Putt With Your Brain - Part 1
From: Sports Are 80 Percent Mental
If Mark Twain thinks golf is "a good walk spoiled", then putting must be a brief pause to make you reconsider ever walking again. With about 50% of our score being determined on the green, we are constantly in search of the "secret" to getting the little white ball to disappear into the cup.
Lucky for us, there is no shortage of really smart people also
looking for the answer. The first 8 months of 2008 have been no
exception, with a golf cart full of research papers on just the topic
of putting.
Is the secret in the mechanics of the putt stroke or maybe
the cognitive set-up to the putt or even the golfer's psyche when
stepping up to the ball? This first post will focus on the mechanical
side and then we'll follow-up next time with a look inside the golfer's
mind.
Let's start with a tip that most golf instructors would give, "Keep
your head still when you putt". Jack Nicklaus said it in 1974, "the
premier technical cause of missed putts is head movement" (from "Golf My Way") and Tiger Woods said it in 2001, "Every good putter keeps the head absolutely still from start to finish" (from "How I Play Golf").
Who would argue with the two greatest golfers of all time? His name is Professor Timothy Lee,
from McMaster University, and he wanted to test that observation. So,
he gathered two groups of golfers, amateurs with handicaps of 12-40,
and professionals with scratch handicaps. Using an infrared tracking
system, his team tracked the motion of the putter head and the golfer's
head during sixty putts.
As predicted, the amateurs' head moved back in unison with their putter
head, something Lee calls an "allocentric" movement, which agrees with
the advice that novice golfers move their head. However, the expert
golfers did not keep their head still, but rather moved their heads
slightly in the opposite direction of the putter head.
On the
backswing, the golfer's head moved slightly forward; on the forward
stroke, the head moved slightly backward. This "egocentric" movement
may be the more natural response to maintain a centered, balanced
stance throughout the stroke. "The exact reasons for the opposite
coordination patterns are not entirely clear," explains Lee. "However,
we suspect that the duffers tend to just sway their body with the
motions of the putter.
In contrast, the good golfers probably are
trying to maintain a stable, central body position by counteracting the
destabilization caused by the putter backswing with a forward motion of
the head. The direction of head motion is then reversed when the putter
moves forward to strike the ball." Does that mean that pro golfers like
Tiger are not keeping their heads still? No, just that you may not have to keep your head perfectly still to putt effectively.
So, what if you do have the bad habit of moving your head? Just teach
yourself to change your putting motion and you will be cutting strokes
off of your score, right? Well, not so fast. Simon Jenkins of Leeds Metropolitan University tested 15
members of the PGA European Tour to see if they could break old
physical habits during putting. His team found that players who usually
use shoulder movement in their putting action were not able to change
their ways even when instructed to use a different motion. Old habits
die hard.
Let's say you do keep your head still (nice job!), but you still 3-putt
most greens? What's the next step on the road to birdie putts? Of the
three main components of a putt, (angle of the face of the putter head
on contact, putting stroke path and the impact point on the putter),
which has the greatest effect on success?
Back in February, Jon Karlsen of the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences
in Oslo, asked 71 elite golfers (mean handicap of 1.8) to make a total
of 1301 putts (why not just 1300?) from about 12 feet to find out. His
results showed that face angle was the most important (80%), followed
by putter path (17%) and impact point (3%).
OK, forget the moving head thing and work on your putter blade angle at
contact and you will be taking honors at every tee. Wait, Jon Karlsen
came back in July with an update.
This time he compared green reading, putting technique and green
surface inconsistencies to see which of those variables we should
discuss with our golf pro. Forty-three expert golfers putted 50 times
from varying distances. Results showed that green reading (60%) was the
most dominant factor for success with technique (34%) and green
inconsistency (6%) trailing significantly.
So, after reading all of this, all you really need is something like the BreakMaster,
which will help you read the breaks and the slope to the hole! Then,
keep the putter blade square to the ball and don't move your head, at
least not in an allocentric way, that is if you can break your bad
habit of doing it. No problem, right? Well, next time we'll talk about
your brain's attitude towards putting and all the ways your putt could
go wrong before you even hit it!
Timothy
D. Lee, Tadao Ishikura, Stefan Kegel, Dave Gonzalez, Steven Passmore
(2008). Head–Putter Coordination Patterns in Expert and Less Skilled
Golfers Journal of Motor Behavior, 40 (4), 267-272 DOI: 10.3200/JMBR.40.4.267-272
Jenkins, Simon (2008). Can Elite Tournament Professional Golfers Prevent Habitual Actions in Their Putting Actions? International Journal of Sports Science & Coaching, 3 (1), 117-127
Jon Karlsen, Gerald Smith, Johnny Nilsson (2007). The stroke has only a minor influence on direction consistency in golf putting among elite players Journal of Sports Sciences, 26 (3), 243-250 DOI: 10.1080/02640410701530902
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