Fact or Fiction? Looks Impact How Your Putter Performs
Putters

Fact or Fiction? Looks Impact How Your Putter Performs

Fact or Fiction? Looks Impact How Your Putter Performs

By Dave Wolfe

There is nothing in machinery, there is nothing in embankments and railways and iron bridges and engineering devices to oblige them to be ugly. Ugliness is the measure of imperfection. – H. G. Wells

Some of you are not going to like what I tell you today. You are going to dismiss what I have written. You will immediately jump to the comment section to let me know how much of an idiot I am.

I understand that impulse.

I really do.

No so long ago, I would have been shoulder to shoulder with you, torches held aloft as we stormed the castle in fury.

All I ask today is that you postpone your judgement until you have read the whole story and looked at the data.

What is this taboo topic? What subject am I psychologically easing you into? It’s not a complex statement, but it will be controversial. The topic for today is:

Aesthetic opinions do not affect putter accuracy

Yes, that’s right. I am saying that an individual’s views on a putter’s looks will not affect the putting accuracy of the person with that putter. One of the aspects of our Golf’s Most Wanted putter tests that some people have a hard time accepting is that aesthetic like or dislike does not influence accuracy.

In other words, you can make lots of putts with an ugly putter.

Some of you will tell me about the confidence you gain when you look affectionately at your attractive putter, and that this confidence makes you a better putter because putting is all about confidence.

Mental state absolutely influences putting, and other parts of our golf games too, but the all about confidence argument is flawed, and wholly unsupported by data.

cum hoc ergo propter hoc

For those of you not up on your Latin, that phrase translates to “with this, therefore because of this“. In other words, if two things are happening together, then they must have some kind of cause and effect relationship. It’s bad logic. Correlation does not prove causation. Let’s say that you get up at dawn every morning. One could argue that the sun coming over the horizon wakes you up, but using the same flawed logic of correlation and causation, you could argue that through the act of waking up, you caused the sun to come over the horizon.

When a positive correlation exists between two things, it’s entirely possible, even probable, that they may not be linked together in any way whatsoever.

I know…you still think that looks and accuracy still go together though, and that there is in fact a positive correlation. Let’s look at the phrase Positive Correlation.

Positive Correlation
A positive correlation is a relationship between two variables such that their values increase or decrease together.
Basically, if aesthetics dictated performance, their lines on a graph would follow similar paths. Aesthetic scores would increase and decline alongside the corresponding performance values. To take you back to algebra class, the lines would have similar slopes.

Lets now look at the accuracy and aesthetic scores from the most recent Most Wanted Mallet Test. Putters have been arranged on the X-axis from most accurate (Ping Ketsch) to least accurate (Odyssey Metal X Milled #7).

accuracy-vs-looks-mallets-1

As you can see, positive correlation between accuracy and aesthetics simply does not exist. If we look at the blue aesthetic score line, the best fit line would be essentially flat, not at all matching the negative slope of the accuracy line.

There are some spots where accurate putters also scored aesthetically well, but we also see spots where you the data suggests an inverse correlation; aesthetic perception trends are actually the opposite of performance trends.

If how a tester perceives a putter dictates performance, then the Havok (rated most highly for aesthetics), would be toward the top of the pack, and the Metal X Milled #7 would never have finished last.

This is not the first time that we have recorded the lack of correlation. That actually occurred in last year’s Most Wanted Mallet test.

Case in point, I bring you the STX xForm3:

STX xForm3

The STX xForm3 placed second in the 2013 Most Wanted Mallet competition, again, with the scoring based solely on accuracy. What was it’s aesthetic ranking? Dead last. Keep in mind that the aesthetic scoring is done after the tester has putted with it. Who knows how low the aesthetic scoring would have been if we had collected the data before putting?

Even more shocking, with the xForm3 only about 30% of the testers said that they would take the putter out for a round of golf. Keep in mind that they all, on average, were extremely accurate with the xForm3. When I asked one of the testers who putted very well with it why he wouldn’t bag it, his reply was “I don’t like looking at it.”

