Sunday, February 27, 2011

Luke Donald's Putter: Odyssey White Hot XG #7

Luke Donald's PutterIn a duel of $99 putters, Luke Donald wielded an Odyssey White Hot XG #7 en route to upsetting Martin Kaymer on Sunday and winning the Accenture Match Play tournament.

Also known as "The Fang," the Odyssey White Hot XG #7 putter is a progressive mallet with two weighted fang-like protrusions along the rear of the heel and toe. It features the White Hot XG insert, which Odyssey calls its "softest and most responsive" insert.

Luke Donald's putter appears to be a customized with a darker finish than the standard retail version.

Meanwhile, Martin Kaymer's putter is a PING Anser 2, which carries the same $99 price tag as Donald's White Hot XG #7. Between them, Kaymer and Donald won more than $2 million this week. That's a pretty nice return on their putter investments.

Donald isn't the only golfer to rock the "white hot" magic lately. Graeme McDowell used an older White Hot #7 to win last year's U.S. Open, while Stuart Appelby won the most recent Greenbrier Classic with a White Hot 330.


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Friday, February 25, 2011

The Scoop on Putter Balance

Confusion seems to reign when it comes to the concept of putter balance. Indeed, we have even seen major golf publications make erroneous statements, such as calling a putter "heel-toe balanced."

A putter can be heel-toe weighted, meaning that the bulk of the head weight is placed toward the heel and toe (see accompanying photo). But such a putter can be balanced in a variety of ways, so there is no such thing as a putter that is "heel-toe balanced."

A putter's balance typically falls into two categories: face balanced and toe hang, with the latter occurring in varying degrees.

With a face-balanced putter, the face is parallel to the ceiling when you balance the putter's shaft on an outstretched finger. If the toe dips slightly or points straight to the ground when the putter is balanced on your finger, then it has toe hang. For a more detailed look at putter balance, check out our related putter fitting tip on the subject.

So what determines a putter’s balance? When the axis of the shaft (ie: where the shaft points) intersects the head’s center of gravity, the putter is naturally face balanced. You see this orientation most often with mallets. When the axis of the shaft intersects the rear of the head’s center of gravity, as seen on most blades, the putter will have toe hang.

In other words, the exact same head shape can be either face balanced or have toe hang, depending on where and how the shaft is connected. A traditional Anser-style putter like the one pictured above typically has some toe hang. However, if you lengthen the hosel so that the shaft angle intersects that head's center of gravity, then the putter will be face balanced.

The average golfer need not be terribly concerned about the nitty-gritty of shaft angle, etc. But in an effort to find the right putter fit, it's a good idea first to be clear on terms such as "putter balancing." Once you understand putter balance, you are in a better position to find the balance that best fits your game.

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Thursday, February 24, 2011

Nike, TaylorMade and More on The Greenside

A new episode of The Greenside radio show is now airing on The Hackers Paradise, and is also available as a podcast on iTunes. The show is co-hosted by Sean of PutterZone.com and Josh of The Hacker's Paradise.

The new episode takes a look at the new Nike Method Core putters and the new TaylorMade Tour Ghost putters, as well as preferred putter finishes. Josh and Sean also rap the knuckles of putter makers who give their putters the NASCAR treatment with too many logos and questionable numerical names.



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Wednesday, February 23, 2011

The Fringe: Vokey Custom Wedges

If you think about it, the wedge is really the spiritual cousin of the putter. Indeed, while the putter still reigns supreme when it comes to artisan brand names and overall “geek out” appeal, the wedge is the next closest thing.

For evidence, look no further than Bob Vokey, Titleist’s master wedge craftsman. Similar to putter designers such as Robert Bettinardi and Scotty Cameron, Vokey’s name turns heads and opens wallets on brand equity alone. And like many of the famous putter designers such as Karsten Solheim and T.P. Mills, Vokey’s clubmaking career began in the family garage, where he worked with his father—a tool and die maker who also loved to tinker with golf clubs.

