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Putting


Borf
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I was thinking about putting, and I know this is the scoring zone. One putting is key to scoring your best.

I played in a 72 hole tournament last season, I finished 12 shots off the lead,

check out my putting stats:
3-putts: 14
total putts: 137
putts/round: 33.75
GIR/Round: 12.5
GIR putts/hole: 2.100
Total birdies: 9

some comments on these stats? and maybe some advice on how to putt?!
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I was thinking about putting, and I know this is the scoring zone. One putting is key to scoring your best.

I think ur putts per round should be read '34.25' (unless im an idiot?)

But yeah, putting has always been the strongest part of my game...if you can get ur putts per round down to about 31-32 you wouldve had a better chance (those pesky 3-putts bother me to no end). At least for me, a good round of putting always kept my confidence high and i was able to hit more consistently because of it.

:P
In the bag Nike SasQuatch SuMo 10.5* {} Tiger Shark Hammerhead 3w, 5w, 3h {} Nickent 3DX Pro 5i-PW {} Titleist Vokey 250.08* {} Cleveland CG11. 54* {} Callaway X-Tour 58.11* {} Carbite Tour Classic Putter {} Titleist ProV1x

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I was thinking about putting, and I know this is the scoring zone. One putting is key to scoring your best.

I would work on your irons, and hit greens more often and closer to the hole.

Driver:  Ping G15 9* with Talamonti 70x shaft
3 Wood/Hybrid:  Taylormade Rescue TP 17*
3-PW Irons:  Ping G15 Green Dot KBS 90 shafts
Gap Wedge:  Cleveland 588 RTG
Sand Wedge:  Cleveland 588 RTGLob Wedge:  Cleveland 588 RTGPutter:  OdysseyBall:  Bridgestone 330-RXS or 330-SBag:  Generic

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I saw a great video on the golf channel on-demand that has actually helped my putting. It was with Gary Player. Player said people have to much of a tendency to try and watch the ball go in. He said you need to keep a quiet head, (not moving your head during putting). He suggested listening for the ball to go in the cup. You don't have to see it go in, you can hear it go in. I tried this and my missed putts were so much closer than usual, and I made a lot more putts than usual. It was a great tip and it really helps you concentrate on speed. Try it, works for me. That's my 2 cents.
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I'm not a fan of the "just listen for it to go in" method. If I do that and hear nothing, look up and see I've missed, I don't know how it missed and I've learned nothing.

I hit, pause, tilt head to the side to look. I could have a 60' putt and still be frozen in that finishing position just watching, lol.

...the world is full of people happy to tell you that your dreams are unrealistic, that you don't have the talent to realize them. - Bob Rotella

Driver - Taylormade R1.
Fairway - Taylormade R9 15º.
Hybrid - A3OS 3 Hybrid.

Irons - Cast CCI 4-AW.

Wedge - SV Tour 56º wedge.

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chipping the ball in helps my putting, try it

They will beat their swords into golf clubs and their spears into putters. Nation will not take up sword against nation, nor will they train for war anymore. Old Tom Morris 2:4

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3 rounds and 14 3 Putts is not the greatest. Usually i get 2-3 3 Putts Per round so for 4 rounds that would be 8-12 3 Putts. But it also can depend on your handicap also.
In My Bag

Driver: Sasquatch 460 9.5°
3 Wood: Laser 3 Wood 15°
5 Wood: r7 19° (Stiff)Irons: S58 Irons 4-PW Orange DotWedge: Harmonized 60°Wedge: Z TP 54°Putter: Tiffany 34"Balls: Pro V1 Shoes: Adidas Tour 360 IIThe Meadows Golf Coursewww.themeadowsgc.comAge: 16
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Those stats looked like the average player for last years US Open at Oakmont--id say those statistics are misconstrued because if your hitting that many greens--then your proximity to the hole must be very far--so i would say it is more IRONS than Putter

"People think the size of the head is most important. Wrong. It's getting a quality shaft. test different shafts to see which goes the straightest. Also, more degrees of loft on the head is better than less. Eleven degrees is about right."

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Those stats looked like the average player for last years US Open at Oakmont--id say those statistics are misconstrued because if your hitting that many greens--then your proximity to the hole must be very far--so i would say it is more IRONS than Putter

I would work on your irons, and hit greens more often and closer to the hole.

I couldn't disagree any more. I don't care how far away he is from the hole, averaging more than 2.1 putts per GIR is the problem. It means he's three putting more often than making a birdie putt. Hitting 12.5 greens per round would put him in the top 15 on tour. Irons and approach shots are NOT the problem.

If I was borf I'd glue myself to a putting green and work on my stroke...for all types of putts - long, short, lag, etc. I'm not going to offer advice on what to change or work on since I have no clue what his stroke looks like. Plus, putting is arguably the weakest part of my game.

Fairways and Greens.

Dave
 

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I messed up on the total putts its suppose to be 135:
so 33.75 per round

I liked that tip on keeping your head down and listening for it to go in.

I also got a good tip on tv last night from dave pelz:

on long putts approach it like a chip, practice your stroke as though it was a chip, and then get up to the ball and put the same stroke on the ball.

And about my proximity to the hole: It was not extremely far, it was just your normal distribution, the greens were not large or anything, I am not here to make up excuses about why I putted poorly, I just want to get better
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