Basically he would rather miss putts with a pretty putter than make putts with an ugly one.

I seated ugliness on my knee, and almost immediately grew tired of it. – Salvador Dali

We had the reverse case as well in that mallet test. Here is the Barber Pole Waterville:

Barber Pole Waterville

That putter ranked first in aesthetics. It deserved to. It’s a beautiful piece of metal. However, its accuracy score was second from the bottom. Also scoring aesthetically high in that test was the SeeMore SB2C, the last place finisher in accuracy.

Obviously liking the looks did not help the testers to be more accurate with these two. The super hot face of the Barber Pole and the likely unfamiliar alignment scheme of the SeeMore had something to do with it.

 

Aesthetics Do Influence Accuracy

ketsch badge

Being physically attracted to a given putter won’t improve accuracy, but if the visual elements assist with alignment, accuracy can be enhanced. That’s a totally different story, however. That’s a story driven by data, not opinion.

Just this past week, Golfspy Tim and I were fortunate enough to travel to Ping Headquarters where we got to spend some quality time with Ping’s engineering team. I will have more to share about our trip and the Knowledge Environment at Ping in upcoming articles, but one of the topics we discussed was putter alignment schemes.

The engineers at Ping tested a whole bunch of alignment schemes and determined which ones promoted accuracy. There are three Ping putters in the market based upon this research. Two of them, the Ketsch and the Nome TR placed first and second in the 2014 Most Wanted Mallet Test. The third putter is currently competing in the Most Wanted Blade test. I’m keeping that one anonymous until the testing is over, but I’m very curious to see how it will perform.

Visual components can affect how you aim a putter, but your opinion that a particular putter is ugly is not one of those components.

 

All I’m Saying Is Give Ugly A Chance

Cameron Futura X

Liking the  looks may help you decide to buy a putter, but that visual affinity won’t put the ball in the cup. If you can bring yourself to think about this objectively, you’ll concede that it’s true. We have all had owned putters that we absolutely love the looks…and we’ve putted like crap with them.

For me, it’s the Zing. I love the looks of that putter, bagging new versions whenever they’re released. I like looking at it when I stand over a putt in the shop or on the course. Only after I miss long and 30° to the left do I remember that I just don’t putt that well with a Zing.

You don’t need to agree with me. That’s your prerogative. However, I highly recommend you trying rolling some putts with the putters you find ugly…maybe even hideous. It’s quite possible that one of those ugly ones will be the best performing putter you have ever rolled. By immediately dismissing it based on how it looks, you missed your best chance to putt like a beast.

Putting well can quickly turn an ugly putter pretty, just like poor putting can reveal the ugly inside your beautiful putter.

Familiarity is a magician that is cruel to beauty but kind to ugliness. – Ouida

 

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Dave Wolfe

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Dave Wolfe

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      maddog

      10 years ago

      Ugly can be good. Several years ago, I got (for cheap) a Boccieri D1-DF putter. I thought (and still think) that it is one of the ugliest putters I ever saw. However, I putted decently with it. My desire to get better has caused me to move on to a different “gamer” – but the D1-DF taught me the lesson that a putter’s looks don’t matter – objectively measured putting accuracy does.

      Reply

      BWJ

      10 years ago

      In “Golf My Way” Nicklaus once said he’d literally putt with anything that got the ball in the hole.
      Remember the lovely Cleveland 792 VAS shovels (irons) Pavin used to win the US Open ?
      It’s all about performance of a given club for a given player.

      Reply

      Andy

      10 years ago

      Yeah Dave, I am a huge angle guy for sure. Took a longer look at your ultra-adjustable AH putters and your “better results” comment above. Just off the top, conventional thinking is golfers should strive to establish a repetative stroke; and smooth or jerky motion, length, arc, etc., all matter not just as long as can repeat this exact SAME stroke every time, then you have a chance to be a great putter.

