George Connor
Fix Your Game


George Connor is Director of Instruction, Gillette Ridge GC, Bloomfield


Recently in Putting Category

Take Advantage of Technology

By George Connor on April 18, 2012 12:02 PM | Comments (0) | No TrackBacks

The game of golf has changed immensely over the last 20 years.  Technology has come into the game in all aspects.  We use radar to fit clubs, lasers to establish our distance to the targets, high speed video to assure the club is on plane, 3D Motion analysis to improve the efficiency and power of the swing.  We use computers that measure as many as 30 metrics in our putting stroke.

Then it comes time to read how our putt is going to break as it rolls across the green.  There is a great technology available to accurately predict how a ball is going to break.  Sadly, most people that have taken advantage of some of the above technology dismiss a systematic approach to reading greens.  They apparently would rather just take a guess.

Aimpoint is a system that removes the mystery of green reading.  After all, a ball curving as it rolls across an uneven surface is not a mystery.  The ball will curve based on the a few measureable factors.  Once you learn how to define these few inputs, the Aimpoint system will tell you which direction the ball will curve and exactly how many inches it will curve. 

So why are you guessing?  When I talk to people about Aimpoint the first response I get is "that will take too long, it will slow up play."  False.  Once you know the system, you will be able to read a basic 20 foot putt in less than 20 seconds.  I can accurately read a multiple breaking 50 foot putt in less than 45 seconds.

Then I hear "that's impossible! How can one system work on any green in any part of the world?"  Simple, gravity is the same in Connecticut, Florida, Scotland and yes, even south of the equator!  Tour players all over the world are using Aimpoint to make more putts and more money.  Isn't it time for you to take advantage of this technology? Check out AimpointGolf.com

Putting is exciting

By George Connor on February 13, 2012 3:49 PM | Comments (0) | No TrackBacks

It was a great weekend of golf.  A six-way playoff for the Australian Master's, Lee Westwood dueling down the stretch in Dubai, Corey Pavin looking for his first win on the Champions Tour and of course, the much anticipated duel between Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods.

All four events were decided by the putter.  Two of the girls struggled on the 18th when they had a chance to avoid a playoff.  Lee Westwood hit the ball incredibly well in the desert but couldn't buy a putt.  Peter Senior struggled all day with the putter before falling to Pavin in a playoff.  Of course the Pebble Beach Pro-Am was a putting disaster for some and a bonanza for others.  Charlie Wi four putted the first green before making a bunch of putts after it was too late.  Tiger Woods hit the ball well enough to make the match-up with Mickelson exciting.  However, he made next to nothing in addition to missing a few short ones.  Mickelson on the other hand made putts from all over the Monterey Peninsula.  35 and 40 foot putts for par, 40 footer for eagle....

In my opinion, Phil putted so well because he was concerned with rolling the ball more than making the ball go in the hole.  We have all seen him miss a few short putts to knock himself out of contention.  Yesterday, he was rolling the ball on a line and allowing the ball to go in the hole.  Nothing was banging against the back of the hole.  If you watch the highlights, you will see that all of the putts he made were perfect speed.  If they had not gone in they would not have rolled more than a foot past the hole.

The next time you are standing over a four  footer with a bit of break, resist the urge to bang it at the hole with a "take the break out of it" mentality.  Remember, the faster the ball is moving the smaller the hole becomes.  A putt that would roll 3 feet past the hole effectively makes the hole only half as big.  Tiger's birdie attempt on the 18th green ran more than 5 feet past the hole.  Any putt traveling that fast cannot go in even if it hits dead center in the middle of the hole!

If there is break in a putt, allow for the break and hit the putt at a speed that will only allow the ball to roll 6 or 12 inches past the hole.  Most often the player that tries to jam the ball into the hole is the one that doesn't trust how much break the putt will have.  If this applies to you, learn how to precisely read greens.  Knowing the Aimpoint Green Reading System will allow you to have the confidence of knowing how much a putt will break.  When you know your read is correct, the trust is much easier to have and you can roll putts in the hole like Phil did yesterday.

It's Pre-Season Not Off-Season

By George Connor on February 2, 2012 12:46 PM | 1 Comment | No TrackBacks

I don't want to startle you but golf season is less than two months away!  It won't be long until handicap computers start accepting scores, and the trees will start to bloom.  What have you done to make your golf more fun in 2012?

