Posts Tagged ‘long putter’
Using the Long Putter

Using the Long Putter
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Form a circle around the grip cap with your thumb and index finger with the left hand (if you are a righty).
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Do not wrap your other fingers on the left hand around the grip as you want the shaft to be able to pivot from a fixed axis.
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Hold the club in the right hand in one of the methods illustrated below.
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Keeping the shoulders out of the stroke – stroke the putt by “pistoning” the right arms back and forth.
With this stroke the only part of the body moving should be the right arm. Berhard Langer has used this method very effectively over the years.
The second method is a stroke based on connection and using everything as a unit. Here the shoulders and arms all work together to get the ball rolling.
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Place your left thumb on top of the grip cap and wrap all the fingers comfortably around the shaft.
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Once the putter is anchored in your sternum pivot the shoulders back and through.
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Make sure the arms are linked to your side or at least stay in place relative to the shoulders during the stroke to ensure a “one piece” motion.

The Paintbrush Grip

The Split Finger Grip

The Standard Grip
Additonal articles and sites for using the long putter:
thelongputter.com
How To Use Long Putters by Jack Moorehouse
Putter Length – Comparing Conventional, Belly and Long Putters
How to Use the Long Putters | Golf Digest
The “YIPS” in Golf and How to Work Around Them!
Whether it be putting, chipping or the full swing (see Charles Barkley) a bad case of the yips is enough to drive anybody away from the game. I have had the yips (putting) and once you have them I believe you always have them.

Bernhard Langer
Here is how the yips get started:
- Poor technique leads to negative results.
- The excess of negative results creates an overload of negative expectations in the memory bank; ‘mental baggage’ so to speak! The brain essentially tells the body, “Only bad things can and will happen!”
- Eventually the brain/nervous system develops an impulse twitch/flinch in response to the impending negative outcome. Once a golfer gets to this stage the trouble begins.
A yip is the brain responding to an adverse event. I believe it is just like a dog that has been beaten; every time anybody lifts a hand to the dog it will flinch and cower in response to the pain it is anticipating, but has not yet felt. And yips in golf is exactly the same way! The brain flinches at the expectation of a ‘failed’ outcome.
No matter what you hear, I firmly believe the yips cannot be cured. Look at Bernhard Langer, I regard him as having one the strongest minds in the game, yet he was not able to conquer the yips, he merely found a way around them. You cannot overcome them with better technique, lessons, positive thinking or hard work. In fact the more you work at beating the yips, the more you ingrain the belief that you have them. A golf instructor once said that the yips should stand for “Yes I‘m Putting Super!” Not necessarily the best thing to think when standing over a four footer.
This is excellent information from European teacher Denis Pugh but he does seem to stress better technique as an avenue towards overcoming the yips. I wish it was different, but I wholeheartedly believe that the yips cannot be overcome.
Here is how to work around the yips, because without brain altering surgery you will never be able to forget you have them (I know this from experience!):
- Try alternate equipment. The long and belly putters are great additions to the game and they have allowed many yippers to continue playing golf. I’m all for that! I have even got chipping yippers to go to left handed (you will need a lefty PW in the bag!) and even eyes closed. Hey, they both worked better under the gun! Leave your pride at the door and try something radically different; your nervous system has no baggage when you try something completely new.
- Experiment with various grips. From cross-handed, to the claw, to the paintbrush – try them all until you find something that is semi-comfortable and then learn how to play with it.
- If you have full swing yips (like Sir Charles!) then the only way to go is cross-handed or try to play opposite handed.

Sir Charles Barkley
A note regarding Hank Haney and Charles Barkley: Hank approached Charles’ problems as if they were swing based. While I would agree the problem originated as a technical one, it had been left unattended for too long and had now manifested itself as a mental hitch. No amount of swing upgrade would overcome the flinch Charles exhibited halfway through his downswing. In my opinion the only way Charles will get better is to do something radically different; I would start with cross handed and if there was no success there I would quickly switch him to left handed.
If you happen to have the yips in any area of your golf game I feel your pain. Work around them by trying something radically different. I believe you will be thankful you made the switch!
Things to Ponder:
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This swing is perhaps the funniest swing I have ever come across and it is real. Turn the sound up and listen to the supporters and friends in the background. The latest swing to come out of Egypt and take the tour by storm…..? There might be a yip in this one!
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A note to Heath Slocum: Did you not ruin the greatest playoff in the history of golf by making that putt at the Barclays? I don’t think Tim Finchem or anybody from CBS is going to speak to you for the rest of time. Good luck getting a good tee time from here on out! I would have loved to have watched the “other four” go at it in sudden death!
Enjoy and please don’t beat your dog!