      Seems AH is allowing a single putter to better fit the golfer’s putting stroke of the week or month or year. This sound like the mission statement?

      Sure putts can be missed by the best in the world with a perfect greenread, but you must have also seen on TV where the best flat-out misread some greens and whiney-baby like “how did it break that way??” Then TV announcers join in saying, “All of ’em missed it on that side, it must be one heck of an optical illusion.” That’s what the P&SI-EGOS putter does, eliminates ALL optical illusions on putting greens; and yes, it does it quickly with calibrated ANGLES right in your face for each putt at the green condition at that time…:)

      Anyway, great stuff….

      Reply

      Bumpon

      10 years ago

      Andy, what I find insane is NOT knowing, or bothering to know, what attack angles may work or defiantly don’t work. If your married to a conventional “looker” putter, it’s pretty much has ONE intended set up. Can it be altered? Yes, its called custom fitting. That in itself is a process, why most won’t bother with it. Until I made my own, I Never altered anything, excepting length or a grip change. You seem to be very angle orientated in a good way! Me too, just all the other angles that make a great putter/puttee, the ones that are ignored or not known, being the same, that are, have, relative impacts on performance parameters.

      If you tweak mine by 1 degree, at 5 different angle adjustments, its comparable to having 6k putters in one. Thats conservative in the range of motions it has. Fractions of degrees? Do the math. One setup or 6k +++? Tools required? 2, 10 cent Allen wrenches. Don’t forget the brain. It’s the final decision maker when at the very least, you played the shot you got, in the cup or not.

      I can’t help but notice watching the best Pros on the planet, having a caddies perspective,help with aim, and maybe a read from the competition, and still miss putts all-knowing what the correct read was, but something else entered into the equation. The human interactions don’t always follow the brain waves, or the bump on the green, you didn’t see.

      Reply

      Andy

      10 years ago

      >>>making the point that individuals need to find (a putter) what works best for them.<<<<
      Dave, above is insane to me. Works best at WHAT? Seems the vast majority have been brainwashed into believing that “feel & looks & fit” are the most important decisions in buying a putter. It’s like golfers have forgotten the REASON for having a putter in the bag. As such, I offer the following rant:

      Football coach Herm Edwards is famous for his rant “We play to WIN the game.” Along the Herm line of thinking, "We putt to get the ball in the hole," I offer:
      –A bad greenread + good stroke does NOT get the ball in the hole
      –A good greenread + bad stroke does NOT get the ball in the hole.
      –A perfect greenread + the ability to get the ball rolling on the greenread's dictated line & speed; Well, that gets the ball into the hole.

      Add "putter" with "stroke" and all is still true.

      There is a putter at above website that guarantees an expert greenread EVERY putt, which is something even the Touring Pros can't do today as witnessed on TV every week. This putter has incredible feel with classic Anser looks & weight so getting use to it is easy, meaning practice until it fits like a glove. Imagine that, practice to make a putter fit and feel good!! But if a golfer feels can only achieve the greenread's dictated putt path & proper speed with touchy-feely old faithful, by all means carry two putters in the bag…

      Reply

      MbwaKaliSana

      10 years ago

      Too Many attention is given to the “MAGIC WAND “per se .For all golf shots ,the club is nothing ,it’s the Man. And the “Brains “behind which count .That’s why you CAN put Well with an ugly putter .But you préfèr to go dancing with a pretty girl ,rather than an ugly One ,don’t
      you ?When I say the “Brains “it means your vision ,the sound of the ball on the clubface ,are you stiff or RELAXED ,do you contrôll your breath and your balance etc,etc…
      Better train your body and your mind to Play good golf and become an expert putter .
      Of course ,a PANZER KING ROYAL Will always outperform a SHERMAN ,,but the SHERMAN did the job sufficiently Well in most cases!

      Reply

      Bumpon......