But while we’ve always been an admirer of Vokey’s standard retail offerings, nothing prepared us for the sheer beauty of the Vokey Custom Wedges shared with us by our friends at Golfland Warehouse (disclosure: GolflandWarehouse is a retail affiliate of PutterZone.com).

While these wedges are doled out on a very limited basis, Golfland Warehouse proprietor Nick Taylor has managed to work the back channels to accrue a rather impressive stash. He recently climbed a ladder in the back of his shop, returning to the ground with an armful of beautifully rendered Vokey custom boxes in which the wedges are packaged.

Vokey Custom Wedge
One that really caught our eye Indigo Blue Limited Edition V-60 wedge ($349), of which only 200 were produced. Each wedge has some hue variation, so no two are alike. They say that the finish will wear with use, and while some folks might be inclined to keep it on the wall as a collectible, what’s the fun in that?

Another looker is the Black Ion Limited Edition V-60 wedge ($349), with distinctive narrow forward bounce surface and black nickel KBS Tour shaft, as well as pre-2010 Spin Milled grooves. Only 250 were produced.

Anyhow, our first love will always be putters, but the Vokey Custom Wedges—along with some of the limited wedges by Scratch Golf and others—are proving that the flatstick isn’t the only club that can double as a work of art.

About The Fringe
The Fringe is where PutterZone.com roams "beyond the green" in search of golf's hottest new gear. This bi-weekly series is reserved for products that truly earn the spotlight by demonstrating superior quality and ingenuity.
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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Gambler Putters Officially Released

Never Compromise christened the official release of its Gambler Limited putters this week by revealing new photos and full product specifications on its web site.

The Gambler putters have been hotly anticipated over the past few months, with interest escalating in the wake of Never Compromise's strong showing at the PGA Merchandise Show. PutterZone.com has published an exclusive series of stories on these putters, including a Never Compromise Gambler putter review and interview.

The web site has yet to activate the "My Custom Putter" page, which promises to offer several personal putter fitting options, as well as a wide range of custom paintfill options. Stay tuned at PutterZone.com for more information.
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Saturday, February 19, 2011

Insider Interview: Glen Coombe

Known as “The Putting Doctor,” Glen Coombe has been focused exclusively on putting for nearly two decades. Glen has worked with high-handicap amateurs and past major championship winners. He is a former PGA Apprentice, Non-Member Head Professional and is a member of The Golf Coaches Association of America. Glen is also the Eastern USA representative of Science and Motion Sports of SAM PuttLab fame. At his web site at PuttingDoctor.net, Glen offers a lesson plan called The Money Back Guarantee Putting Lesson, as well as a related clinic called The Money Back Guarantee Putting Experience. PutterZone.com recently caught up with Glen to talk about his teachings. Following is our exclusive interview.

Can you briefly describe the Money Back Guarantee Putting Experience (MBGPE)—what it is that you offer, and what distinguishes it from other instructional approaches?
I focus on fundamentals. You could say my method is focused practice. I’m fond of telling my students I don’t care about the shape of their stroke. Whether it be inside to inside, straight back straight through, or inside down the line, it has to be their natural stroke so it will hold up under pressure.

I’m looking for a stroke in which the face angle is square in relation to the target line for as long as possible through the impact zone. In my teaching we work on both the physical and the subconscious. We’re training our eyes to gauge speed and distance and our muscles to react to what we see versus what we think. My students have a very strong mindset regarding their ability to two-putt any green and know their percentages from every distance. The MBGPE is a disciplined, focused practice routine. In my private lessons we work with the SAM PuttLab and Focus Band, taking full advantage of the latest state-of-the-art technology. Golfers who follow my four-week program lose on average four strokes in handicap. My event days have attendees run through analysis sessions on the SAM PuttLab and the day concludes with my putting clinic.

