Ruling to outlaw lengthy putters expected today

Putter going belly up

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Ernie Els putts for par on the sixth green during the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club and Lodge on March 25 in Orlando, Fla.
Ernie Els putts for par on the sixth green during the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club and Lodge on March 25 in Orlando, Fla. (MCT)
Buy Sauk Valley Media Photos »

Els, too, has suggested rulesmakers will "have a couple of legal matters" to deal with before a ban can go into the books.

A move to ban long putters fell short in 1989 when the USGA approved their use. Former U.S. Open champion Orville Moody, who had just won the U.S. Senior Open with a broomstick model, threatened legal action if a ban was enacted.

This time, a restriction would not be placed on long putters but the way they're employed. For many, anchoring the shaft against their body has produced a steadier stroke.

Hall of Famer Leo Diegel, a superb ballstriker in the 1920s but often betrayed by a balky putting stroke, experimented with various techniques until settling on a strange-looking one in which he bent over nearly 90 degrees at the waist, stuck the putter shaft into his chest and putted with elbows sticking straight out.

"Diegeling" never caught on, and longer putters didn't really enter the game until the 1980s when a handful of senior players began using the broomstick. As recently as a decade ago, long putters were considered weapons for the desperate or those with bad backs.

Recent years, though, have seen a boom in usage. Els switched grudgingly last year, and Phil Mickelson went to a belly version for a brief time. Bradley and U.S. Open champion Webb Simpson were belly practitioners before they turned pro.

"There's a whole generation of kids right now that are growing up playing golf, never using a short putter," said reigning FedEx Cup champion Brandt Snedeker, user of a traditional model and considered perhaps the game's best putter.

But Rocco Mediate, whose 1991 Doral-Ryder Open victory was the PGA Tour's first with a broomstick model, calls the outcry "overdone."

"It doesn't make you better," said Mediate, who went back to a short model years ago. "If it was the way to go, 144 guys would use it. … And even guys that do use it don't make every putt – because if they did, I'd be using one."

||2|Next Page

Comments

Blogs

» Extra! Extra! - A blog by Chris Heimerman
Extra! Extra! - A blog by Chris Heimerman

Knowledge is power, right?

Bryan Frederick is a Lifestyle Medicine Instructor at CGH Medical Center, and he's got me thinking and re-thinking my approach to weight loss.
» Out Here
Out Here

Why the need for middleman?

The other day, we ran a story about the Dixon Tourism Board's website, which is hard to navigate and missing key information, particularly about the Petunia Festival. Are we wasting our time examining local tourism websites?

Reader Poll

Have you ever gone boating on the Rock River?

Yes
No