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Posted
I am interested in methods, drills and/or training aids used to work on aiming the putter. I have never been more than an average putter relying on my ball striking and short game to score. Lately I have really struggled with my aim as it relates to the putter and as a result making fewer birdies. Thanks in advance for your replies.

Posted
Just to keep it simple. I usually use the centre line of my putter to line up where i want the ball to actually go. And then, i line both feet up square with the clubface and in the closest to where the line is pointing direction..

It seems to work for me, but then again, there is 29strokes difference in our handicaps :P

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Posted
i draw a line on my ball and aim the line where i want to putt and then align the line on my putter with the line on the ball and putt away.

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Posted
I love picking a spot 6" in front of the ball, and then rolling the ball over it.

Just HATE when the grass is too perfect to find a "spot"!

Posted
I have an unusal method for aimming the putter.

1) I stand behind the ball and check for the target line
2) I drop my putter perpendicular to the target line
3) I walk around to my putting stance while the putter is resting on the ground and then once my feet are position to putt I then move the putter perpendicular again so that the face is square to the target line.
4) I focus on making a taking the putter back with my shoulders and not my hands to keep the putter face square to the target line.

Try it you might like it.
I will admit it looks strange but I tried a spot ahead of the ball and try to walk around to my stance but I am not confident that the putter is on line with my target line always.

I also do this routine with my irons, woods and driver, it works for me to get the target line.

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Posted
You could always try getting a laser pointer... In fact, some electronic putting trainers have these built in now. Other thing you could try is the old string line or using mirrors to help with alignment. I've even known of people that 'putt' their way around the house by keeping the ball running parallel to the wall.

Posted
I love picking a spot 6" in front of the ball, and then rolling the ball over it.

I use this method now and I know what you mean about loosing your spot, especially this time of year when the greens are dormant.

I have an unusal method for aimming the putter.

Are you aiming the putter from behind the ball then walking around to it? I have experimented with this on the practise green with some success, but I often inadvertantly move the putter on the way around the ball.

Thanks for all the tips.

Posted
My pracatice routine is fairly standard, but after I have picked out my line and place the putter square towards my target I step in focusing on aligning the inside of my right elbow (right palm would be facing the target if not holding the club) to my target, then I align my feet parallel to the target line. I focus entirely on tempo and feeling the putter head after that. Putting is the best part of my game by far. I feel that practicing a routine, that works for you and tempo is what makes good putters. I feel that is Sergios problem for example all the focus on technique makes it difficult to perform under pressure. The only time I struggle is when my green reading gets off.

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Posted
I use this method now and I know what you mean about loosing your spot, especially this time of year when the greens are dormant.

I do move around my putter to my putting stance while the putter sits on the ground being careful not to move my putter, then I realign the putter perpendicular to where the putter was and draw my line this way. It works for me even though I have never seen a pro do. The only pro who did something similar was Betsey King, She aim behind the ball and placed her putter face square to the target line and walk around to take her putting stance so her putter was already line up.

Titleist 910 D2 9.5 Driver
Titleist 910 F15 & 21 degree fairway wood
Titleist 910 hybrid 24 degree
Mizuno Mp33 5 - PW
52/1056/1160/5

"Yonex ADX Blade putter, odyssey two ball blade putter, both  33"

