Jared Willerson
Super Moderator
Say what you want about his swing. Best putter I have ever had the chance to play with. Congrats to him.
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3 straight birdies to win it. Congratulations! I feel for Weaver too.
Par on 18 won the hole after Weaver had his par putt go in and horseshoe out. I'm a Cal Bear so I was watching with some interest and rooting for Weaver. He did hit that putt hard but it looked like it went in then out. Too bad.
Did Trevino say" Worry about the guy w/ the bad grip and funky swing because he has figured out how to get it around" (or something to that effect)
It was great to see choice of putting speed be the difference in a big tournament. "18-inches past" might be the most popular, yet stupid, misinformation in golf instruction history.
Mr. Fox's putt on 16, making the hole as large as possible, lipping in on the low side, vs. Mr. Weaver's putt on 18, hitting the hole in the heart but wayyy too hard, hence making the hole smaller, was a perfect example of how destructive - or beautiful - choice of putting speed can be.
"But, but, but, it can never go in if it never gets there!" ... Yep, and you can lose the U.S. Am by trying to hit it harder than you ought to.
If only the Cal Bear had a more well-rounded education, ...![]()
I first heard about the "18 inches past" rule from Dave Peltz. He is a scientist and did a lot of study on the subject. I think he arrived at his conclusion not because of the old "never up, never in" rule but rather as a way to combat what he called the "lumpy donut". He claimed the area around the hole was lumpy from golfers walking around it. To combat this unevenness a putt had to be hit hard enough to stay on line while it bounced to the hole. I trust Dave but I cannot putt like this. I'm not good enough to make all those 18 inchers coming back.
The Aimpoint folks have determined that a "go past" distance of 24" will reduce the capture width of the hole from 4.25" down to 2". As the SEC has proven, speed truly does kill.
Not that it matters, but wasn't Pelz's deal 17"?
The 18" conclusion doesn't account for the various grasses for putting surfaces. Geoff Mangum touches on this subject in his book Optimal Putting (which I was again reading last night due to bad putting rounds on greens with a ton of grass that I had to hammer to get the ball to the hole).