There are a lot of differing opinions out there on putter fitting factors such as putter length, swingweight and lie angle. What is your point of view on these things as they relate to your teaching?
I find most putter lengths too long for the average golfer. I favor an athletic setup with extended supple arms at address, so the majority of my students tend to end up with shorter putters. The one thing I demonstrate and have great acceptance with is the concept of eyes over the line of the putt. This can’t be accomplished with the average amateur’s longer putter.

Putter swingweight is one of the most counterintuitive issues facing club fitters and golfers today. The prevailing school of though is that for each inch of shaft reduction up to 20 grams of weight needs to be added to the head. I contend that if you lose 4 grams per inch of shaft, which lowers the balance point by one half to three quarters of an inch, adding weight to the head further lowers the balance point again. We are currently working with the SAM and a putting robot on this very issue.

I offer that it is more important to have the appropriate length of putter, regardless of swing-weight. In terms of lie angle I submit that all putters should sole flat on the surface and lie angle is a product of setup and putter length.

What is the Putting Doctor training aid and how does it work?
The PDTA is a pocket sized mirror which I believe to be the most versatile yet simple training aid available. The mirror is opened and placed on the surface, at home on a hard surface floor adjacent to a baseboard. It has adhesive tape on the bottom to adhere to the floor keeping it in place. Set up with the face of the putter applied to the back of the mirror which squares the face to the established target line parallel to the baseboard. Proper stance will have the left eye only appear in the mirror in ball position to train the golfer to have his eyes over the line. Making a stroke over the mirror keeping your eye in place creates a rock steady stroke. The baseboard becomes a reference for stroke shape and will, in short order, train out any tendency for the putter to travel outside the line of the putt. Repeated short duration training ingrains the setup and stroke. I suggest to all my students that they leave the mirror in position for about two weeks of everyday training. The mirror can also be set up in front of the golfer on the target line to check putter lie angle. I joke with my students that once they have completed their training they can also use the PDTA in the shower to assist with shaving.

What is the most common putting flaw you see among students, and do you have any simple tips for correcting it?
At all levels of the game I see players execute putts that never had a chance. By that I refer to putts that finish under the hole either short or long. I train all my students to have reasonable expectations of miss or make, but we focus on a path to the hole which allows the ball to enter at a certain spot relative to clock position and have enough pace to finish within a two foot circle behind the hole. I demonstrate the visualization of the ball path by unrolling a roll of toilet paper for my students, often to a lot of laughs. Again this is a much more reasonable expectation of the path your ball can roll on and still enter the hole. By putting to a high fall in entry point, but with appropriate pace, we open the door to more birdies, and should we miss we can be very confident in our ability to make every two foot putt.

As far as a simple tip, each and every golfer whom I work with remembers the magic words and they generally smile when repeating, “Never leave a putt short.”

Thank you, Glen!
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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

On The Green: Bettinardi Putters

Today we enter the home stretch of our series of stories from inside the tour vans and around the practice green at the recent AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Now on the tee: Bettinardi Golf.

We meet Bettinardi tour representative Ben Bradbury on the practice green. The morning air is rather brisk off the bay, but Ben is based out of the Bettinardi Golf headquarters in Illinois, so he appears to be enjoying the comparatively balmy weather of Pebble Beach.

Ben has set up a Bettinardi tour bag surrounded by a variety of Bettinardi’s finest sticks, which collectively look like pure eye candy. Ben has a cool demeanor on the green, ready to accommodate any player who shows interest.

Ben shows us a prototype "JAM" putter with a head similar to the new Studio Stock #8, but in a black oxide finish. The putter also has a white prototype Matrix Ozik putter shaft, and the black-on-white effect is truly righteous.

Another putter that catches our eye is an all-copper blade putter with Bettinardi’s signature honeycomb face (pictured above).