      10 years ago

      Bill, your last sentence makes lots of sane sense. Pros tweak their sticks. Individuals need to find what works. I am AKA Dave above. I make the Arrowhead Putters. It has tweak factors for every angle a putter can have. Lofts with adjustable angles with different durometers of materials, shaft angle offsets, 6 lengths, counter weights, blade or mallet, even a grip offset, all mentioned above. One putter that can and will fit any players preferences, the same look, with different angle parameters. One tweak here, one there, all independent of each other, in fractions of degrees.

      My background is art, so when I came up with the concept, i wanted it to look old fashioned, vintage. An illusion kinda. First impressions varies. Some like it and some don’t. if they don’t, its capabilities are irrelevant to them. Ive even modified other brands to give them extreme adjustability. That in-itself gives the golfer their preferred look, and the options in varying angles. Patents Pending, Whats inside is what one needs look at, evaluate, on a personal level. Miss a putt that still goes where intended, says it was a misread. I, we, all do that more often than not. When my own personal stats (Golfshot GPS) tracked showed there was no gains, it did happen when I pursued a better way to approach the bump the ball process. I’m new to Golfspy, and haven’t posted excepting here. Hope to learn something, and hope to share what i know. Its a game that will never be mastered, why it keeps my attention.

      Reply

      Andy

      10 years ago

      Gotta agree with Bumpon that most all putters are the same and matter not, but take exception to the “luck” variable. Making putts involves acquiring a precise greenread, getting the ball rolling on the line dictated by the greenread, and rolling the ball at the speed calibrated from the greenread.

      If you are on smooth greens, luck has nothing to do with it… And in getting that perfect greenread, a special putter that was specifically designed as a Surveying Instrument makes reading greens quick, automatic & precise. No bubbles, levels, lasers, etc…and of course USGA conforming. Plus, the putter has incredible feel from its balance feature. All at website above..

      Reply

      Bill

      10 years ago

      Bumpon- When I first read your summation I smiled because you sounded like a guy who just got off the 18th green after missing a 5 footer for $$. But much of what you say is true.
      I can get around in 25 putts one day and 33 the next on the same course in similar conditions so the gray matter between the ears is definitely a factor. Some days I can see the line and others I’m struggling. There’s no arguing that hype has jacked the prices of putters to ridiculous levels in many cases. Some look good and are awful and others look clunky and are scoring machines. Depends on your stroke, you’re ability to focus on any given day and finally, the putter itself. Case in point is the #2 mallet in this test, the Wilson Visor 2 M3. I spent a lot of time hitting last years original version and A/B testing it against the original Visor. The new model lags far better and doesn’t feel as head heavy as the original. Close in is no contest. The new one is rock solid and has great “feel”. It performs far better than the original with a similar profile. I will definitely look at the Ping Ketch when it becomes available where I live. Conversely, I saw a lot of guys buying the Cameron Futura X putter when Adam Scott won the Masters with it for a lot of money and hated the sound, the looks and didn’t see one guy play particularly well with it. Scott, Dufner and others used it but (IMO) that was a putter for new adopters that overspent for the Cameron name. Doesn’t mean it’s a bad putter but what works for one guy has very little influence on another (and the tour guys get their putters tweaked to their swings just like irons and drivers). At the end of the day, practice and the right putter for your stoke (arcing or straight back and thru) is what will make you a better putter. The putter itself is third in the mix (and still important), but that’s the intriguing point of this story. How did the Ketch perform so much better inside 5 feet? The numbers are amazing considering these are amateurs (and I’m not hating on the Cameron, I’m sure many have had success with it. But many don’t, making the point that individuals need to find what works best for them).

      Reply

      Bill

      10 years ago

      oops..sorry…didn’t proof read my remarks. I A/B tested the original Visor against this years Vizor 2 M3…

      Reply

      Bumpon......

