and the C series, carbon steel, heel-toe weighted designs.

The A series has more game improvement features. There is a sight line, as an alignment aid; the weight is back from the face, which stops it twisting on off-centre hits; and the blade is face-balanced, promoting squareness.

The C series has more of a classic look. The feel is still soft, yet the metal gives the ball a solid click sound off the face. There are three head styles, each with a satin pearl finish.

What does the H mean on the bottom?

It stands for Heavy. The putters come in two lengths, 34 and 35- inch. The shorter putter being 10 grams heavier to keep the overall swingweight up.

Where do you do the Research and Development into your putters?

I have a hi-tech facility in Illinois called Studio B. It is staffed by 60 technicians and has a 100ft putting green. We’ve installed a four-camera laser vision system, which sends 200 frames per second to a 40-inch plasma screen. We can watch in minute detail what happens when the ball leaves the putterface.

What else do you make besides putters?

I make products for the dental industry, but more interestingly I make the casings for the ‘brain’ of a smart bomb. We use a very strong grade of stainless steel – and the design must meet very tight tolerances.

Finally, what’s the strangest putter you’ve been asked to make?

Rocco Mediate once had me use sterling silver for a face insert. He wanted a different feel off the putter face. He said ‘I don’t care what it costs, just make it’. I charged him $3000. Unfortunately the face felt just like aluminium. I could have given him the same feel for 300 bucks. He hasn’t used it for a year now.

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Discuss this story

Greetings all,

Just got my hands on one fo Mizuno's new Bettinardi c-Series putters (C-01H was my preference) and it's just been out for a few tests and the result are rather good.

I've played with a Scotty Cameron Newport 2 TEi3 Long Neck for so many years and always thought this putter had the best feel on the greens...until I put this in the bag last week.

I knew of Bettinardi putters a whiel ago and tried one of the similar "insert" putters he had and it was nice, but I couldn't get my hands on one, so I kept the Scotty. It's served me well, but in comparison to this c-01, the Cameron feels quite hard and sounds like a wooden club when you hit it.

I can't explain why, but the Bettinardi feels so soft when you hit the ball, long putts, short putts, whatever. Some of you will know the feel in Mizuno's irons are legendary, now they have managed to get the same kind of buttery feel in a putter. It truly has to be felt to believe it. I went for the 34" heavy putter as it fits me better (you should check your fitting with a putter as well) and with my natiral stance, my eyes are over the ball and sightline making it easier for me to see the line and take the putter back and through straight. With my scotty, I had to have the toe end up a little to get this effect. You dont' want to cut down a Scotty as you affect the weighting of it. However, Bettinardi has dealt with that making the shorter putter a little heavier.

Overall, the feel is simply awesome, crisp, yet soft is the only way to describe it. As for the engineering side of things, it's all milled for one piece and has no unsightly welding on the neck. It also comes with one of the Winn AVS grips which are ever so comfy in the hands!

If you're looking for something to give you that extra feedback on hitting putts without resorting to a plastic or rubber insert, you need to give these a try.

I've alwasy preffered a metal putter, now Mizuno have finally got a putter to match the quality of their irons.

So, the final result is the Scotty has gone back to California for a refurbishment and personalisaton which will be hung up in my academy and the C-01H is in the bag.

Anyone else tried these out yet? There's the A-Series as well and I think four models in each type.

Would be good to hear what the rest of you think.

Happy golfing

Parky

Posted: 25/09/2006 09:29

Parky - you may want to update your putter in your profile as apparently you play with an Odyssey putter?
Posted: 25/09/2006 09:36

Been a long time since I've updated that!! Thanks LGL!
Posted: 25/09/2006 09:54


G
And your age while your there:)
Posted: 25/09/2006 09:56

very personal thing putters...I had a go with one of the Miz Bett's a few days ago...found it very lively off the face

will no doubt go back to the same place over the next few weeks and pick it up again and have another bash....i'm not one to dismiss a product out of hand on the basis of a single play.
Posted: 25/09/2006 09:59

I noticed Luke Donald had one, but was using a Scotty again in the Ryder cup.
Posted: 25/09/2006 10:02

Updated profile and age!! Still 36, I think!

for those of you who didn't know, I moved to Denmark this year - now working as a teaching pro and have my own academy/drving range on the sunny island of Bornholm, just south of Swedish coast, middle of the Baltic.

Might invite you all over for next year's Bornholm Open, europe's largest amateur event!
Posted: 25/09/2006 10:04

JB, Luke was using a Bettinardi in black during the Ryder Cup. Difficult to distinguish from a Scotty, but it did say Bettinardi on the back of his putter. I think it's the same as the C-01 or C-02, just in Black Oxide, not silver.
Posted: 25/09/2006 10:06

So, where can we try these amazing putters and how much ?

Would love to organise a GM crowd for a Danish trip! (It's open to gals as well, right?)


Posted: 25/09/2006 10:11

Parky, yesterday whatever he was using definitely had a scotty grip on it.
Posted: 25/09/2006 10:26

Danish trip - I can help there and get some details for y'all for 2007.

JB - honestly, it's defintely a Bettinardi putter. trust me on this one! It may be a scotty grip, but the head is a Bettinardi!
Posted: 25/09/2006 15:51

Defnitely a Bettinardi with the Scotty grip, a bit like Tiger with a Ping grip on his Scotty putter.
Posted: 25/09/2006 17:26


G
Any nice totty Parky?
Posted: 25/09/2006 18:43

I stand corrected :-)
Posted: 25/09/2006 22:05

They had the Mizzie Bettinardi putters at Mannings Heath pro shop last week.
After the first 18 holes of misery on the greens I went in to buy a putter at lunchtime to use for the afternoon 18.
Their stock was:-
Two over priced Scotties which I dismissed.
A rack of Yes putters which I do not like, and these rather cool Mizzie putters which immediately grabbed my attention.
Swished them on the carpet for 5 mins. Every one setup open. The black ones looked absolutely dreadful, like some very cheap and nasty Chinese rip-off of something else made of chewing gum quality plastic, and the Answer ones looked like copies of Cameron Newports which are copies of Answers. They were also expensive.
I didnt buy.
Really, I thought they were bad.
While I personally dislike Yes putters at least they setup square and look well engineered.
Posted: 25/09/2006 22:17

Creo...what putter do you actually use at the mo????

I also had a second swish with the Miz Bett this evening...still retain my original opinion that they are hard and clicky.

also tried one of the black Scotty Camerons...didnt like them either.

The only putter (apart from the Yes! Amy reverse face balance model that I currently use) that I have some affection for is a centre shafted Odyssey two ball (the original one...not the one with the steel insert or the more recent one with the dimpled insert) model. I dont know what it is about this thing but when I take it out on to the practise green it is just so damned easy to line up and hit putt after putt perfectly along the line I have chosen straight into the hole with a confident plop!!

I suspect that if I can source a 33 inch model there will be a small hole in my wallet from which money will have escaped!!
Posted: 25/09/2006 22:49

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