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8th February 2022 05:42 PM
#1
Putter length and type
Hi All
Not feeling that comfortable with my putter. On the golf journey just breaking 100 now pretty consistently. I've been using a ping anser 2 putter at 34 inches. I'm yet to groove a consistent stroke and wondering if this putter is not the best to help with that. Would I better suited to a mallet style?
Also, I chose the putter length based off my height. I'm 5'11" with no shoes on. Would it be bad if I went a 35 inch putter? If I find that more comfortable, can practice a bit longer with a more upright technique. Keen to hear if I'm on the wrong track with a 35 inch, mallet putter. Will try some in shops as well.
Thank you!
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8th February 2022 06:52 PM
#2
Member
Touring Pro (Aust PGA)
I guess the only way to find out is to try different ones or maybe a lesson to help with the stroke and a fitting.
Having said that I've never done any of those things, almost exclusively used blade type putters and quite comfortable with them. The main reason I miss is because I don't pick the line properly.
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8th February 2022 07:12 PM
#3
Senior Member
Touring Pro (Nationwide Tour)
Pretty hard to judge something like that without seeing you putt. Got some spare cash? Buy some different putters to experiment with on a real green. Fake grass at a golf shop isn't great. Where do you live? Maybe there's an ozgolfer nearby with a collection you could try out.
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8th February 2022 08:10 PM
#4
Yeah that is probably the only way isn't it either fitting or on a putting green?
I like the idea of getting on a putting green to try a couple.
I've got a longer putter at 35 inch but not a mallet type.
I'm in St Kilda.
Thanks for the replies on that one as well. Very much appreciated
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8th February 2022 10:28 PM
#5
Senior Member
Major Winner
Putter is length based on how comfy you are over the ball.
Grab your PW and just putt with it... find that posture you like where your hands can go past your body without the lower body helping.
find that posture and you find the length...
then you have to find the weight.. cause that is always the issue...
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9th February 2022 12:32 AM
#6
Originally Posted by
Pdiddy24
Yeah that is probably the only way isn't it either fitting or on a putting green?
I like the idea of getting on a putting green to try a couple.
I've got a longer putter at 35 inch but not a mallet type.
I'm in St Kilda.
Thanks for the replies on that one as well. Very much appreciated
correct putter fitting is critical
length of putter is fitted so your eyes sit in the right place in your posture not based on height
different head shapes can change the way you aim
grip size can change your stroke
correct weight can stabilise your stroke.
we have been doing more and more putter fitting lately as people understand how important it is
I work for Pureform Golf and are At MGA in heatherton
happy to help you out if you want to do a fit, no obligation to buy.
maybe you can give a review on here after
Stephen
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9th February 2022 10:31 AM
#7
Senior Member
Major Winner
Originally Posted by
Aussielongdriver
correct putter fitting is critical
length of putter is fitted so your eyes sit in the right place in your posture not based on height
different head shapes can change the way you aim
grip size can change your stroke
correct weight can stabilise your stroke.
we have been doing more and more putter fitting lately as people understand how important it is
I work for Pureform Golf and are At MGA in heatherton
happy to help you out if you want to do a fit, no obligation to buy.
maybe you can give a review on here after
Stephen
I'm hoping to get back down to Victoria between Easter and ANZAC Day, once that's confirmed I might come see you, if that's alright?
Ping G430 MAX 9° - Tour Alta CB Stiff
Ping G430 MAX 15° - Tour Alta CB Stiff
Ping G430 Hybrid 20.5° - Tour Alta CB Stiff
Srixon ZX7 4-PW - Dynamic Gold Tour Issue 120 S300
Cleveland RTX Zipcore 50°, 54°, 58°
Custom Lajosi DD201 - 390g head
GolfMap
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9th February 2022 11:09 AM
#8
That's all fantastic advice! I'd be keen to see how a fitting would go as well.
Do you think technique comes before a fitting? Or a putter that is fit to build the technique around?
Also love the idea of trying with different length clubs. Mine is 34 inches and feels ok but any longer practising I get tired in the back. Admittedly I'm probably bit of a whinger and just need to condition myself. Curious of thr options out there
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9th February 2022 12:59 PM
#9
Member
Touring Pro (Aust PGA)
I'm no expert but my feeling would be to work on the technique first then get a putter fitted based on it. I'm only basing that opinion on my own experience with the full swing, recently working on a swing rebuild of sorts with a view to get fitted later. My coach thinks I'm ready to be fitted now, but new clubs are out of my budget for now so I'll just keep working on it til tax time and do it then.
