great video! thanks for going against the grain with most teaching instructors with this advice. there should be a natural rotation of the wrist along with arms and shoulders for putting instead of keeping them still
The pros all started teaching stiff-arm putting during the 1970s. I don't know why. Before then most of the great putters were wrist putters: Casper, Palmer, Rosburg, and Barber for example.
@@kerrodgraygolf True. When I was first learning golf I watched all the best putters to learn what their strokes had in common. They had almost nothing in common except they stroked the ball the same way every putt.
Old school putting (Jack, Crenshaw) is not the way on modern greens. Tiger for sure is handsy/strong arc but he’s the most skilful golfer ever. Not the way for most.
great video! thanks for going against the grain with most teaching instructors with this advice. there should be a natural rotation of the wrist along with arms and shoulders for putting instead of keeping them still
Happy to help!
Would love to know the length of your putter. I believe most golfers use a putter that is too long for them.
Nice video
Cheers! 👍
The pros all started teaching stiff-arm putting during the 1970s. I don't know why. Before then most of the great putters were wrist putters: Casper, Palmer, Rosburg, and Barber for example.
The most important thing is to find what works for you 👍
@@kerrodgraygolf True. When I was first learning golf I watched all the best putters to learn what their strokes had in common. They had almost nothing in common except they stroked the ball the same way every putt.
Tiger, Jack, Crenshaw all used a little wrist and had feel in the hands and wrists.
Old school putting (Jack, Crenshaw) is not the way on modern greens. Tiger for sure is handsy/strong arc but he’s the most skilful golfer ever. Not the way for most.
Pelz screwed a lot of people up with his ideas. Although he had some great thought on green reading.