Reading Putting Distance – An Essential Golf Technique

Reading Putting Distance – An Essential Golf Technique

Article by BQ Browning







How often have you been so close to winning a game of golf – there’s just the final putt. You take your time and breathe deeply, you concentrate and contemplate your stroke – and then you come up short! Worse still, you just miss the hole and have to watch your ball go rolling past the hole, leaving you with a return putt that is further than the original to which you gave so much thought and effort. Putting is one of the basic golf techniques that is sadly neglected by beginners and experienced players alike.

A huge number of games are lost on the putting green and in most cases it is down to the wrong distance, rather than to the direction of your ball. One of the great truisms of golf is that ‘You drive for show and putt for dough’. The weight of your putt is just as important as direction. Many new golfers rapidly get a ‘feel’ for the direction their ball will travel and how it will roll, even on the most unpredictable of greens. No doubt you have seen it yourself when a relative newcomer to the game leaves the ball within inches of the hole even on a sloping green time after time, getting more and more frustrated as the game goes on. What you don’t see quite so regularly is a miss with the ball coming to rest a few inches beyond the hole.

Learning to read the distnace on the green is one of the most basic golf techniques there is. So many factors come into play when making up your mind about the distance your ball will travel on the green. You need to factor in the slope, the quality of the green, is it wet and slow or dry and fast. Even the number of players that have been through the green ahead of you has an effect depending on how well they repair their pitch marks. Fortunately with the increase in the use of soft spikes we don’t generally have so many spike marks to contend with these days. Not least among the factors you must consider is the time of day – greens inevitably speed up as they dry off from the morning dew and the difference by afternoon on a warm day can be quite astonishing.

The main factors you have to concentrate on after taking the conditions into account are reading the line and the distance. Reading the line comes with experience of the game and the course. There are a couple of greens on my course that have deceptive swings which always give the local player the advantage as they are very difficult to spot when you’ve not played the course before. Reading the distance should be a great deal easier but it requires one thing that many new golfers don’t like to do – putting practice. Going to the range and bashing balls a huge distance with your driver is great for the ego but it won’t win you a game, and there is nothing more frustrating than leaving those putts on the edge of the cup, even if it’s a friendly round with your regular partners.

Time spent on the practice green is never wasted, especially if you are playing in a tournament. You should always practice on the day, in the conditions that you will be playing and on the type of grass that is on the greens of that course. You will never see a Pro go out on the course without spending time on the putting green and those guys don’t waste their time practicing golf techniques they don’t need to. Even ten minutes on the practice green will give you a feel for distance in the current conditions.

One of my playing partners learned the hard way never to leave the ball short. As a small boy, who didn’t get a great deal of pocket money he occasionally played with some members of his father’s regular fourball. They had a simple but effective system. If your ball didn’t reach the hole, you paid a ‘fine’, not much to them but a lot to a small boy. The winner took the ‘pot’. These days he never leaves a putt short! Quite simply if the ball doesn’t reach the hole – it won’t drop. I was always taught that you should aim about two or three inches beyond the hole and that way it should just roll gently in.



About the Author

BQ Browning grew up in a Golfing family and has been involved with the game for many years. News views and information are willing shared with fellow addicts at Golf Techniques and Tournament Tips. You will find a treasure trove of golf information written with wit, humour and wisdom.

Virtual Golf And Swing Analyzer Can Keep You Technically, Physically And Mentally Fresh

Virtual Golf And Swing Analyzer Can Keep You Technically, Physically And Mentally Fresh

One might suppose that playing golf video games all winter long may help strengthen your grip. You know, get those fingers and thumbs working. Maybe playing miniature golf indoors could improve your putting, especially if your beloved course chooses to level out every green. I’m being sarcastic, of course.

But really, what exactly are you really doing to improve your golf technique during the winter? Isn’t it every single springtime you’ll have to pretty much start over yet again, warming up your swing, making oh-so-slight changes in your stance and so on? What a ineffective routine! Every spring, you move through the identical ineffective routine: warming up the swing, enduring embarrassing hooks and sore muscles; yelling out profanities on the green and nearly yanking out your hair.

You know, you can keep your golf game hot during the cold. You’ll remain in your prime and even discover growth when the ice just starts to melt from the fairway.

Stay Physically Sharp With Virtual Golf:

So maybe you’re not as in-shape as Tiger Woods, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t maintain your muscle memory for your golf swing.

Each and every winter season, when you tuck your golf clubs in for a long winter’s rest, your golfing performance also falls into hibernation too. After that, when your muscles are rudely woken up from that very first swing of the new golf season, its memory sometimes suffers from amnesia.

Now, you’re left guessing where your game went. In scientific circles, that’s known as atrophy – when muscles degenerate, decline, or decrease, as from disuse. In layman’s terminology, atrophy means you should to use it, or lose it.

By keeping you muscles active, you can stop your golf game from sliding. You can do this by playing as if you were on a real course.

Obviously, golf courses aren’t the best places to be when it’s frigid out. Fortunately, technologically experienced golfers have already invented a solution called the virtual golf. Golfers can stay warm and comfy inside and keep their game sharp.

Virtual Golf Keeps You Psychologically Prepared:

A great golfer known as Bobby Jones once stated that golf is a game that is played on a five-inch course – the distance between your ears. What virtual golf can do for a golfer is keep this five-inch course prepared.

New and different situations create anxiety. Stress and tension can have a destructive effect on your golf game. Therefore, what more effective way to cope with high-pressure situations than to become more familiar with them? You may find yourself in challenging predicaments playing virtual golf such as having to carry 180 yards of water, hitting a tight fairway or sticking your shot on an island green. Having confronted these mental tests virtually, you will be far better ready throughout the summer time to tackle related situations. Virtual golf can train you to stay loose and comfortable in any situation.

The Golf Swing Analyzer Can Help You Stay Technically Sound:

Golf swing analyzer systems built into golf simulators can help golfers make advancements in their game. Taking golf swings consistently may keep you in “golf shape,” and digging yourself out of difficult scenarios may keep you mentally keen. But, in the end you may be looking for that discovery in you game.}

Without correct coaching, golfers can find themselves running into an invisible wall with their technique. The difference between a average Joe and a pro is what occurs during the impact of the club against the ball.

A golf swing analyzer lets you witness the spin, launch angle, club head speed, ball speed, direction, club face angle, and club path angle of your shot when the club strikes the ball. The onslaught of feedback by the golf swing analyzer seems overwhelming, but it allows you to polish your swing to perfection.

By putting your golf game on hold in the winter, you have to eventually come back from that horrid golf-less opening on the calendar. Virtual golf is the remedy to keep your golfing technique fresh.

For further information on how virtual golf can help preserve and develop your golf game during the winter months, explore our website.