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Do you find you have better speed control with certain putters?

Posted on 12/18/25 at 9:32 am
Posted by Jon A thon
Member since May 2019
2403 posts
Posted on 12/18/25 at 9:32 am
As I'm lowering my scores, I notice one thing I'm horrible at is long puts. I have an Odyssey Jailbird Cruiser. I liked the longer balanced grip when trying them out and felt comfortable with my accuracy/stroke using it. My accuracy isn't my main concern now. I'm a 15+ handicap and leave myself a lot of very long puts and just feel like I can't feel a speed for a lag put leading to too many 3 putts. When I play with more standard grip putters at golf galaxy/pga superstore, I feel a little more confident in the feel for the speed. Plus like playing with the LAB putters that just feel right. Is that a thing, or am I just seeing the shiny new thing that I want to buy?
Posted by lsunutinno
Dome Island
Member since Nov 2004
1355 posts
Posted on 12/18/25 at 5:18 pm to
I do with heavier putters. I do not like light putters.

Also, tour pros are now overwhelmingly choosing mallet putters. Very few in the top of the putting stats use a blade (or the whole tour for that matter). I’m inclined to think that’s because of speed control more than anything.

Cliffs? Buy a mallet putter if you are struggling with speed and using a blade putter.

Disclaimer:: This may not help you at all.
This post was edited on 12/18/25 at 5:20 pm
Posted by makersmark1
earth
Member since Oct 2011
20431 posts
Posted on 12/18/25 at 5:47 pm to
quote:

Cliffs? Buy a mallet putter if you are struggling with speed and using a blade putter. Disclaimer:: This may not help you at all.


Everyone should have at least 2 putters.

Who am I kidding?

You can’t have too many putters.

I like trying different things.

They don’t take up much space.
Posted by llfshoals
Member since Nov 2010
20557 posts
Posted on 12/18/25 at 6:22 pm to
If I had every one I’ve owned I’d have a golf shop supply.

My limit is 3 now. More than that find a home that isn’t mine. Yes the bottom of a lake counts.

Took a bit to get decent distance control with my DF3. Ball comes off very differently.
Posted by makersmark1
earth
Member since Oct 2011
20431 posts
Posted on 12/18/25 at 6:31 pm to
quote:

If I had every one I’ve owned I’d have a golf shop supply.


This is reasonable goal in my opinion.

What fun on a rainy day!

I roll golf balls down a yardstick with my non-gamers to see what they feel like.
Posted by TT9
Seychelles
Member since Sep 2008
90611 posts
Posted on 12/18/25 at 7:08 pm to
I've always had a blade putter. Always will.
Posted by Jon A thon
Member since May 2019
2403 posts
Posted on 12/18/25 at 9:24 pm to
I guess I've known a putter is a club people go through and often jump around. But figured it was for confidence in the stroke as far as good contact and line. I just feel like I have no clue how far short or long I'm going to be. I'm new enough that I don't expect my line to be perfect every putt. So that isn't bothering me so much. But my speed control has been atrocious on occasion. If every putt was within 10' I'd not think of changing. I'm almost more confident in a 100 yard wedge than a 40' putt right now (almost).
Posted by FieldEngineer
Member since Jan 2015
2592 posts
Posted on 12/19/25 at 6:28 am to
When I switched from a blade to a mallet, it took me three solid months before I felt comfortable with my speed. Fast forward to today, putting speed is one of the strongest parts of my game.
Posted by zippyputt
Member since Jul 2005
6839 posts
Posted on 12/19/25 at 7:57 am to
Heavy versus light swing weight. I can’t control a light putter at all. I usually add a little bit of lead tape to mine.
Posted by mikedatyger
Orlandeaux, FL
Member since Jun 2005
4339 posts
Posted on 12/19/25 at 1:13 pm to
quote:

Everyone should have at least 2 putters.
Who am I kidding?
You can’t have too many putters.

I have 5 putters. 4 mallets and 1 blade (PING Anser).
They all have different face materials, so I alternate from softer faces to more firm faces. Go back and forth between Odyssey 2-ball and a Bertinardi Inovai 6 (fang style). The Bertinardi stays in my back the most.

For distance … IMO, it’s just practice. I try to get a feel on the practice green to see how fast they are.

Saw a drill that helps me. Find a flat spot on the practice green and hit 2-3 balls taking a “normal” no-thinking stroke. (ASSUMING THE PRACTICE GREENS ARE THE SAME SPEED AS THE ACTUAL ONES). Walk it off. The average around here is about 6.5 paces for me. Now I have a gauge. If a practice green is only rolling out 5 paces, then I know it is slower than normal. If it rolls out 7 paces, then they are fast. Add or subtract if it's uphill or downhill.

Don’t know if that makes sense, but ever since I started doing this, I’m MUCH more consistant on long putts.
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