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9th February 2022 03:06 PM
#10
Originally Posted by
Kelsey86
I'm no expert but my feeling would be to work on the technique first then get a putter fitted based on it. I'm only basing that opinion on my own experience with the full swing, recently working on a swing rebuild of sorts with a view to get fitted later. My coach thinks I'm ready to be fitted now, but new clubs are out of my budget for now so I'll just keep working on it til tax time and do it then.
Yeah that's a good point as well. I had one putting lesson when I got into golf 8 months ago. Mostly distance control and lining up the ball etc. Instructor said technique wasn't too bad and pretty simple. I still have no idea if what I'm doing is right or wrong now so might be worth another look. Just aim for two putts as much as I can at this stage.
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9th February 2022 03:23 PM
#11
Senior Member
Touring Pro (Japanese Tour)
Do you know what you are doing wrong or think you are doing wrong with putting? What’s the normal miss left or right? Short or long? If it’s a consistent miss much easier to work out putters to try. I have also found it I want to straighten out putting stroke putting a thick book ether side of the ball and putting thru the “gate” works pretty quick,
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9th February 2022 04:54 PM
#12
Member
Touring Pro (Aust PGA)
Originally Posted by
Pdiddy24
Yeah that's a good point as well. I had one putting lesson when I got into golf 8 months ago. Mostly distance control and lining up the ball etc. Instructor said technique wasn't too bad and pretty simple. I still have no idea if what I'm doing is right or wrong now so might be worth another look. Just aim for two putts as much as I can at this stage.
I sometimes have trouble lining it up as well, but from a green reading aspect. Distance control is usually pretty good. I use those TP5 pix balls with a line I put on which I've found helps me line the putter up and stick to my chosen line when making the putt. My natural stroke is an arc rather than straight back and through. I'm led to believe blade putters suit that stroke which is probably why I prefer them. I don't think about it much, just line it up and hit it. The markings on the ball tell me if I've hit it square or not.
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9th February 2022 04:57 PM
#13
Senior Member
Touring Pro (PGA)
Originally Posted by
Aussielongdriver
correct putter fitting is critical
length of putter is fitted so your eyes sit in the right place in your posture not based on height
different head shapes can change the way you aim
grip size can change your stroke
correct weight can stabilise your stroke.
we have been doing more and more putter fitting lately as people understand how important it is
I work for Pureform Golf and are At MGA in heatherton
happy to help you out if you want to do a fit, no obligation to buy.
maybe you can give a review on here after
Stephen
I’d add that in terms of length of putter it’s ideal to have the forearms continue on the same plane as the shaft. So you could draw a straight line from the ball to your elbow through the grip. This will dictate the ideal length and lie based on preference for where the eyes sit over the ball.
A fitting will nail this straight away.
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9th February 2022 09:21 PM
#14
Originally Posted by
bdoug10
Do you know what you are doing wrong or think you are doing wrong with putting? What’s the normal miss left or right? Short or long? If it’s a consistent miss much easier to work out putters to try. I have also found it I want to straighten out putting stroke putting a thick book ether side of the ball and putting thru the “gate” works pretty quick,
I had trouble leaving a lot of putts short. I think the training matt I was using was too quick compared to the greens I am on. I've worked on that a lot especially for lag putts. Now that my lag putting is just ok, need to focus a bit more on making more closer putts within 5 ft. Not too sure on my regular miss yet but will start making more of a note of this. Thank you!
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9th February 2022 09:26 PM
#15
Originally Posted by
Kelsey86
I sometimes have trouble lining it up as well, but from a green reading aspect. Distance control is usually pretty good. I use those TP5 pix balls with a line I put on which I've found helps me line the putter up and stick to my chosen line when making the putt. My natural stroke is an arc rather than straight back and through. I'm led to believe blade putters suit that stroke which is probably why I prefer them. I don't think about it much, just line it up and hit it. The markings on the ball tell me if I've hit it square or not.
Do you line up the ball for long lag putts as well as shorter ones?
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9th February 2022 09:26 PM
#16
Originally Posted by
BUSHY
I’d add that in terms of length of putter it’s ideal to have the forearms continue on the same plane as the shaft. So you could draw a straight line from the ball to your elbow through the grip. This will dictate the ideal length and lie based on preference for where the eyes sit over the ball. A fitting will nail this straight away.
Perfectly explained, thank you!
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9th February 2022 10:09 PM
#17
Member
Touring Pro (Aust PGA)
Originally Posted by
Pdiddy24
Do you line up the ball for long lag putts as well as shorter ones?
