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If you want more pars, let’s adopt a few keys from Cameron Smith’s awesome stroke. He’s doing something that you ain’t. So, let’s get to it!

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Hey guys Christina Ricci if you want more pars but you really struggle with your putting you’re three putting way too many greens then let’s take a look at one of the best Putters in the world Cameron Smith he’s an awesome Putter and I’m going to share in detail what he

Does really well so you can incorporate into your putting and it will really be a game changer you’re going to like it ready let’s get to it all right what Cameron does really well is with the setup he keeps his elbows in all right so everything is connected

So then you can really work the shoulders around the spine all right it’s a tiny move and you can let the putter release properly what he’s not doing is this this is where I see players go off this is a attempting to guide the putter head all right trying to keep it super

Straight back and straight through all right this isn’t moving at all all right that’s a big No-No with putting all right you gotta get the arms in chest arm connection so the chest moves too all right that’s really important this is a false sense of stability right

Here I call this rocking the baby let’s get the baby in the crib that’s one of the real magic with a stroke all right and I’m just going to exaggerate this so you can see it I’m going to take the Putter and I’m going to go like this he lets this happen

So then when he lets go that momentum hits the ball they’re not letting physics do it they’re trying to guide it where Cameron makes everything because he’s letting physics do it and he’s letting physics do it so you just change the length of your backstroke and then you let physics do the rest

That takes care of the energy right so a longer putt will be a longer backstroke and that adds more energy at the bottom all right so that’s the magic to putting short backstroke less energy watch to put her head come up in the backstroke and release that tells you is working on

An arc it’s arcing to the inside and it’s arcing up and then he releases it with a bit of a pop so we’re going to flip it around we’re going to take a look at face on you’re gonna get a good look at it here we’ll take a look at it

Full speed here and we’re going to slow it down for you so you can see that the putter head gets behind the hands and that’ll tell you that he’s got nice relaxed uh grip on the on the putter head he’s letting it get up it’s letting

It get behind his hands so now he’s got energy and he can let that energy just fall onto the ball Ben Crenshaw said I like to just let my putter head fall onto the ball let it go to sleep at the top of the stroke and that’s why they

Have this pop there’s no sense that they have to accelerate through because they haven’t taken it far enough back or they’ve taken it too low they let the putter head get up and they get a free ride down with gravity so that’s why the best Putters tend to look like they have

Pop Strokes Nicholas looked that way Crenshaw certainly all right so you don’t have to change your energy each and every pot based on the distance you keep the same energy that’s where the pop is and then you let the length of the back stroke take care of the rest

All right that’s on a really important Point that’ll change your putting forever right a lot of players get anxious around the green and by just allowing the putter to fall right and then he holds his finish just like that really important that you hold your finish

Right a lot of players recoil all right because they’re holding the putter so tight and then they’re trying to guide it and then they have no control whatsoever all right where players can go off and down the line View is they’ll take the putter either two inside all right or two outside

Where Cameron basically just kind of looks like he takes it slightly inside and then up all right he goes up with the putter head and then down right that’s where the magic is that was a beautiful roll all right when you make the putts you’re gonna feel like wow that feels really different

It just brings like a peaceful easy feeling to your putting stroke give it a shot let me know how it goes yeah yeah

4 Comments

  1. I use the pop style stroke on putts inside 20’, or so. It’s soooo much easier for me to feel like I sorta bump the ball, to start it perfectly on my line. I don’t do this by jabbing, or chopping at the ball. I’ll use smooth tempo just like any other putt. It’s just a shorter backswing, and a more abbreviated follow through. I pick a specific spot about 6” in front of my ball, and then focus all of my efforts on bumping it over that spot, not thinking about the outcome(that’s key). They all don’t go in, but a lot of them do! This is a little more challenging on long, lag putts. On those, I’ll use more of a long, fluid stroke. I feel like you read one of my previous posts about using the same energy, and tempo on every putt. The distance control is based solely on length of backstroke. I’ll take practice strokes, and imagine I’ve hit the ball. My imagination tells me if my backswing was too long, or too short. Once I find what feels like the perfect swing for the distance, I just step up to the ball, and repeat it. I only 3-putt maybe once every 5 rounds, or so. And, I almost always have less than 30 putts per round, using these methods. It feels like cheating. lol

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