      10 years ago

      Physics and luck make putts. Speed, angles, and a lot of luck dictate success or failure. That includes where the ball is during the ark process to get back to only face angle at impact that was within the range of error. The brain can not see the 1 degree of face angle error that makes or breaks a 10′ putt. It matters not what putter you play. My putter is extremely adjustable. I apply specific angles specific to my desired attack angles. Stats show the brain what angles worked and so does imagery. Testing by others, for whatever putters, is “THEIR” player induced physics, not mine, nor yours. Compare specifications of near all brands and you come to realize looks are illusions, may cause disillusions. There isn’t much difference from A-Z brands in what matters the most. Angles. Why do golfers buy into the hype? Evaluate the physics, the rest is a drain on the brain let alone the $ down the drain. }}}——>

      Reply

      Mbwa Kali Sana

      10 years ago

      Before writing this Article on the “looks “of a putter ,You should have read the excellent book by GEOFF MANGUM ,todays putting Guru , “OPTIMAL PUTTING “.
      He says The is the most important factor in excellent putting .
      Méchanics ,the stroke are nothing ,it ‘s your brain who does the work .
      If your ” Brain ” doesn’t like your putter ,You wil put poorely .
      If have both the PING KETSCH PUTTER ,nô 1 in Your 2014 test .
      I have also the NIKE méthod MCO ,nô 1 in last years test ,
      I put very Well with both putters ,but I can’t help m’y “Brain ” to like better the aesthetics of the Blade Nike MCO rather than the PING KETSCH .
      So while the results on the golf course are More or Less the same , I feel More ” confident ” on a clutch put with thé NIKE than with the PING.
      As a conclusion ,I would say that your testing has comme out with the two better putters on the market today ,notwhistanding the outcome of the 2014 best blade putter test .
      It ‘s a mater of personal préférence ,which nobody CAN explain rationally .

      Reply

      Andreas

      10 years ago

      Liking the look of a putter for me is thinking that I am aiming it right. It would be interesting to see a test where the participants first ranked the looks of a putter and then were measured when aiming it at a spot.

      What more is it to like with a putter than the feeling: I’m going to make this putt!!

      Reply

      Andy

      10 years ago

      And then the putt is missed because of a misread? “More to like” is knowing your greenread is precise & perfect, than having that “going to make this putt” feeling is never a disappointment…

      Again, http://www.expertgreenreading.com

      Reply

      RoverRick

      10 years ago

      I will take a different view. I have three putters in the rotation. Yes, they are all very similar and have the same performance specs, if you will, but are different weights and I vary them based on course speed and time of year. But here is where the aesthetics come in to play. When I pull my putter out of the bag, I tell myself that it is the most beautiful putter in the world and everybody that sees it wants it because of its beauty and the fact that it is going to make this putt.

      My playing partners often comment about my putters and most really do envy my putter. However, I will say that I have gone to the golf stores and sank putt after putt with 20 different putters without regards to their look. The interesting thing is I went to buy a particular one, and could not sink a putt with it. It was a centershafted blade with not much toe flow and it would not get near the hole for me. I then moved on to putters with strong tow flow and mallet or blade or brand or looks had no effect.

      Reply

      Andy

      10 years ago

      In what possible way can grooves be better technology than a 4 degree lofted smooth putterface? Are we saying grooves impart topspin and that is a good thing?

      Reply

      Dave

      10 years ago

      Grooves are groovy. That’s about it! It’s a look as well. More hype than help. Being a negative shape, it can not touch the ball at the typical speeds of the stroke. 2 points meet at impact, high point of ball, high point of face!

      Reply

      Scott

      10 years ago

      If Aesthetics have no impact on makes, then wouldn’t everyone be better off playing the putter with the greatest MOI and so wouldn’t this favor mallets over blades?

      It would be interesting to see if there is an accuracy difference between the two after the blade test is over.

      Reply

      mygolfspy

      10 years ago

      Understand your logic and though process. But MOI is not the be all and end all of how well a putter performs. Take for example, the grooves that PING uses, they are a technology that makes a putter perform better, along with a few other small features you don;t know about YET.

      But I like to see the wheels turnin’, for sure Scott.

