04/11/2013
DECISIVE PUTTING
by Stan Sayers
Commitment is an "act", a "state of being", engaging oneself. Desire - to wish or long for; to want.
Does this describe your putting? Do you stand over a putt thinking that...without a doubt...this putt is going in the hole! If this is you, then Congratulations and welcome to the few. For many, they say they want the putt to go in but, truly they are neither committed or have the desire required to make a good putt. How does one get to the point of being confident about making putts when many don't go in?
Anyone can become a good putter. Through work and skill training you can become a great putter! A large motion is not required it is small and compact. Not everyone can play the Tour or become a Major champion. Everyone has a performance potential they can reach.
1) You MUST be confident in your fundamentals. You're grip, posture, stance, aim and stroke must be repeatable without a doubt.
2) Your Green Reading, speed control and ability to start the ball on the intended line are skills that require training to perform under stress and competition.
Previously the green reading process took years to be proficient but now with AimPoint that process, with practice and commitment, it is cut into months. Why is this so important? Without the ability to read a green properly you can never fully commit to a putt creating doubt in your stroke, the putter, the universe or whatever else you would like to blame it on. Green reading is the WHY to speed and direction. It's just physics and gravity. Why guess when you can determine the right read with a proven process.
When you've put the work in to be able to "Trust" in your fundamentals and the skills you've acquired, you're now ready to Commit to every putt you make. Obviously all putts will not go in the hole. You're Commitment however will change every future putt you find yourself over. You will make putts that you previously may not have made. Distance control will become a part of your commitment no longer a guess or a hope.
Great putters have the ability to Commit to making a putt regardless of the result. Their personal belief system is that no matter the result they will hit a great putt. The following is a great story from "Putting Out of Your Mind" by Bob Rotella...
Jack Nicklaus was speaking at an event at which he said “I have never three-putted, or missed from inside five feet, on the final hole of a tournament.” For those of you who are not golfers, he was saying
that when the pressure was at its greatest, on the final hole of a 72-hole tournament, he had never missed a putt he should have made (if you are a professional golfer, you shouldn’t miss from inside five feet, and you shouldn’t take more than two putts on any hole).
At question time a guy in the audience took Jack to task. He said that he was watching a recent tournament and that Jack Nicklaus missed a three-foot putt on the last hole.
Jack replied “Sir, you’re wrong. I have never three-putted, or missed from inside five feet, on the final hole of a tournament.” The audience member offered to send him a video tape. “No need to send me anything sir. I was there. I have never three-putted, or missed from inside five feet on the final green of a tournament.”
After the talk was over the audience member came up to Dr Rotella and asked “What’s wrong with Nicklaus? Why can’t he just admit it?”
Rotella asked the man if he played golf (he did) and what his handicap was (16 ... an average weekend golfer) and whether if he missed a short putt on the last hole of a tournament he would remember it and admit it (of course).
Rotella then said to the man “So let me get this straight, you’re a sixteen handicapper, and Jack Nicklaus is the greatest golfer ever, and you want Jack to think like you?” The man had no answer.
A great putter will hit a putt that doesn't go in but KNOW they hit a great putt. Jack was quietly saying while he may not have made the putt he didn't miss it. He hit it exactly the way he wanted.
A great friend of mine, Mike Bender ( #4 ranked Teacher by Golf Digest), and I were playing one day and I asked him the reason he thought he was such a great putter. Let me give you a little history...Mike was a great putter when he played on Tour. A few years later he developed the yips and switched to left handed. Trust me, he is still a great putter. His reply..."One word, DESIRE! The best way I can describe it is that I've always had a desire to make putts!" This desire drove his ability to Commit to every putt.
Make a decision. Desire to hole the putt. Commit to the putt and make it!
If you want to become a great putter then let us help you walk on the green with the confidence of knowing you’ll commit to hitting a great putt! Contact us about AimPoint Green Reading and Putting instruction.
303-799-0870