Tuesday, November 15, 2011


▷▷▷There Are Only Two Kinds of Putts

Driving is probably the most fun shot in golf to many players. You get to put the ball up on a peg and swing the biggest club in the bag as hard as you can. When properly done, you get to watch the ball fly high and far.

Putting, on the other hand, is the most frustrating shot in golf to most players. Especially when the putts are close enough to the hole the golfer feels they should make them. Everybody knows if you miss a short putt you lost a stroke, no matter how far the drive went.

Somewhere down the line, your objective has to change from hitting a general area such as with a tee shot or long approach putt, to hitting a specific target and making the ball fall into a hole.

There are really only two kinds of putts. The ones you want to leave close, and the ones you think you should make. But most golfers apply the same technique and mindset for both types of putts.

The result is often poor putting from short range, and the resulting higher scores from missing those putts the golfer feels they should make. One of the biggest reasons these short putts are missed is because the golfer is still focused on the putting stroke instead of the target they must hit to make the putt.

By failing to change their mindset to one more conducive to making a short putt, the golfer continues to take a "lag putt" approach on putts they should be trying to make.

If you want to improve on your short putting, you have to change the way you look at what you are trying to do. Short putting is not a matter of making a perfect stroke. Success in short putting comes by hitting a perfect target, which can be done with a less than perfect stroke.


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