
In last week’s Post I included a poem, “Dedicated to the Duffer” from a book, The Winning Shot, by Jerome Travers and Grantland Rice published in 1915. But what is “the winning shot?” According to Travers, who won the U.S. Amateur Championship four times and the U.S. Open once,
“Undoubtedly “the winning shot” in golf is the putt. There can be no question about it.”
Travers later on in the chapter continues,
“We all know that there is less of the physical and more of the psychological in putting than in any other part of golf. To be putting well the golfer must have absolute control of his nerves…”
Travers ends the chapter with “a few condensed suggestions” to improve your putting:
- Stand well over the ball and keep your head still.
- Keep your eye on that ball and don’t move your body.
- Cut out the jab or the stab, learn the pendulum swing, and get a follow through with the club.
- Cultivate, in practice as well as play, the knack of being a trifle beyond the hole if you miss. Make a steady practice of giving the ball a chance.
- Cultivate the habit of concentration.
- Cultivate the habit of confidence and determination, for mental faults can be improved as well as physical ones.
- And then practise putting wherever and whenever you get the chance.
Remember these words were written almost 100 years ago. They hold up well when reading the modern gurus Pelz, Utley, Rotella and Valiante.
And yet, as the following poem suggests, when you compare all the words of wisdom regarding putting, the result is more often confusion than improvement. [Read more…]












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