Lesson Learned: Reading comprehension Problem Area: - TopicsExpress



          

Lesson Learned: Reading comprehension Problem Area: Putting Torrey Pines is a tremendous venue, everyone who watched one shot of the golf this past weekend understands how beautiful, impressive and difficult it is. When Phil Mickelson had to withdraw due to back pain and Tiger Woods somehow shot 79 to miss the secondary cut, there was a concern that Sunday would somehow lack in interest and drama. Not a chance. That was one of the most crowded and crazy leaderboards weve seen in a long time. What the thick rough and tucked pins from the week showed the golf world was that when your long game is not working, you can still score if you take care of business on the green. Scott Stallings hit only four of 14 fairways in the final round, yet still shot 68 to emerge with the win. It was his putter that bailed him out and then propelled him ahead. So how do you putt better? One of the best ways to improve is to become better at reading a green. And thats the topic of this weeks A Lesson Learned. Youve heard the adage that everything breaks toward the water (and at Torrey, thats some big water). Not exactly. Gravity still matters and the ball will break towards the low point on a particular line. Most players understand that a rolling golf ball (all else being equal) will break towards the ocean. And what looks straight may break, what looks like a slight break may be pretty severe and uphill/downhill putts should take the same concepts into account. Now, lets apply that same (correct) logic to all your putts - no matter where you are. Watch as the worlds best players walk up to a green (especially in the practice rounds). They are looking for the highest point of the green and the lowest point on the green. They do the same for the landscape around the green. Once youve established the flow of the green, it will make reading the green much easier for you. Additionally, I encourage students to look at a putt from the hole back to where the ball rests. Specifically, determine what the ball is doing at the hole. The idea is that you want to know which way your ball is moving as it nears the cup. If you hit the low side, the ball will most likely spin out. But putts that come in via the high side will often drop. Its the classic pro side vs. the amateur side of a read. We all know how important putting is to your score. The ability to avoid three putts and get the occasional longer putt to drop will most likely improve your score faster than any other part of your game. Reading the greens properly, and understanding what influences the ball on each green, will go a long ways in you reaching your golf goals
Posted on: Mon, 24 Feb 2014 18:03:18 +0000

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