Putting tips
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Ten top putting tips

Three putting will be a thing of the past


Posted: 10 October 2001
by Golfmagic instruction editor

Consider our top putting tips.

Over forty per-cent of strokes in a round of golf are made with the putter on the putting green and it’s here that most frustration with golf occurs.

Take the time to practice your pre-shot routine and establish a consistent ball-strike with the sweet spot.

Here’s a few tips to work on to eradicate those niggling three-putts and bring your scores and handicap tumbling.

If you have any putting tips you want to share and that work for you, log-on to the Golfmagic forum and spread them around.

1. Palm to palm grip

Dangle your arms in front of you and clap your hands together with palms facing, before gripping the handle of the putter softly. Ensure the back of the left hand follows through on the line on which you want the ball to roll.

2. Ball between the eyes

Most good putters have their eyes over the ball. In practice take your stance and address and drop a ball from between your eyes. In the correct position the ball should fall on top of the club head.

3. Reading the lines

On faster greens the lines of the mower will give a clue to the pace. A lighter shade (mown away from you) means the surface is slightly speedier than the darker shade and will take more break or borrow.

4. Short range practice

On the practice green concentrate on good technique and consistency by holing a succession of four-footers. It will give you confidence in hearing the ball rattle into the cup rather than randomly firing long-range putts that never go in and ruin your focus.

5. Dustbin for distance

From longer range, pace is more important than line. Concentrate on rolling the ball to within an imaginary circle the width of a dustbin lid. Remember from 20 feet two putts is always good.

6. Find the sweet spot

Hold up the putter up between finger and thumb and tap the face with the edge of a coin to find the sweet spot – the clubhead will pendulum rather than twist. Mark that spot on the top of the clubhead so you can see it at address. Struck opposite that point the ball will generate overspin and roll.

7. Err on the pro side

With a curling putt, always allow for more break than you see. Pro’s know that a ball die-ing into the hole from side has more chance of dropping into the cup, than one weak and shallow.

8. Fringe benefits

Putting from the fringe of the green, imagine the hole is a few feet further from you and ensure you follow through to get a good roll.

9. Routine procedure

Establishing an identical pre-shot routine is essential. Check the line (ideally while others are putting out but not in their eye-line), address slightly away from the ball, check your alignment, practice swing to get the feel of the pace, shuffle forward to the ball. One look then pull the trigger, smoothly back and through.

10. Left below right

Comfort and alignment are crucial but the shoulders must be kept square and aligned to the direction of the line on which you want the ball to roll. Try left hand below right, (if you’re a right handed player – and like Jim Furyk or Padraig Harrington); it helps to keep the shoulders square at impact. You may have to adjust to a shorter-shafted putter to get the full value of the stroke.


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Discuss this story

Yes, 40% of strokes are taken with a putter. But that doesn't necessarily make it hte most important club. I've been influenced by reading Tiger Woods say that the driver is his most important club, because if that's going well the reast of his game falls into place. That sums up the psychological aspect of the game, and of course it helps to drive the ball 350 yards. (My game would also fall into place)
Posted: 11/10/2001 16:26

Come on, Adam surely you don't believe that. We use the driver, on average 8 or 9 times a round - how many fairways do you hit?. If you're putting well you will have 30 or less putts a round. The scoring zone is from 100 yards in. Leave the driver in the boot, practice your chipping and putting and see your scores tumble. Once you're confident and proficient around the green give the driver another airing but make sure you digest our Driving Tips first.
Posted: 11/10/2001 19:17

Leave the driver in the boot! Bob you must be having a laugh. All that money spent on the best brick on a stick you can find and leave it in the boot. I say NO! Get it out, let everyone see your pride and joy! Here speaks a man with all the gear and no idea!!
Posted: 12/10/2001 01:08

Oh and just to finish, Take your o so expensive diver into the scoring zone. Use it from 100 yards out and from the fringe. You can, I did today and I putted outed out. Ok I'd had a bad game,(well not that bad until the last 3 holes) and it was a case of THATS IT! this hole start it finish, one club. It does make me wonder why we spend so much time and money on the best 14 clubs when you only need one. If anyone comes up with the technology for the 'one club' answer. IT WAS MY IDEA ALL ROYALIES to me, me , em ME
Posted: 12/10/2001 01:41

THANK YOU
Posted: 12/10/2001 01:44

Well done Neil, perhaps you can talk us through your method sometime... and how would you manage out of bunkers? Nearest I got to using one club was testing a set a couple of years back, that had one shaft with six heads that screwed in (3-wood, 5-, 7-,9-iron, wedge and putter) in a tartan shoulder bag the size of small brief case. Got some strange looks on the course, but after working out that I had to swing much slower because of the extra weight in the shaft (including the heavy-duty thread) I played to my handicap! The only set back was that it tended to take time making my club selection, then screwing in the clubhead. Great idea for the business golfer (cost about £180) but in these troubled times I doubt if you would get it through the hand-luggage checks.
Posted: 12/10/2001 09:59

A friend of mine was playing the par 4 18th at Ashdown Forest (350 yards-ish, but down and back up the other side of a huge dip / valley). He played it to par, and with only one club.... his putter. That was amazing!
Posted: 12/10/2001 10:07

I agree with Tiger - and I have to say that's not always the case - but I reckon if you're caning your driver miles, it raises the confidence for the rest of the game. I always putt well, so that's not a problem, but if my drives are going well, I'm a real bandit of my unofficial handicap of 21. I can't wait until the next GOLFmagic golf day!!
Posted: 12/10/2001 11:10

Tiger can say that but what if you're not caning your driver miles - what about your confidence then? Grind out the pars and bogeys, then get out the driver you spent 300 quid on. Anyway Alex I've seen you putt when in the immortal words of Howard Clark ' the head came off!'
Posted: 12/10/2001 13:25

I agree with Bob. If and when you get to the Green and you can't sink a putt, it is totally demoralising and then effects your overall game. Putting without a doubt is the key to good scoring. As for Alex who, 'always putts well' you should be ashamed to state that you are off 21 ...you Bandit ! I need to know your secret quickly please.
Posted: 08/11/2001 11:25

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