We’ve all heard it. We all know it’s true. After a great drive and shot into the green, 3-putting is a momentum breaker. A lack of confidence with your putting and/or green reading sabotages your score.
In the image above, World #1 Lydia Ko is using her arms and fingers, aspects of AimPoint, to determine the break of her putt. No more squatting down, no more looking for mountains or where a creek might be running. For Lydia, it’s pure physics and math, meaning the elimination of any guesswork. Which way the green slopes is the way her ball breaks.
In this post, I’ll explain AimPoint, a system that’s particularly helpful for those three- and four-foot knee knockers. It’s used by Ko, Stacy Lewis, and other current or past World #1s and more than 200 touring pros, plus at least 75,000 amateurs. I’ll also let you know how you can schedule private and group AimPoint workshops at your course or club. If my experience is any indicator, you’ll be glad you did.
I know, I know. It sounds ridiculous for me to write “to make everything.” Let me quickly explain why it’s true. Sean had a device with him called The Perfect Putter. This adjustable device allows you to repeatedly roll balls on the green on the same path at the same speed. Once you set it up to roll the ball so it goes beyond the hole the correct distance and on the correct line, ball after ball ALWAYS go in. It’s uncanny to watch. So, it proves that if you hit a putt on line at the correct speed you will make everything. Everything.
Before you try to use AimPoint on the course you have to learn how to determine the amount of slope your putt is going to roll over. That’s what Sean teaches you in his clinics. And it’s going to require some practice afterward.
Putts of less than four feet are handled uniquely (and the system taught does work, as I’ve found out!). It’s money, believe me.
Of course there’s more to improved putting than just being able to read the greens well. That’s where having Sean Lanyi, or if you are back east, another certified AimPoint instructor, come to your course for workshops is important. Length of stroke and tempo of your stroke all factor into how well you putt and were part of what Sean taught. My stroke was too long, was a bit across the ball and I aimed to the right every time I set up to putt. That’s why I left putts short. He’ll also explain how to adjust for the speed of greens, which we know varies from day to day and from course to course, as well as various other tidbits that will help you perfect your putting.
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