I'd have thought it would work for a linear clubhead path too, like a top spin pool cue shot. I dunno. Why not? Although my friend does have a very flat shoulder turn powered putting stroke and a horizontal type hinge. And a chuckle to himself that drives his playing partners crazy.
O.B.
If you really want an answer to "Why not?" let me know. Wasn't sure you really wanted an answer to your question.
P.S. Drew, I lit it up at Falmouth Country Club today
__________________
Life Goal- Developing a new theory of movement based on Brain Science
Interests - Dabbling with insanity
Hobbies- Creating Quality
If you really want an answer to "Why not?" let me know. Wasn't sure you really wanted an answer to your question.
P.S. Drew, I lit it up at Falmouth Country Club today
No Im interested and it is on Topic for a change, which would be kind of new for you.......talk about biting the hand that is about to feed you.........sorry Mike.
So negative loft is only usable for a pure swing procedure? Can you start by describing a true swing for putting.
I can't tell you what method or putter Homer Kelley used when he played with Bruce, Jay and Don.
I do know that Homer Kelley would have liked the fact that your friend had a stroke that put "immediate" over spin on the ball 2-C-4, reducing or eliminating skid.
I do know that Mr. Kelley had three different putters to work with different stroke types. Specifically, the reverse lofted putter is only needed for a "true swinging" putting motion in that the face is only square at low point (at least for a straight faced putter) and that the reverse loft is therefore needed if you wanted to hit the ball above the equator at low point - in order to give the ball overspin and start it rolling right away. Since he didn't tend to putt using a true swinging procedure- I'd guess that he wasn't using a reverse loft putter for that round of golf.
Hopefully DG or Bucket will now threadjack this thread - because the power just went out and I need to head down to the freezer and check on some of my prized possesions - they don't do well when they thaw - I'll double check to make sure that my "Bucket" shelf is still empty.
However, as always - it's not so much what putting procedure you are using but rather the importance of understanding one's putting procedure in order to repeat it and correct it when necessary.
Man . . . I thought you were quitting at 1000 posts . . . . did the hair on your palms get stuck in the key board or something?
Drew . . . no more hampsters . . . Mike's matriculated to pot belly pigs now.
If you really want an answer to "Why not?" let me know. Wasn't sure you really wanted an answer to your question.
P.S. Drew, I lit it up at Falmouth Country Club today
Dude . . you can't smoke bean pods a country club you moron . . . . did you try to go in the ladies' locker room too?
For those in Falmouth (uh huh you got confused right Mike?) . . . . if you find any pieces of duct tape with hair all over 'em . . . . DO NOT TOUCH THEM . . . call the proper authorities to dispose.
Good point Michael! Forgot about Falmouth, Maine. Once you cross the border from Massachusetts into New Hampshire, you have hit the point of no return..."Big Foot" Territory.
No Im interested and it is on Topic for a change, which would be kind of new for you.......talk about biting the hand that is about to feed you.........sorry Mike.
So negative loft is only usable for a pure swing procedure?
No that's not correct. You could use a negative loft putter for any procedure if you wanted. I said IF you used a TRUE swinging procedure - in order to effectively strike the putt at the target and start it rolling with overspin - you'd need a reverse lofted putter. Of course, when Mr. Kelley would say something like that he was assuming that you didn't have any hookface built into the golf club- putter, iron, etc. Anything that makes the sweetspot (longitudinal center of gravity at the point it passes through the clubhead) move back - away from the target(from the viewpoint of a helicopter)- putting the center of gravity behind the shaft, creates a situation where the true swinger- putter, iron, driver, doesn't matter- would have a hookface clubface and therefore wouldn't have the clubface facing the target at lowpoint. Because the true swinger allows the automatic alignment of the sweetspot with the pulling force, which dictates the clubface alignment depending on the amount of hookface "built" into the club.
Can you start by describing a true swing for putting.
I need to make a Wal-Mart run before I make my trip to North Carolina- duct tape, rope, eight car batteries - I'll post to this when I get back later tonight.
Thanks for this.
Ob
See above - in red
__________________
Life Goal- Developing a new theory of movement based on Brain Science
Interests - Dabbling with insanity
Hobbies- Creating Quality