Yep, all putts except the ones inside 3 or 4 feet, and the obvious off the green where I can't mark it. Using the line on the ball I've found helps me to hit the ball square and start it on the chosen line instead of being distracted by the hole and twisting the putter face on contact. I try to hole everything, if it misses it's usually close enough for the next putt to be pretty easy. If it goes in, bonus 😁
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10th February 2022 12:19 AM
#18
Originally Posted by
Pdiddy24
I had trouble leaving a lot of putts short. I think the training matt I was using was too quick compared to the greens I am on. I've worked on that a lot especially for lag putts. Now that my lag putting is just ok, need to focus a bit more on making more closer putts within 5 ft. Not too sure on my regular miss yet but will start making more of a note of this. Thank you!
Weight will help with this
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10th February 2022 08:57 AM
#19
That's good to know and one of the reasons on thinking a mallet style would be better for me. On what I read anyways
Cheers
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10th February 2022 09:37 AM
#20
Senior Member
Touring Pro (Japanese Tour)
Originally Posted by
Pdiddy24
That's good to know and one of the reasons on thinking a mallet style would be better for me. On what I read anyways
Cheers
You don't necessarily need a mallet to get weight. I am a bit of a putter whore, I have a really good mix of light and heavy, mallets and blades. My heaviest putter is a Scotty Cameron Newport select 2.6. Learning to read green speed is an art to be practiced, alot. There are a bunch of drills on YouTube for distance control. The first thing I do when I get on a putting green, is hit 3 balls without looking up between strokes, just roll them with your normal comfortable stroke, and step out how far they go, that will give you an indication of green speed. Practice is your friend, and so is a nice new putter
Sent from my SM-G960F using Tapatalk
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10th February 2022 05:59 PM
#21
Originally Posted by
JoeS
You don't necessarily need a mallet to get weight. I am a bit of a putter whore, I have a really good mix of light and heavy, mallets and blades. My heaviest putter is a Scotty Cameron Newport select 2.6. Learning to read green speed is an art to be practiced, alot. There are a bunch of drills on YouTube for distance control. The first thing I do when I get on a putting green, is hit 3 balls without looking up between strokes, just roll them with your normal comfortable stroke, and step out how far they go, that will give you an indication of green speed. Practice is your friend, and so is a nice new putterSent from my SM-G960F using Tapatalk
That's good to know thank you.I'll remember that distance control idea as well in testing greens.At the moment I basically step out 5m, 10m and 15m. And then have a putting stroke for each of those distances using different areas of my feet (inside, outside and far outside) to get an idea. This might not be that practical in the long run bit will keep at it and the advice of yours as well.
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10th February 2022 07:31 PM
#22
Senior Member
Touring Pro (Japanese Tour)
Originally Posted by
Pdiddy24
That's good to know thank you.I'll remember that distance control idea as well in testing greens.At the moment I basically step out 5m, 10m and 15m. And then have a putting stroke for each of those distances using different areas of my feet (inside, outside and far outside) to get an idea. This might not be that practical in the long run bit will keep at it and the advice of yours as well.
Another way of doing that is varying feet width and putting foot to foot, not sure if that will be better or worse in the long run. I have a pretty narrow stance on short putts and it seems to work for me
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11th February 2022 07:28 AM
#23
Originally Posted by
bdoug10
Another way of doing that is varying feet width and putting foot to foot, not sure if that will be better or worse in the long run. I have a pretty narrow stance on short putts and it seems to work for me
That's another good idea as well! Cheers
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11th February 2022 11:24 AM
#24
Senior Member
Major Winner
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12th February 2022 10:12 PM
#25
Originally Posted by
Hatchman
Distance control for all aspects of short game (chipping & putting) takes practice.Putting mats are great for alignment and accelerating stroke training which also plays a part in distance control.To dial distance control in on the greens your playing on the day I use 3 balls on the practice Green.I space them out roughly 2 foot apart on the same line with the first putt 12-15 foot away (depends on how much room you have on your practice green). Also pick a putt that's relatively flat and straight without excessive breaks.Naturally you start with the shortest distance to hole ball first and work out to the furthest one. The focus is to get a feel for the stroke required for the length. Rinse and repeat until your satisfied. You could hole any after the first Putt if you need but I prefer not to Putt to many of those as the practice green see's more traffic around the holes influencing the roll of the ball with deviations giving you a false impression of your technique. I back myself that my technique is sound enough to roll them in from 3 foot and under during a round.
Another good one that will be super helpful. Thank you I hadn't thought of the extra foot traffic on practice greens which meant perfect sense so I'll keep that I the back of mind
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