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  1. This reminds me of a time when Mark and I were younger. His dad used to run
    a burger van in Swindon that did sort of slap up hot dogs and chips etc.
    Place used to be filthy, mouse droppings all over the place and Mark’s job
    used to be to clean them all up. But he never used to just sweep them away,
    he would pick them up individually by hand and put them into a jar with
    vinegar. He reckoned the smell after a year of fermenting was enough to
    fell a horse. He then used to sniff it after 6 months or so and apparently
    it made him high. Was a weird kid but a nice fella.?

  2. The best way to find a putter is to go to your local golf shop and demo
    every putter…but…*DO NOT* look at the price tag. That will mentally
    affect your decision. ?

  3. I was expecting him to say you have to practice putting to get better at
    putting. You can spend as much as you want on a putter, driver, balls etc
    but it won’t make you a better golfer. Practice will make you better.?

  4. My putting was quite simply woeful. I tried pretty much every style, price
    range and balance of putter, changed grips, ball position, various stroke
    techniques, the lot. My least favored putter was almost on ebay several
    times ( a Cleveland classic face balanced mallet 34 inch). Then quite
    simply i gripped down on it to 32.5 or 33 inch made my grip completely
    neutral and now 3 putts are complete history and my pace is spot on. Green
    reading is a different matter. My advice to anyone is do not be dictated to
    by the 35 or 34 inch standard or by the physical location of the grip on
    your putter. Place your hands where they want to be and rock. Get that
    leading wrist out of the equation by shallowing the angle between the back
    of your leading hand and your forearm and I reckon that will save more
    strokes than any mega investment on a more expensive version of a
    fundamentally flawed putter design (i.e. its length for you). It cost £23
    second hand. No chance of ditching it now. ?

  5. Thanks Mark, great videos by the way. I have always been a Ping man. I love
    the simplicity of the Ping Zing. I have an old bronze Anser with that slit
    in the bottom of the blade, I have an H blade (smaller version of the
    Zing), a J blade and my go-to flat stick right now is a Shea H mallet style
    putter. And Like David I tend to grip down on the shaft, favoring about
    33″ lengths, and a slightly flatter lie angle (orange is about right for
    me). ?

  6. Worked in the golf industry in the past, namely with a well known retailer
    here in Ireland as well as for Adidas Golf, so I’ve been quite fortunate to
    have had the opportunity to try many, many putters out over the years (more
    so 2004-2010). Let me just say that I fully agree with Mark here. It is is
    about what inspires confidence most importantly, but, I wouldn’t be
    obsessed or certainly wouldn’t recommend anyone being obsessed with brand
    name putters whenever in the market for a new one.

    For the love of Jebus, test numerous putters. Be it at the shop’s
    artificial green, club pro shop green or out on the course. A lot of pro
    shops at clubs will let you try it out on their practice green outside.

    I’ve loved all my putters at one stage or another, including my Scotty
    Cameron. My favourite putters however are the 2 Ball Blade DFX, Yes! Morgan
    and… the Wilson Deep Red (mallet one) Putter. The latter cost me €35
    brand new back in 2002 I think, and it was stunning putter to use when I
    was a teen. Got down to single figures at the age of 15 (after only 2 years
    of playing full golf) because of it. Arguably the best putter I used in
    knocking in 10ft putts and beyond. Regularly beat all the Scotty Cameron
    heads out there at the time as a result.?

  7. What is the classiest way to answer a question : play golf while you’re
    answering.
    Thank you Mark i love your videos !?

  8. Honestly I played a round of golf today with a guy using a scotty cameron
    and I was using my odyssey versa. I used his putter just to get a feel of
    it. I feel that if the $350 putter gives you the confidence you need to
    sink the putt BUY IT. ?

  9. Sorry, don’t think this is relevant. The most important factor is technique
    . Surely a good coach would recommend someone spend £100 on a few lessons
    rather than encouraging handicap gofers to go out and buy a Scotty Cameron.
    Find a putter you are comfortable with & stick with it and practice.
    Changing putters is generally the act of a desperate golfer!?

  10. It’s been said before but I’ll say it again. When it comes to putters it
    really is the Indian and not the arrow. To me, the only thing that matters
    is if a putter helps you to line up true to your line. You either see it or
    you don’t. Sometimes a certain putter can help tremendously with that. I
    have the Ping Scottsdale Hohum and I can line this putter up with the line
    I see much better than any other I’ve tried. That’s for me though. May do
    the same for you or maybe not. This is why branding and marketing hold back
    so many golfers. I’ve seen to many golfers keep buying things such as
    Scotty Cameron or whatever and their putting sucks. No it’s not the putter
    that makes you suck. It’s the fact that you think that putter is right for
    you and will somehow make more putts than a cheapy or another brand that
    gets you less attention. Reminds me of the goofballs in junior high who
    thought they could jump higher and run faster in a pair of Jordans. Do what
    ever floats your boat by all means, but don’t say it like you mean it.
    Please, you must be smarter than that. I’ll take a quote from the movie
    White Men Can’t Jump. “You’d rather look pretty and lose than look bad and
    win.” ?

  11. Had the same generic brand putter for 10+ years and picked it up at a
    garage sale. it has a thick red line on the top contrasting to a dark
    carbon finish. Has always helped me line up my practice stroke to the line
    I desire.?

  12. Totally agree with your thoughts. With a putter you have to feel
    comfortable about it, looks and feel. Whether you can putt is about
    technique & being able to read the greens, that and having confidence with
    the flat stick in your hand so it gives you a positive mental attitude to
    hole putts.
    I do use an expensive putter for similar reasons you mentioned, a 10 year
    old ‘Scotty C” Studio Stainless Newport Beach 1.5 with a milled face-no
    insert – a rare one with a slot behind the face, soon as I picked it up the
    length, feel, sound, look just felt right. Most putters have loft of
    between 3&1/2 and 4 degrees.?

  13. Expensive putters for me – somehow the balance and weight feels better.
    They’re cooler to look and hold value or even increase in value in the case
    of some Scotty Cams.?

  14. I used a $20 putter for years. Since getting back into the game, I forked
    out the cash for a Nike Method 001 and it is awesome. It gets the ball
    rolling instantly with no noticeable skid. I preferred it over the Scotty
    Cameron. ?

  15. There needs to be a certain level of skill. But in terms of expensive
    putters vs cheap putters then I would say as “Mark” has said in the past
    buy the putter you can afford. But being fitted for a putter would be best.
    There are heel mounted putters, slanted heel mounted and center mounted
    putters. Depending on your putting stroke you need to find what fits and
    feels best for you. Then you need to try out different face types as well,
    I had a Yes C-grove faced putter, the sweet spot was very small on this
    putter so any mishits didn’t go the distance I wanted. My new Ghost Manta
    with an insert provides consistent/predictable distance but less feel off
    the face. Then you need to play with length as well, my buddy would do
    great with a short putter and I use a 35″ shaft. If you can’t be fitted go
    out and try as many putters as you can before they kick you out of the
    store. If you think about all of the putters you’ve used in the past you
    may already know certain aspects you like. Also think about lie, I have my
    putter set up 2 degrees flat for my stance. ?

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