Narin An made four straight birdies around the turn and finished with an 8-under 64 Thursday for a one-shot lead in the CME Group Tour Championship.
Dial in your lag putting with this simple tip from Phil Mickelson
Need some help getting your lag putting in mid-season form? Follow this simple tip from six-time major winner Phil Mickelson.
The post Dial in your lag putting with this simple tip from Phil Mickelson appeared first on Golf.
Need some help getting your lag putting in mid-season form? Follow this simple tip from six-time major winner Phil Mickelson.
The post Dial in your lag putting with this simple tip from Phil Mickelson appeared first on Golf.
Your read may not always be right, but you can get any putt within tap-in range with proper distance control.
Fact: There are two variables in your stroke. The first is how far you take the putter back. The second is how you accelerate, or how big a stroke you make going through. If you cut the number of variables in half, your odds of always being around the hole skyrocket.
I keep the length of my forward stroke (and acceleration) the same on most lags. That’s the constant. So then all I have to do is vary the length of my backstroke to roll the ball the correct distance. At every event, I’ll spend time on the practice green rolling, say, 40-, 50- and 60-foot putts, dialing in the backstroke length for each one while keeping the forward stroke the same. If I’m a little short, I’ll take my putter back a little farther, but I won’t change my acceleration.
This makes lagging so easy. I don’t know why all pros don’t do it.
The post Dial in your lag putting with this simple tip from Phil Mickelson appeared first on Golf.