Orikoru
Tour Winner
I don't understand how I'm so bad at this. At least twice a round there will be a putt that I think goes 6 inches left and actually it goes 6 inches right (which means it goes miles right by the time I've aimed that way). Upslopes and downslopes often look flat to me. Putts that look dead straight aren't straight at all. It feels like there's something wrong my eyes, or I have one long longer than the other or something.
Sometimes having read the putt from several feet behind the ball, I'll address the ball to take the putt and now the slope looks different - bizarrely the read I get from this latter position is often the slightly more accurate read (which I wouldn't expect given that I'd be looking at it side-on with my head tilted by this point) - so it actually pays to second-guess myself.
I can't trust myself to read any green correctly, unless it's EXTREMELY obvious. Has anyone got any tips or advice that can help with this?? Bear in mind I don't have any spare cash to put into lessons right now, I'm just looking for literally any advice that might help. One thing I started doing was taking the whole green and the surrounding terrain into account more, this helps sometimes, but other times it does more harm than good (i.e. a severe slope in the background can make a light slope in the foreground look flat).
I'm clueless. Any advice welcome.
Sometimes having read the putt from several feet behind the ball, I'll address the ball to take the putt and now the slope looks different - bizarrely the read I get from this latter position is often the slightly more accurate read (which I wouldn't expect given that I'd be looking at it side-on with my head tilted by this point) - so it actually pays to second-guess myself.
I can't trust myself to read any green correctly, unless it's EXTREMELY obvious. Has anyone got any tips or advice that can help with this?? Bear in mind I don't have any spare cash to put into lessons right now, I'm just looking for literally any advice that might help. One thing I started doing was taking the whole green and the surrounding terrain into account more, this helps sometimes, but other times it does more harm than good (i.e. a severe slope in the background can make a light slope in the foreground look flat).
I'm clueless. Any advice welcome.