      Reply

      Bill

      10 years ago

      I like a classic, good looking putter as much as the next guy. But my personal experience is that the blade putters are difficult to lag and the mallets often are heavy handed on short putts and I pull them. But green reading and practice time are still the keys.
      Ended up using a Wilson mallet the last couple years because it’s such a solid lag putter and I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t piqued by the Ping Ketch’s strong finish as well as the Wilson Visor 2 M3. Haven’t hit the Ketch yet but did hit the new Wilson and it’s light years better than the version 1, which was weighted funky. Have never been a big mallet fan but for me, I putt better with them.

      Reply

      ComeOnSense

      10 years ago

      Looks matters to me, I cant use one of those ugly putter. I feel like am going to drag it and take a divot with that enormous rear end.
      Don’t forget that if you don’t read your putts well the ball is not going in the cup. Since the article and some of the readers are using a slogan to describe the ugly putter, I want to use one in behave of the pretty putters…

      ” If you don’t look good, we can’t look good”
      Vidal Sasson

      Reply

      Andy

      10 years ago

      You play to win the game! You putt to hole the ball.

      It’s nice to have a putter that can get the ball rolling at your intended line & speed MOST of the time, but it matters NOT if have not read the green correctly.

      As such the only putter in the world that can give you that perfect Greenread EVERY time is at http://www.expertgreenreading.com. I will say that the Surveying Instrument putters found there are pretty boys. But get use to it, maybe do some actual practice (imagine that), and then with the stroke & greenread fine-tuned, you will have the best of both worlds and actually have a CHANCE to make ALLl your putts on the golf course where it counts…

      Reply

      Person

      10 years ago

      I have always just used w/e putter works. Right now I am using a Cleveland Classic 5.5 center shafted mallet and I like the finish on it but I have lead tape all around the sole and in the back cavity so it looks like a Frankenstein.

      Reply

      greg

      10 years ago

      Imho , I believe one of the putters most important features is to help you align up to the hole.it’s not about fugly, it’s about function .

      Reply

      Bud Davis

      10 years ago

      I think a key part of the aesthetics equation is “feel”, (or sound, depending on how you define it) and feel hasn’t been mentioned here yet. Guys often buy putters for no other reason other than because it “feels great”. They end up gathering dust in the corner like all the rest.

      Reply

      Dave

      10 years ago

      I like this article. It reveals what look hype is all about. See one that looks good, hear the hype stories, and hope it performs. Been there, done that. I started to keep stats on Golfshot GPS. 4 years ago. I looked at the performance stats for the periods of use for each putter recently. 100 rounds. It was a real eye opener to see that I didn’t gain one less putt per round in 3 years, 3 different putters hindsight. Then I built one from the turf up. That’s what made the difference. The physics and angles that felt good, and saw the putt go where I intended. I call it Arrowhead Putters. A vintage look and the most adjustable putter on the planet. I like the looks to boot. Arrows have guided so many scenarios for 64k years so historians say. Thus the name. Physics and angles produce effective putts, not looks. Is a properly fit putter effective? Yes, so my stats say. Shaved 3 putts per round off last year! Standing at average 29 per round. I can tweak mine with 2 Allen wrenches, loft, shaft offset angles, lengths, and a grip offset. Just the grip offset, NOT in the norm square position was a huge stroke gain. If I want to try something a bit different with either the stroke technique, or the putters angles of adjustability its moments away from a tweak or two. The most effective stroke that works now, is not even a remote possibility with all the others I’ve ever owned. I’ve filmed them with iswing slow motion app. No going back to conventional wisdom fittings or putters.

      Reply

      Bobby

      10 years ago

      Where can you test and get fitted from all the various styles of putters to find the best putter for you? Going to an off course retail golf shop and putting on their indoor mats is not the best way to find a putter. This seems to be a need that most all golfers have.

      Reply

      Teaj

      10 years ago

      we turn on the magnets when you pick up the expensive ones

      Reply

      Adam

      10 years ago

      A hard learned lesson in my game…

      Reply

      David W

      10 years ago

      I personally don’t like the look of the Ping Ketsch but putted with one this last week at Martin’s (Myrtle Beach) because it won the most wanted award. With the three alignment lines I was burying 5 and 6 footers, one right after the other. It’s on my most wanted list now!