Ben says that the copper putter was perfectly shined upon his arrival the previous day, but it has now developed a patina since being exposed to the Pebble Beach elements. This gives the putter a sweet visual texture that will only get more interesting with use. It's truly one of the prettiest putters we've seen lately.

The unifying effect of the Bettinardi putters is one of sheer quality and craftsmanship, the twin hallmarks of designer Robert Bettinardi.

Click here for PutterZone.com's Pebble Beach equipment photo gallery, and stay tuned for more putter stories from the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.

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Sunday, February 13, 2011

D.A. Points' Putter: SeeMore FGP

With a scorching final round that included some clutch putts, D.A. Points notched a victory at the 2011 AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am—and another victory for the SeeMore Putter Company, too.

D.A. Points' putter is a SeeMore FGP blade prototype, essentially the same model that Payne Stewart and Zach Johnson used to win, respectively, the U.S. Open and Masters.

Earlier this week, PutterZone.com caught up with SeeMore's Jason Pouliot at the practice green at Pebble Beach. Click here to read the story, which includes insights into SeeMore's signature RifelScope alignment system, as well as some of the company's upcoming new models.

The SeeMore FGP ($150) is one of golf's enduring putter models. SeeMore also makes an all-milled version called the mFGP ($295), and Points' putter is a milled FGP prototype.

As a smaller company, SeeMore cannot afford to pay hefty sponsor fees to get tour professionals to use their sticks, but they nevertheless find themselves once again atop the final leaderboard.
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Saturday, February 12, 2011

Postcard from Pebble Beach

Throughout the week, we have been filing reports from inside the tour vans and around the practice green at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, with more to come in the days ahead.

In the meantime, PutterZone.com editor Sean Weir takes a break from the equipment today to file the following postcard for a broader taste of what life is like at the tournament—and why you might want to plan your own visit in the future:

"If you’ve never been to the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, try to find a way. There's just nothing like watching some of the world’s best golfers tee off against the jaw-dropping coastal backdrop of Carmel and Pebble Beach.

Pebble Beach is classy but not stuffy, and the atmosphere is fairly casual and relaxed. And what might really surprise some is the access that the average spectator enjoys at the tournament, particularly on the peripheral venues such as the driving range and practice green.

Indeed, the spectator seating at the driving range is fairly close to the action, affording you a magnificent opportunity to watch world-class ballstriking up close. When you are walking the course and following the competition, it can be difficult to to get a perfect vantage, and even then you only get to see a few shots before you have to wait or walk again. But on the driving range, you can position yourself right behind a player and watch him hit ball after ball toward a distant flank of Monterey pines.

Down the hill you will find the practice green tucked between The Lodge at Pebble Beach and a concourse of shops where you can load up on gear and memorabilia. A short walk away is the Pebble Beach Market, where you can cobble together a nice and relatively affordable lunch on the run.

Around the green, you might find yourself a few feet away from your favorite touring professional (or celebrity), and watching them rolling the rock up close can be quite fascinating and instructive.

It was a kick to see Chris Berman, Nick Faldo, Jim Nantz, Jerry Rice and other celebrities on and around the practice green. Personally, however, I was more interested in the equipment. Indeed, the practice green is a putter geek's dream, with numerous companies setting up their latest sticks and prototypes right next to the spectator barrier.

The tournament gets increasingly crowded as the week goes on, and reaches a crescendo by the weekend. Personally, I prefer to go on a weekday, and even during a practice round, before the crowds have arrived. That's what I did this year.

In years past, the tournament has been a bit of a rain magnet, but not this time. The sun was bright overhead and a brisk breeze blew off the sparking bay. All in all, it was a magical day. It was hard to leave, but my only consolation was that I knew I'd be back next year."
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Friday, February 11, 2011

On The Green: SeeMore Putters

SeeMore ONEcs Putter
Today we continue our series of stories from inside the tour vans and around the putting green at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. Now on the tee: the SeeMore Putter Company.