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    • He's using a driver swing, while I used the iron swing. Bryson goes from about 65° B to 15° B, hence the 50°. If you bend your right elbow, you're going to pull your hands across your chest some. Conversely, if you abduct your right arm and hold onto a grip with your left arm, you can see how extending the right elbow as we do in the golf swing during the downswing will "pull" the right shoulder/humerus forward (adducting it, as going from 65° to 15° of abduction is). Even people who pull their right shoulder WAY too far around them eventually get it "back in front" when their right arm/elbow extends. So, such a motion shows up as shoulder adduction even though the movement that causes it is just widening the trail elbow. The left hand on the grip almost "pulls" the hands forward as the left arm can't stretch much (there's some shoulder protraction, but that's almost maxed out at P4). Oh, I downloaded it and watched it (and commented there) before he blocked me. It's what led to him posting the comment in the "update" above. 😄  Single shoulder range of 75°, and that's going out well into the follow-through. 50° Max range up to impact. Manavian's video is bad. He keeps saying "midline" which is just a horrible way to look at it. He also kept saying that the club was moving that amount — also wrong. Adding left and right together is really freaking dumb. Another golf instructor said "That's like saying the player has 100 degrees of knee bend (adding left knee bend to right knee bend) 🤦‍♂️" (similar to what the biomechanist said about squatting). Also, see my post above about elbow bend. That's why Plummer’s alignment stick demo is so intellectually dishonest. A golfer can't get anywhere near that position on the left with his left hand on the alignment stick (quoted below).  
    • That makes no sense at all.  so, I watched that Instagram. Here is a summary...  Bryson.... Address: Trail Shoulder 0 degrees adduction. P4: Trail Shoulder 65-deg abduction. Impact: Right shoulder 15-deg abduction. P9: 10 degrees adduction. Rory... Address: Trail Shoulder 16 degrees adduction. P4: Trail Shoulder 26 degrees abduction. Impact: Right shoulder 0 degrees abduction.  P9: 18 degrees of adduction.  DJ... Address: Trail Shoulder 4 degrees adduction. P4: Trail Shoulder 42 degrees abduction. Impact: Right shoulder 2 degrees abduction.  P9: 15 degrees of adduction.  Their point is that arm doesn't stay on the trail side. That the arms have to get across the chest from P4 to P9. I mean they do. What matters is the rate of which it happens relative to the position of the swing. The trail shoulder at P9 is not abducted a lot. The range of that total abduction movement is like 40 to 70 degrees. Bryson might be an outlier. Rory might be an outlier as well.  A couple of points.  1. None of them had any adduction at impact. So, this tells me the trail arms stays on the trail side of the body at impact. Is it moving towards lead shoulder, yes. It doesn't happen till post impact. The right side of the body is moving towards the target, so the arms don't have to as much as people think.  2. Trail shoulder adduction from Impact to P9 is 18 to 25 degrees.  3. P9 adduction of the trail shoulder is only about 2 to 12 degrees more adducted than at address. The arms/hands stay in front of the chest a long-time post impact. If Rory, from his address position just rotated his body towards the target and raised up his arms so he is at P9. He basically didn't have to move his trail arm further across his chest than where he started at address. Visualize that for a bit. I bet for people who tend to stall and drag their arms across their body to hit the ball, that would emphasize how much the arms stay in front of the body and how much you have to turn.             
    • Do you know how Manavian is measuring his shoulder adduction-abduction that purports to demonstrate 50 degrees or motion in Bryson's downswing? I know the broader biomechanics research/scientific literature on this suggests shoulder adduction-abduction is only a modest contributor of force generation in the downswing, so I'm definitely not convinced by anything he's arguing, I'm just curious how different people can be claiming to use ostensibly the same "data" to tell a much different story.
    • I have an update… I don't have much of a response, because the fact that they would ADD the numbers for the lead and trail shoulder together… I mean, wow. I was giving them too much credit. Nobody would think to assume they were doing THAT. That's beyond comical. One of the biomechanists I talked to put it this way: "So if I squatted down and went from 180 to 90 deg knee angle, then I would say 180 deg range of motion because I have two knees?" I'd type more (maybe), but honestly, I'm laughing a bit too hard. 🤣 Update: Mini Manavian blocked me on Instagram, so I cannot see his post showing Bryson with about 50° of range of motion (with a driver) from P4 to P7, and 75° only if you go out to the mid-follow-through. What a terrible loss for me. 😉 
    • Thanks, interesting to read. The swing is definitely very timing dependent. I hit it consistently I guess but consistently bad.    
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