      Reply

      flaglfr

      10 years ago

      I sort of agree and sort of don’t.
      The data above doesn’t seem to identify the personal data for each of the testers. To make a blanket statement that looks do not affect accuracy is fairly correct. However, to make a case that an ugly putter will make you a better putter is a bit sketchy.

      The key issue here is to know HOW you putt. Do you have an arc style putt or are you more of a straight through putter? How do you deliver the putter to the ball? What is the loft on the putter? Is a face balanced or heel-toe balanced putter more appropriate? Not heeding these items will create more problems than you will solve.

      For the flat stick MORE THAN ANY OTHER CLUB, you need to be fitted properly. Many of us will spend $300 on a putter and not a dime on being properly fitted. Half or more (hopefully not more) of your strokes depend on the “wand”. Many people will pick up a putter, roll a few putts with it in a store and buy it based on that experience.To simply pick something up, roll a few putts with it, think it feels good, believe it will work for you (ugly or not) and see it as the salvation to all your putting woes will most likely bring you back to the store again and again.

      I have a row of putters (probably 20 or 30 much to the dismay of my wife) collected over the years that I have “fitted” myself. I now have one to which I was fitted. I now only use that one. Do I have bad days with it? Sure. But they are fewer and farther between. Is it pretty? It is when the ball rolls into the hole. Whether its a Billy Baroo or the latest high tech, high dollar baddy on the block isn’t what counts. Fitting is.

      Do yourself a favor and save $$$. Get properly fitted and practice. Whether your putter is ugly or not. Your game will thank you for the results.

      Reply

      Teaj

      10 years ago

      I love the look of a blade putter and purchased one last year, I managed to play ok with this putter. We, my coworkers and I got board over the off season while the shop was pretty much empty and started playing a little game on the putting green, we started choosing each others putters at which point my coworker chose this huge mallet putter (havok). I turned my nose up at it almost immediately, that was until I stated to sink putt after putt. I made so many if not made pretty dam near close that I ordered one to bag this season. my putter setup consists of a ball placement outside my eye line and a good arc to it definitely not down the line which would warrant more of a heel shafted putter and not the faced balanced mallet but for some reason the planets align when using this putter. Not sure what this means to the masses but hey next time your purchasing a putter you may want to try that weird looking thing in the corner collecting dust, you might just like the results.

      Reply

      Adam

      10 years ago

      The heel shafted and face balance for certain strokes is only a rule of thumb. Many “see” putts a certain way that allows them to better use a putter that the rule of thumb would not place in their bag. Miss tendencies and consistency also come in to play for fitting of course.

      Reply

      Teaj

      10 years ago

      I totally agree with the miss tendencies as I also usually pull the ball and miss on the low side I guess I alter my stoke enough with this putter that the low miss happens less frequent. what ever it is I’m excited to start rolling some putts on some real greens as soon as the weather permits.

      barbajo

      10 years ago

      Learn something every blog. Was ready to say absolutely aesthetics affect performance (just compare my ex-wife and current – and hopefully last – wife!), but the data is the data. Will give a few ugly putters a try…

      Reply

      markb

      10 years ago

      How does the old Jimmy Soul song go?

      “If you wanna be happy for the rest of your life, never make a pretty woman your wife.
      So from my personal point of view, get an ugly girl to marry you.”

      Perhaps the same goes for putters.

      Reply

      Adam

      10 years ago

      depending on how you meant that i hope your wife doesn’t read this post …

      Reply

      barbajo

      10 years ago

      The new wife is definitely purdier than the old one – making, ah, performance much better.

      On an unrelated note – took out an old Wilson Tour Special Forged 8802 wannabe putter out to the putting green today. Got it for $5 over the winter – it’s beat up, dinged up and looks like it went 12 rounds with Roy Jones, Jr – but it was pretty darned accurate.

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