We meet SeeMore co-owner Jason Pouliot on the glorious practice green adjacent to The Lodge at Pebble Beach.

Jason is a high-energy, upbeat guy with a quick smile. A few feet away, numerous tour professionals are practicing with a variety of putter brands and styles. Jason doesn’t seem overly concerned about getting them to try a SeeMore putter—he’s there to help, not to sell.

Anyhow, SeeMore doesn’t need to be too anxious when it comes to tour validation, since their putters have notched major victories at the U.S. Open and Masters. And as it would turn out, a player using a SeeMore putter—D.A. Points—would lead the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am after Thursday’s opening round.

All SeeMore putters feature the company’s signature RifleScope Technology (RST), whereby you visually align the shaft at setup so that it hides a red dot along the crown of the putter. In that position, the shaft is framed by two white lines, communicating proper alignment.

Jason says that SeeMore is increasingly emphasizing education, with a focus on young amateurs and recreational golfers. SeeMore has published a putting fundamentals manual by Pat O’Brien, a SeeMore consultant and a leading putting instructor who counts Masters champion Zach Johnson among his clients. SeeMore has also launched a national teacher credential program based upon O’Brien’s methodology and the SeeMore alignment system.

On the practice greens at professional tournaments, you typically get a glimpse of “what’s next” from the putter companies, and SeeMore is no exception today.

Jason shows off the new SeeMore ONEcs blade (pictured above) and the SeeMore DB4x mid mallet. Like the DB4 blade, the DB4x putter brings the SeeMore RifleScope alignment system to an offset hosel. The SeeMore ONE putter is a carbon steel blade with a scooped flange and curvaceous cornering. Stay tuned at PutterZone.com for more details on these new 2011 putters from SeeMore.

Click here for PutterZone.com's Pebble Beach equipment photo gallery, and stay tuned for more putter stories from the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.
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Thursday, February 10, 2011

Crenshaw Joins Never Compromise and Cleveland Golf

One of the hottest putter companies in 2011 is now officially affiliated with one of golf's putting icons as Ben Crenshaw has signed on as a design consultant to Never Compromise and its parent company Cleveland Golf.

Crenshaw won the 1995 Masters without recording a single three-putt during the entire tournament, and his touch on the greens is legendary.

Now he is an official ambassador for Never Compromise and the brand's new Gambler Limited putters, which have been previewed extensively on PutterZone.com, and which have generated immense buzz in advance of their release later this month.

The addition of Crenshaw to the staff will only amplify the buzz, and it's more confirmation that Never Compromise is on a roll right now.
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Inside The Van: TaylorMade Tour Ghost Putters

TaylorMade Tour Ghost Putter
PutterZone.com today continues its series of stories from inside the tour vans and around the putting green at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.

Now on the tee: TaylorMade's new Tour Ghost Putters.

In the TaylorMade Golf tour van, the energy was high. There, Shawn Mullin was kind enough take some time out to offer a peek at the new “Tour Ghost” putters, which take the TaylorMade Ghost line to new aesthetic heights with a contrasting black sole and a black “Pure Roll” insert, as well as a sleek new Ghost logo.

These new putters clearly signal a departure point for TaylorMade. The patented Pure Roll titallium insert replaces the company’s familiar AGSI+ insert, and the extraneous moniker “Rossa” has been dropped as the unifying banner for TaylorMade’s putter offerings. It’s a leaner and meaner branding approach that should only accelerate TaylorMade’s fast-growing presence in the putter category.

TaylorMade's Shawn Mullin
According to Mullin, the Pure Roll insert enables TaylorMade to offer the compatible dual benefits of sufficient launch off the grass with quick forward roll that minimizes backspin. The result is a “pure roll” that remains more impervious to imperfections on the green, and thus more consistent in matters of directional accuracy and distance control.

