Missing crucial putts when under pressure is one of the worst feelings in golf, but there are many reasons why this might happen. The added significance could be causing you to subconsciously alter your putting grip, fail to match up line and speed or totally mis-read your putts, but more than likely it will all come down to your posture.
In this article, Golf Monthly Top 50 Coach Andy Gorman shares three expert tips to perfect your posture with the putter when under pressure…
1. Create A Solid Left-Side Column
Despite reading the best putting tips, a lot of amateur golfers still misunderstand what should be happening in the putting stroke. The movement of the stroke into the ball should be upward and not downward. A poor posture with a lower left shoulder encourages a downward hit and a poor strike.
When you’re under pressure, the posture can easily go wrong. The left shoulder, arm, hip, knee and ankle are all in a solid line here and this is a good visual to keep in your mind. You are creating a solid left-side column with the weight loaded over the left hip, leg and ankle, but you are in a high rather than low position. This encourages good posture over the ball.
2. The Role Of The Left Shoulder
The role of the left shoulder is key in putting. The forward swing is governed by an upward movement of the left shoulder, before it then starts to rotate around the spine.
If the chest is low, the left shoulder gets stuck and the hands take over and start flipping the putter. By getting a taller set-up, you can activate the spine; by bunching over it, you are deactivating the spine’s rotational capabilities.
3. The Putting Stroke
The hands and the handle keep moving forward because the chest keeps moving through the stroke, and the body/head stay in the same position. In effect, the right shoulder turns the chest in the backswing and that moves the club 10-12 inches, which is sufficient for a 12-foot putt.
The left shoulder has gone down to the right and forward as part of that rotation and needs to get up and out of the way on the through-swing before starting…
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