The Welland Tribune

Tiger’s putting goes south

Analysts and experts weigh in on Woods’ woes on the greens

- JOSH PETER

Tiger Woods’ putting stroke is ailing, and “The Putt Doctor” is in the house. As are a couple of other putting gurus ready to diagnose Woods’ problem.

“The biggest thing I’d say personally is that he spent so much time on his swing that other parts of his game suffer, and this is one of them,” Craig Farnsworth, a sports vision optometris­t also known as “The Putt Doctor,” said. “I think that you have to keep working on your strengths, and sometimes people forget that and spend way too much time on the how to’s or mechanics and lose some of the athleticis­m and that can creep over into every aspect of the game.”

Until last week, Woods this season has at times been stellar on the greens, ranking among the top 15 on the PGA Tour in four statistica­l putting categories — total putting (third), strokes gained (eighth), overall putting (tied for 11th) and birdie or better conversion percentage (14th).

But at the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip he finished tied for 55th, largely due to horrific putting that included a flock of missed birdies and six three-putts.

Three notable putting instructor­s diagnose Woods’ putting woes.

Craig Farnsworth

Farnsworth, the author of “See It and Sink It: Mastering Putting Through Peak Visual Performanc­e,” has worked with Sir Nick Faldo, Brad Faxon and, by his count, more than 150 players on the PGA Tour, LPGA Tour and the European Tour.

“(Woods’) two biggest assets all along have been his mental game and his athleticis­m, and he kind of (forsake) that athleticis­m and the mental game when he jumped headfirst into mechanics,” Farnsworth said, referring to Woods’ extensive work on the swing he uses for iron play and driving. “And that’s what he’s been consumed with off and on. Overall, yes, he’s kind of lost his athleticis­m.

“I’m going to quote him from years ago. He said, ‘I know I can win on tour with a C-plus golf swing and an A-minus concentrat­ion.’ And I think he forgot what he said.”

Although Woods felt it necessary to adjust his mechanics, Farnsworth said he thinks the old swing served Woods well — especially coupled with Woods’ once-dominant putting.

“He was wild, but he could pull off some incredible shots to get out of wherever he put himself off the tee,” Farnsworth said. “He reminded me of Seve (Ballestero­s) and he could get up and down from anywhere. That’s why he won a lot of golf tournament­s, athleticis­m and mental side of the game. So that’s what I think is costing the most, is he’s gotten away from dominating mentally and into mechanical­s.”

James Sieckmann

Sieckmann, author of “Your Putting Solution: A Tour-Proven Approach to Mastering the Greens,” earned an endorsemen­t from Vijay Singh, a three-time major winner, and has made the Golf Digest top 50 list for instructor­s.

Sieckmann said he thinks Woods’ struggles are a one-week aberration and speculated that the greens at Quail Hollow Golf Course last week fooled Woods because of insufficie­nt preparatio­n on the course. He said Woods prefers offsite practice so he can avoid distractio­ns.

“Tiger said after Day 1 that the greens looked fast, they felt firm but they were slow,” Sieckmann said.

“So his eyes were playing tricks on him in that he was sensing one thing and he was getting another. So now his line and speed are off a little and he starts missing. And what happens, and this is where the chain-reaction comes in, it’s like a shock to the system, it’s like, ‘Wow, I’m way underperfo­rming here.’”

“All of the sudden something that was intuitive or athletic becomes conscious and forced. And once that happens, forget rolling in 8-, 10-, 15-footers.”

Todd Sones

Sones, author of “Lights-Out Putting: A Mind, Body, and Soul Approach to Golf ’s Game Within the Game,” said that Woods’ putting technique — using his hands more than most golfers do — creates for less margin for error.

“When he’s on and feeling confident, not a problem,” Sones said. “But if he gets at all a little bit anxious, as we all do and under pressure, then he’s not going to perform as well.”

Woods is known to use a SAM PuttLab that provides detailed feedback on his putting, a facet of his game that was expected to buoy him during his comeback this year from multiple back surgeries. But the SAM PuttLab and any other equipment that offers extensive feedback is not necessaril­y the answer, according to Sones. “Analysis without solution is confusion. When a player knows what’s wrong but they don’t know the cause of it, they ultimately are tinkering with the effects of the problem, which is not a solution to the cause.

“Whenever you find a solution for the cause of a problem, you can fix it in a way that stands up to the pressure. At that point, the brain is committed and not confused.”

 ?? ATLANTA JOURNAL CONSTITUTI­ON FILE PHOTO ?? Tiger Woods reacts to missing his birdie at the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 5.
ATLANTA JOURNAL CONSTITUTI­ON FILE PHOTO Tiger Woods reacts to missing his birdie at the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 5.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Tiger Woods lines up a putt at the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, N.C.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Tiger Woods lines up a putt at the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, N.C.

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