September 19, 2019 At 04:30 AM By Richard A
Ben ALos Gatos, CA
mmiller
December 05, 2019 At 02:16 PM
Here's my issue. I play several different courses and the speeds range from about a 3 to a 14. On a 30-50 foot putt, I really don't care who you are, you can't be consistent with the same putter for speeds at the extreme ends. I've tried even using a metal wood on the greens to get them to roll semi-consistently to the hole on the super slow greens. What I've finally gone to is a png blade with a metalized rough face. It causes the ball to jump off the face much more. Whereas I use a TM square face with a very soft plasticized face for the fast greens. By switching putters and putter face materials, I can use roughly the same exact swing (or at least close and same general speed with minimal differences) to get the ball rolling and to the hole consistently. I've found that with the soft faced TM there is no way to consistently (and sometimes not ever) get the ball rolling all the way to the hole. And similarly have similar issues with fast greens swinging it slow enough to keep the ball close to the hole is extremely difficult. Personally I prefer fast greens and usually putt better on ones over 10 than ones under 5. It gets really tricky if you play two-three days on fast greens and then the next day play super slow, especially if there are lots of hilly greens with lots of up and down. Judging those is beyond tricky. As long as the greens are semi-fast (8 or more) then it's not hard to use a single putter to judge. But when there are tremendous differences, it gets beyond belief tricky. I played on one set of greens that I used a wood on the entire back nine to putt almost everywhere as I couldn't hit the ball hard enough with a putter. But for the most part, my metal faced png and the TM softfaced work out well for me. But only one per round. Figure out which works best and then use it for the round with the same general stroke and only minor swing speed variations. When one is having to hit the putter super hard, its really hard to control the speed and direction on the putts. played with some people the other day that found that out, they just couldn't control the speed consistently and direction well having to hit it very hard to get it to roll to the hole.
Scott DLethbridge,
JShank
marvin h
Joshua B
Peter CBBedfordshire, UK
Corey FHanahan, SC
Chuck ZMt Pleasant, SC
December 20, 2019 At 08:47 AM
Same putter. Spend 50% of my warm up on the practice green adjusting to conditions since 50% of my shots tend to be putts.
Under the RoofMequon, WI
William STEMECULA, CA
No'lPalmdale, CA
Todd TSan Diego, CA
Gabe BEau Claire, Michigan
JD DempseySavannah
January 21, 2020 At 10:25 AM
One tip I can offer if you are dealing with a big down hill putt or you are having trouble with fast greens is to line the ball up towards the toe of the putter and purposely hit it off the toe.
January 23, 2020 At 03:19 PM
BMaddigan
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