I'm not stopping until straddling your line is banned. What a joke .. to all you that teach it BS, please tell your students they shouldn't be ANYWHERE NEAR the hole.
How do they get the ball out of the hole?
I haven't seen a spike mark on a green for quite awhile. Kids aren't wearing metal spikes these days. I routinely play with a guy who weighs over 400 pounds and don't see spike marks.
But Mike, if AimPointers aren't repetitively straddling their line multiple times within 5-10 feet of the hole every single time, then where's the pretense for them to slam their putters down on their lines and create a little channel for the ball to roll through, in the name of fixing all of the unnecessary spike marks they've just created?
Tim continues to just… make stuff up, I guess? I don't know that I've ever seen anyone "creating a channel."
I don’t think you would see anywhere near as much if they went back to when you weren’t allowed to straddle the line. Originally you stood on the low side and if that was in someone’s line obviously you didn’t do it.
The rule was that you couldn't touch your line, not that you couldn't straddle it. So, you could pretty confidently stay to the low side of your line, while not quite touching it, but if you tried to straddle it before you even knew what your line was… it was iffy. Even when the "you can't touch your line" rule was in place, you'd see AimPoint people straddling their line, because they could confidently say "my line is somewhere here to here and I'm not touching it."
They at straddling three foot putts standing half way to the hole. If I remember correctly until you go to a 3% slope everything was inside the hole at that distance.
Some putts are 3%, and the difference between 1% and 2% can matter. Is it right-center or inside right? Or maybe it's just outside the right edge?
I don’t notice the fingers much any more. Looks to like they are now predominantly just reading slope the doing the math based off stimp and length of putt.
No, it's just that inside of about 6' or so, you can memorize what the numbers are for aiming. No need for fingers at that range.
I bet I can use the process more quickly than other approaches to reading putts.
Kudos - someone capable of thinking and learning instead of just spouting off without any real knowledge. Tim, you'd do well to apply a similar approach. Learn before spouting off. You don't seem to have learned anything since your comments on page 1.
Does walking up and straddling your line really make more footprints that reading a putt from behind the hole? Or going halfway to the hole and reading the last few feet of break from there? These are things putters have been doing for decades. This seems like something that would be impossible to police.I remember watching some old Masters highlights from the 60s and Palmer would walk all across his own line. You can argue imperfections made less of a difference on slower greens, but the reverence for limiting footsteps seems absurd to me. Why or how you should be mindful of a playing partners through line on a potential missed 4 footer is beyond me. While we are at it, let's put a weight limit on golfers or develop a formula for how many steps you can take on a green based on your BMI.
:thumbsup:
Yes, it does. People have not been doing like this for decades .. straddling the line .. putting up fingers. This is a whole new deal, and the younger players are the worst offenders. Completely possible to police .. it's like saying you can't police the stroke "between the legs." Of course you can .. straddling your line is completely obvious. No problem standing behind your ball, but between your ball and the hole? Cmon, it'd be as obvious as any other rule. It's not just about limiting footsteps.
Why? And at what distance? I straddle the line on a 30-footer in one or two places (no closer than about 10-11' from the hole).
I'll say again: AimPoint is a faster method of reading greens than many other methods. One of the problems is that some golfers ADD AimPoint to their whole routine rather than making AimPoint their whole routine for green reading. In which case I always suggest you police the slow play, not the method.
And yes, I've caddied or played in several high-level events with people using AimPoint. Or watched them. Heck, just got back from Nemacolin Woodlands where two or three of the players in my daughter's foursome used AimPoint each day. I've also, of course, played with many other people who use AimPoint (and some who don't).
And yes, if someone is actually leaving marks of some kind in your line, do call them out. You can read your putt from your ball inside of a certain distance, which is what I teach and what AimPoint teaches, and you should only go to the 2' mark on a 4' putt if you're not going to be in the line of someone else's putt and not going to leave marks.
I use AimPoint and I'm so quick about it, many people who don't know me wonder how I putt so well, or read greens so well, since they don't even see me reading the greens. They don't even process that I did it. AimPoint Express, as the name implies, is a very fast method.
Part of it's a TV issue (they cut to players doing AimPoint because they're near the ball, but they don't cut to a player reading the putt from the other side of the hole because clearly he or she is not about to hit the putt). Part of it's again the fact that players ADD it to their five different green reading methods.