NEVER make a backstroke that MAKES YOU accelerate too much to get the ball to the hole.
NEVER make a backstroke that MAKES YOU slow down too much to keep the ball from going way past the hole.
What types of practice or drills do you guys do to get the speed right on putts. I have a tendency to leave putts short and always give myself a 3 footer for par or save bogey.
John, but then how do you gage how far to roll it?
Why would how far the ball rolls past the hole matter if the goal is to make it? Not sure I follow you on this one.
I agree that the brain protects us from pain, and also protects us from TOO far. But how do you then gauge TOO short.
John, if the brain can gauge too far, can it not gauge too short?
John, I disagree that thinking about the length of the putt as including 2 feet past the hole as helpful in any way.
First off, the 'arc' does not resemble an arc in any way due to speed degradation at various points.
Why would you want to visualize the'arc after the hole unless you're thinking about your 2nd or 3rd putt.
If there was no hole there and a profile of the hole was painted on the green, the ball would roll through the center of the circle on it's way to its end point of 8 feet.
Unless you're trying to sell charts to people maybe!
Imagine parking a car or entering a freeway with that concept?
First question I think of is what is the overall length of your stroke. Long strokes, esp. follow throughs generally lead to a slower pace.
The drill I like for improving speed control really has to do with awareness. Take 3 putts while looking at the target, or cup. Then take 3 more putts while keeping your head steady (no peaking). Finally, call your putts before looking up. Final strokes should go... stroke, finish, call it (long, short, right, left) swivel your head to look, stand up.
The better awareness you have of what your stroke produces, the easier you will make adjustments.
Hope this helps, also love Brians post, that ones gonna be put in play.![]()