I’m here to share a few of my favorite tips and drills to help get your short game back on track, especially if you haven’t been playing much golf lately. To get started, check out the picture to the left. Notice how my eyes are closed? That’s not a mistake.
Stay Relaxed In addition to good fundamentals, better putting requires you to stay relaxed in order to produce a smooth motion. |
Practicing with your eyes closed is a great way to retrain your body and mind to get used to making smooth, pendulum-like putting strokes. If you want, go ahead and set up over a golf ball on the practice green. Read the putt, judge the distance, then close your eyes and stroke the putt. Then open your eyes and judge the results. Keep practicing until you can gauge the length of the putt with your eyes closed. This will, in turn, help train the body to recognize how hard to stroke a putt from varying lengths from the hole.
Now, let’s get down to the nitty gritty. All great putters have a solid setup, which in our case, means setting up to the ball in a comfortable and athletic position. In the photo above, notice these few key points: The ball is positioned slightly forward of center. This will help me catch the ball on a slight incline, thus helping the ball roll faster with an end-over-end roll. My head is centered and square to the target, and my hands are slightly in front of the ball. This slight forward-press position also helps me make a solid pass at the ball and hit the center of the putterface.
But, you may be asking, “Which arm should drive the putting stroke?” The reality is it’s both. The left arm is the puller, and the right arm is the pusher. The key is to use both arms in unison to prevent the hands from collapsing through impact. If you do that, the putterhead will outrace the hands (see top left photo, opposite page), and you’ll have inconsistent results. But, if you manage to keep the hands working in unison, the upper body will become more engaged in the stroke, and it’s likely your wrists won’t collapse, and smoother strokes will be easier to attain. I like to use a golf ball between my wrists as I practice, as a handy reminder.
BAD!
If your wrists break down through impact, you have a problem. In fact, if the putterhead is ever in front of the hands, you run the risk of actually hitting the top half of the ball, causing it to dig into the green and pop up off the ground immediately after contact.
GOOD!
Eventually the putter will release and outrace the hands, but in this photo, you can see my wrists are still ahead of the clubhead, relative to the shaft. Strive for this followthrough position and you’ll quickly see results.
With only your left hand, try to maintain a flat wrist through the putting stroke. This will help with consistency and contact.
Putt With Right
Using only your right hand, try to hold the angle formed by the back of your right wrist through the stroke.
Controlling the distance of your putts, both long and short, is a task many amateurs overcomplicate. To simplify, check out the photo above and notice the four tees and the ghosted putterheads above them. The two outer tees represent a longer putting stroke; the two inner tees are of a shorter stroke.
As you putt from a longer distance, the trick is to let your putter swing wider than it would on a shorter putt. Don’t try to force a long putt into a quick, jabby short stroke. Allow the putter to swing on a wider arc, and be sure to try to match up the followthrough length with the backswing length. Conversely, a shorter putt is best executed with a shorter putting stroke. Again, the backswing and followthrough length should mirror each other.
Now here’s the kicker. Whether you have a long or short putt, the same rhythm ought to be used for both. In other words, long putts don’t need to be long, slow strokes, and short putts shouldn’t be quick, jabby strokes. Think in terms of both long and short putts (and all putts in between) as being on the same metronome. A short stroke putts at a smooth 1-second-to-1-second rhythm, and a longer putt is maybe a 2-second-to-2-second rhythm. You don’t want to be 2-seconds to 1, or 1-second to 2 for any putt. The key is to maintain a similar stroke speed for all your putts, and simply adjust your seconds as needed, based on the length of the putt. Just be sure to stay consistent and keep the backswing and forwardswing even! Use a stopwatch and dial in your rhythm, and stick to it with all your putts. Another common flaw I see from students who struggle with their putting is their tendency to lift the putter with their arms, as opposed to developing a rocking motion of the shoulders. When you lift, you lose a sense of your putting arc, which then leads to a host of problems that, no doubt, result in more bad putts.