putters
The Other Game - Putting
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01-23-2006, 06:37 PM
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Lynn Blake Certified Instructor
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: West Linn, OR
Posts: 1,645
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Try a "Yes" putter (C-groove) if you like the roll you get with Rife.
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01-25-2006, 01:18 PM
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Member
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Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Fresno, Calif.
Posts: 93
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What's with the different styles?
I'm hoping some of you more knowledgeable folks can explain what the different style putters are all about. There's the center-shafted one, the Ping Anser one, the mallets, those other really big ones. Someone once told me that the way the putter is shafted has to do with a person's stroke, but I can't remember what he said about which one suits what.
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01-25-2006, 11:24 PM
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Member
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Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Hemet CA
Posts: 77
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Originally Posted by Vandal
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I'm hoping some of you more knowledgeable folks can explain what the different style putters are all about. There's the center-shafted one, the Ping Anser one, the mallets, those other really big ones. Someone once told me that the way the putter is shafted has to do with a person's stroke, but I can't remember what he said about which one suits what.
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It goes back to what I said a while ago about what fits your eye. The advantage of a center shafted putter is that it will do better on off center hits than a heel shafted putter. That's simple physics. But what matters is what looks good to you when you are over the ball, what gives you the best feel for distance and what looks lined up when it really is lined up. Those three things are why there are so many putters out there. Remember NOBODY makes every short putt they look at. If the putter looks lined up when it is (see previous post about how to check this), then it is a good design for you. If it then provides you with a good feel for distance, it is a good putter for you, and if it looks good when you are standing over the ball, then it has fit all three criteria in order of importance. If everyone else on the planet thinks it is the stupidest ugliest thing they have ever seen, but it works for you, then keep it.  Putting is 10% lining up right, 10% hitting the putt the right distance and 80% BELIEVING that the first two are going to happen.
Obi WunPutt
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01-30-2006, 01:19 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: MIchigan
Posts: 151
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Originally Posted by EdZ
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Try a "Yes" putter (C-groove) if you like the roll you get with Rife.
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This is a good putter, but, for me, the feel is one of the worst I have every used. Feels like you are putting with a cement putter.
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01-31-2006, 09:53 AM
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LBG Pro Contributor
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 246
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Rife is the new guru and the heavy putter is counterweighted a ton. GR putters have 1 win already on the PGA Tour with Campbell in Hawaii. Heavy putter is having some problems with the tour players because of the "look" of their head designs.
Here is my opinionated list from best to really good- TP Mills new (and tough to get) "answer" design (TPMILLS.com), Bobby Grace "answer" and Mini(McGregorgolf.com), Scotty Cameron "answer" with sight dot, Coutour putters from Todd Sones (Coutourgolf.com), and the rest heap together.
You can't go wrong with a new putter if it is fit properly. No amount materials in the putter can make up for a bad fit. Keep that in mind as you buy.
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