The time to get better is now.  Any athlete playing a seasonal sport understands that the time to refine, improve or make wholesale changes to the motions they rely on is NOT during their season.  If you want to make 2012 the best year of your golf career, do not wait until late March to get a tune up.  Start today to make significant and lasting improvements to your golf swing and putting stroke.

Over the winter you can really get into making changes.  You can get your golf swing analyzed via video or 3-D Motion.  We can diagnose your putting stroke using a computer analysis.  You can find out if your body has the mobility and stability to perform the golf swing you are trying to make.  Once you have a clear understanding of what you are doing, we can get a plan in place to address these issues.

The key is to do it now.  In the winter you have an opportunity to work on these changes without the interruption of your normal weekly game. 

Don't hope that this year is a better one.  Take action to make sure it is.

Resolutions: result or process?

By George Connor on January 4, 2012 9:53 AM | Comments (0) | No TrackBacks

It is that time of year when many of us set goals for the year. How many people have made their New Year’s resolution to quit smoking, lose weight or lower their handicap? If your goal or resolution is based on a result, you could well be setting yourself up for failure.

Too many of us make the same resolution each year. Clearly this is a bad pattern. If someone resolved to lose weight every year they are either going to be ridiculously thin — or have failed to lose weight.

Try something with a little more definition this year. If your goal is to lose weight, make the resolution to exercise a certain number of times each week and maintain a more healthy diet. If your goal is to lower your handicap, commit to learning how to perform that skill and then pledge to practice that skill a certain number of times each week.

For those that want to shoot better scores in 2012, you may be able to get 75% of the way there by giving your putting skills their due time. Putting will account for roughly 40% of your shots in a round of golf. If you eliminated three-putts, what would that do to your handicap? If you made a few 15- or 20-footers and all of your 3- and 4-footers per round, what would that do?

Winter has arrived in New England, but putting can be improved indoors. I have already spent hours this week working with students on their putting mechanics. Make sure next year’s resolution is a new one. Start lowering your handicap today.  

Experts? Another Myth Buster

By George Connor on December 7, 2011 1:04 PM | Comments (0) | No TrackBacks

Hank Haney is a great teacher.  no question about it.  However, in this months issue of Golf Digest his tip is about putting and is dead wrong.  Hank implores golfers to watch a missed putt as it rolls past the hole.  He says that it is important to watch how it curves after it goes past the hole because this is will show you "exactly how it will break" coming back to the hole on the next putt.  This is without question wrong.  The break of a putt is determined by a few inputs; slope direction, slope severity, and time.

A putt rolling up a hill is traveling at a different rate of speed than a putt rolling down the same grade.  A five foot uphill putt hit correctly will reach the hole in less time than a five foot downhill putt.  Once you change one of the data inputs, the amount of break changes.  The amount of time the ball took to roll three feet by the hole is different from the amount of time it will take to go back to the hole.  This is both a function of the original putt being either up or down a slope AND your two or three foot second putt will not be traveling fast enough to get two or three feet on the other side of the hole.  In other words, the ball that rolled past the hole will NOT follow the same amount of break back to the hole.  This is a long standing myth, but it is just that, a myth.

That Putt Can't Go In!

By George Connor on October 20, 2011 2:32 PM | Comments (0) | No TrackBacks

We have all seen it and many of us are guilty of it.  You face a "must make" putt.  The last message you tell yourself is, "Don't leave it short."  As a result, we slam the putt and it races past the hole.

I have seen it far too often.  I even saw it a few times while watching the Solheim Cup.  A ball that is traveling do fast that it will go 6 or 7 feet past the hole cannot go in the hole.

The hole is 4.25" in diameter.  The faster the ball is traveling the more the hole effectively shrinks.  If a ball travels 6" past the hole, the hole become 3.8" in diameter.  Hit it three feet by and the hole has shrunk to less than 1.5"!  If the ball will travel 5 feet past the hole, your target has been reduced to the size of a quarter, only 1/2"!

On "must make" putts please use good speed.  This gives you the biggest target.  If you are going to run the ball at the hole so fast that it will go 6 feet by, just concede the hole and save yourself the anguish.

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