Mullin cited the example of PGA Tour professional Pat Perez, whose new Ghost putter features a full 4.5 degrees of loft (4 degrees is standard on the Ghost putters), and whose caddie raved about the purity of the roll off the face. “You get less skidding and wobble, which enables the ball to stay truer to the line,” Mullin says.

Click here for PutterZone.com's Pebble Beach equipment photo gallery, and stay tuned for more putter stories from the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.

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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Inside The Tour Van: Nike Putters

On a glorious morning in Pebble Beach during a practice round at the 2011 AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, PutterZone.com was fortunate to connect with putter representatives from Nike, SeeMore, Never Compromise, Bettinardi, TaylorMade, and Odyssey.

Today we launch a series of related stories from inside the tour vans and around the Pebble Beach practice green, giving you insider access to the hottest new putters on tour.

We begin with a visit to the Nike tour van, known as the “Microwave Oven” in honor of Nike’s research and development facility in Texas, which is known as The Oven.

Inside the van, Rob Burbick was as cool as a cucumber, just as he was when we met him at the U.S. Open in the summer. But he was holding the hot new item in Nike’s putter arsenal—the Method Core putter, the evolutionary and more affordable complement to the original milled Method putters. Paul Casey recently notched a victory with a Method Core putter in Bahrain.

On the original Method putters, polymer is ported through the sole of the putter and extruded along the face to create the distinctive Method groove pattern. On the Method Core putters, however, the polymer grooves are encased in an aluminum insert, which gives Nike more flexibility in the head designs. According to Burbick, most players describe the feel of the Core Method putters as slightly softer compared to the milled Method line.

What hasn’t changed is the Polymetal Groove Technology, which Nike says achieves the “desired launch angle with the stability and speed control of a skid free roll.” According to Burbick, the polymer raises the launch angle while the secondary metal grooves ensure quick forward roll. He said the Method putters achieve a comparable launch angle to a traditional putter with 1 to 1.5 less degrees of loft—in other words, a Method putter with 2.5 degrees of loft will launch a ball similar to a putter with 4 degrees of loft.

The touring professionals who switch to the Method have to acclimate to looking down at a putter with less loft than they’re used to, Burbick says. But he adds that it doesn’t take much convincing after they see the roll off the face.

Click here for PutterZone.com's Pebble Beach equipment photo gallery, and stay tuned for more putter stories from the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. You can also follow this series via our AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am thread.
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Monday, February 7, 2011

PING Putters on A Roll

The iconic Anser model by PING Golf is the most popular and most copied putter in the modern era, and "Anser-style" putters by numerous brands still enjoy a widespread presence on the professional circuits.

But for the past two weeks, it's been PING-branded Anser putters atop the leaderboards on the PGA Tour.

Indeed, a week after Bubba Watson wielded a PING Redwood Anser putter to win at Torrey Pines, Mark Wilson used a PING Karsten Anser en route to winning the Phoenix Open. Martin Kaymer has also been red-hot of late with a PING Karsten Anser 2 in his bag.

The Karsten Anser belongs to PING's affordable Karsten Series line of putters, which cost just $89. In our early review of the Karsten Anser more than two years ago, we raved about its quality-to-price ratio. Apparently, we weren't alone in our assessment.

Now, with Kaymer and Wilson making noise with these sub-$100 putters, and with Watson rocking the Redwood Anser, PING is on a serious roll in 2011.
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Thursday, February 3, 2011

Video Review: Never Compromise Gambler Putters

Never Compromise is back in a big way with its new Gambler Limited line. These putters are the supermodels of 2011—they’re sexy and stylish, and they are going to open a lot of wallets on looks alone.

But they’ve got a serious side, too. The 303 stainless steel heads are forged to refine the metal’s grain structure, then precision milled and hand polished—all resulting in phenomenal looks, feel and performance.

Following is the video complement to PutterZone.com's complete Never Compromise Gambler putter review, produced in partnership with our friends at Golfland Warehouse.


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