When golfers attempt to control distance on mid-to-long putts, many simply try and hit the ball harder or softer. They usually adopt the same length of stroke and vary the amount of oomph given each time. This is quite a difficult way to be consistent with your distance control.
In this video and article, PGA pro Katie Dawkins shares a simple drill that will help golfers gain consistency in their stroke by using momentum over force…
When we hit a long putt really hard the ball skids and jumps all over the place before rolling. So it’s far better to maintain a pendulum action, ensuring the tempo remains the same for each putt, short or long.
Four-ball drill
Soft hands are essential if you want a silky stroke. Squeezing the life out of your putter will result in a jerky action and more of a hit through impact. Instead, you want the ball to get in the way of a solid motion. To practise this, set four balls up on a flat stretch of green, ideally one with no severe slopes. Place them in a row so you’re putting them across the green one ball after another.
RELATED: Best putters
You need to almost put the blinkers on so you don’t look and see where each ball finishes. If you peek you can easily influence how hard you hit the next ball.
It’s also important to ensure you have a flatstick that suits your stroke type. If, for example, you tend to arc the putter, you’ll find more success with a blade model that tends to have more toe hang. Alternatively, if you’ve got more of a straight-back-and-through stroke, at one of the best mallet putters is where you should be looking.
All about the rhythm
Use a rhythm like tick-tock or 1-2, keeping the same tempo almost like having a metronome in your head. If you can maintain this throughout all of your putts, it makes it easier to gauge distance simply by the length of stroke.
The first putt is a small tick-tock, then you want to keep that tempo and just lengthen it back and through each time until all four balls have gone.
What you want to…
..
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Golf Monthly RSS Feed…