Thanks John. I really enjoy your tips. I ended up getting a Honu putter with your same grip and love it. I wish they would come out with some other designs. Keep up the good work.
@@BrianWarner-x4i Thanks Brian. I don’t expect that Honu will come up with any new designs simply because they use recycled bamboo flooring for their heads and there is always a limited supply. That said there’s a revolution in Putter’s with every manufacturer introducing a torque free putter in the next 12 to 24 months, so there will be lots of design options. Just not by Honu
I just subscribed and love this channel. I’m a professional classical musician and these are things that my best teacher taught us when it came to performing under pressure. It’s amazing to me how many similarities there are between Golf and music. I’m definitely gonna sign up for a couple of these courses. Thanks so much for all this!
Impressive video, Mister One Putt. Looking forward to your next upload! I smashed that thumbs up button on your content. Keep up the fantastic work. I'm curious, how do you recommend adjusting your putting routine when transitioning from practice to actual tournament conditions, where the pressure is significantly higher?
@@KeyserTheRedBeard thank you for the compliments and for the subscribe. In terms of adjusting your routine from practice to tournament conditions. I think you need to create the pressure situations in your practice over and over and over as often as you can because as much as anything else it’s an experience and mental strength thing. In any sport, the players who succeeded the most often under pressure are the ones who practiced in pressure situations over and over again. Like when Tiger Woods was a kid and his dad jingling keys and change in his pocket while he was putting it gave him the ability from thousands of repetitions to just ignore noise and distractions and focus on the task at hand. Pressure is simply a distraction. Another thing you can do is put earphones in with music that annoys you. Because that creates a distraction and it’s in your head and you’re practicing your putting with that distraction.
Situation: 3-4 footer with a lot of break. Which putt has greater chance of going in? Putt with the break or hit with a lot of pace to the back of the cup? - I find myself in this dilemma a lot of the time.
@@Mav... that is a very common situation. I personally always try to play the break. Because if it has a lot of break, you have to hit it so hard that it bounces out and if you miss it, it goes way past the hole and now you have a longer pot and there’s still lots of break because of where the cup is. My goal is always to play enough break and blend my line and speed for a pace that if it Mrs will go 12 inches past the hole.
It takes me forever to get the alignment stripe on the golf ball where I want it. I keep having to set it, then back off 4 or 5 feet, several times to get it where I want. Then I feel the pressure of everyone getting a little impatient and I end up rushing the putt whether it's aligned up or not. Then just using what I see, looking down no matter that the alignment mark is not where I want. Drives me nuts too that I can't seem to see the line when bending down behind the ball.
Suggestion, practice 50 times a day putting the ball down with the target of a small coin. On the carpet , your lawn anywhere. Don’t have to putt just put it down 50 times while circling the target at 5 foot distance, then vary the distance.
Thanks John. I really enjoy your tips. I ended up getting a Honu putter with your same grip and love it. I wish they would come out with some other designs. Keep up the good work.
@@BrianWarner-x4i Thanks Brian. I don’t expect that Honu will come up with any new designs simply because they use recycled bamboo flooring for their heads and there is always a limited supply. That said there’s a revolution in Putter’s with every manufacturer introducing a torque free putter in the next 12 to 24 months, so there will be lots of design options. Just not by Honu
I just subscribed and love this channel. I’m a professional classical musician and these are things that my best teacher taught us when it came to performing under pressure. It’s amazing to me how many similarities there are between Golf and music. I’m definitely gonna sign up for a couple of these courses. Thanks so much for all this!
@@gordonhill1889 Thank you Gordon. Dealing with pressure is similar in many different areas
Great lesson. Reminds me of competitive swimming training as a youth. Thanks, and love the strokes gained calculator. We use it every week.
@@SierraEchoEcho thank you for the kind words
Thanks for the tips!! ❤
Fantastic video John
Thank you
@@terrypeeples1942 Thanks Terry.
Amazing video… 8secs is something I will work on
Impressive video, Mister One Putt. Looking forward to your next upload! I smashed that thumbs up button on your content. Keep up the fantastic work. I'm curious, how do you recommend adjusting your putting routine when transitioning from practice to actual tournament conditions, where the pressure is significantly higher?
@@KeyserTheRedBeard thank you for the compliments and for the subscribe. In terms of adjusting your routine from practice to tournament conditions. I think you need to create the pressure situations in your practice over and over and over as often as you can because as much as anything else it’s an experience and mental strength thing. In any sport, the players who succeeded the most often under pressure are the ones who practiced in pressure situations over and over again. Like when Tiger Woods was a kid and his dad jingling keys and change in his pocket while he was putting it gave him the ability from thousands of repetitions to just ignore noise and distractions and focus on the task at hand. Pressure is simply a distraction. Another thing you can do is put earphones in with music that annoys you. Because that creates a distraction and it’s in your head and you’re practicing your putting with that distraction.
Thanks John great tips
@@terryholloway9930 thank you sir
what is the name/brand of the 3 hole putting green you have in your home?
@@melanie0941 primeputt they have 2 different sizes that are 3 holes
Situation: 3-4 footer with a lot of break. Which putt has greater chance of going in? Putt with the break or hit with a lot of pace to the back of the cup? - I find myself in this dilemma a lot of the time.
@@Mav... that is a very common situation. I personally always try to play the break. Because if it has a lot of break, you have to hit it so hard that it bounces out and if you miss it, it goes way past the hole and now you have a longer pot and there’s still lots of break because of where the cup is. My goal is always to play enough break and blend my line and speed for a pace that if it Mrs will go 12 inches past the hole.
These very concepts also applies to the best players in the NBA who are clutch from the free throw line....
@@1958LittleLarryG so true
👏👏💪👍
It takes me forever to get the alignment stripe on the golf ball where I want it. I keep having to set it, then back off 4 or 5 feet, several times to get it where I want. Then I feel the pressure of everyone getting a little impatient and I end up rushing the putt whether it's aligned up or not. Then just using what I see, looking down no matter that the alignment mark is not where I want. Drives me nuts too that I can't seem to see the line when bending down behind the ball.
@@journeyman291 I understand that frustration. Only thing I can suggest is practice doing it until you get good and faster.
Suggestion, practice 50 times a day putting the ball down with the target of a small coin. On the carpet , your lawn anywhere. Don’t have to putt just put it down 50 times while circling the target at 5 foot distance, then vary the distance.
@ great stuff
If i talk over and over for ever, i will never be able to put.....
@@kishalayadeb6899 I take it you think I over explained …
too much talking for me sorry
Tons more solid putting help like this at johnevans.graphy.com/s/store