Technology to the rescue: Modern putting lessons based on data can help any player

Modern putting lessons based on measured data can point any player in the right direction.

ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. — My putting is frequently bad, sometimes awful. Has been for years. I started my first-ever professional putting lesson, at Sea Island’s Golf Performance Center, with that confession.

“Most people don’t say that about themselves,” said senior putting instructor David Angelotti, sounding a bit surprised to hear a student so down on himself.

If he had seen the lowlights from my past 20 years on the greens, he might not have been so perplexed. I told him I play to a scratch handicap index but admitted that I’m probably a 20-handicap putter. He’s used to helping players who don’t know why they miss so many putts, but apparently most are not so brutal in their self-assessment.

Angelotti quickly set out to determine the sources of my woes: bad initial aim that pointed the putter more than 5 degrees right of square, a pull stroke that was an attempt to get the ball back online, poor speed control, frequent bad reads. I miss high. I miss low. Most of all, I just keep missing.

Using several pieces of technology with a reliance on the SAM PuttLab created by German sports technology company Science and Motion, Angelotti was able to break down my broken putting. He loves such a challenge.

“Every single person who walks through that door is a puzzle that I’m trying to piece together, with them, to help them putt better,” Angelotti said.

The technology is key. Before a teaching revolution began nearly 20 years ago with a focus on measuring every aspect of a player’s putting, coaches largely had to rely on their eyes and intuition. The SAM PuttLab, which uses ultrasound to track a player’s stroke as its core function, has allowed coaches to obtain a huge array of data points. The information provided can be as simple or complex as the coach chooses, based on the player’s ability to handle the data.

Other key pieces of technology include lasers that show precisely where the putter is aimed, overhead projectors that illustrate the correct break onto an indoor green and other motion systems such as Capto. Working under Phil Kenyon, the director of putting instruction at Sea Island, Angelotti has at his disposal all the latest gear to help the resort’s stable of tour players as well as amateurs. The lessons aren’t cheap – Sea Island charges $470 for the initial 2-hour assessment for resort guests, but that’s not much more than the price of one more fancy putter that might not help a player hole more attempts.

[jwplayer Zm5sws9e-vgFm21H3]

No aspect of a player’s putting is missed. If the aim at address is bad, the coach can measure by how many degrees. The stroke is wobbly? How wobbly, and how does that interact with the improper aim and start point? It’s all measured, and Angelotti said such knowledge leads to feasible solutions.

The only thing sometimes missing, especially in the case of recreational golfers, is the player’s willingness to try.

Most players – myself included before my trip to Sea Island – never take putting lessons. While many golfers are open to learning more about the full swing, a putting lesson just never enters the equation. Big mistake.

“The mindset is that putting is easy,” Angelotti said. “They’re like, I don’t have to hit it 300 yards. It’s easy to move a putter back and through. This is bred from a lack of knowledge about what it takes to hole a putt. If I take the time to list out all the factors of what a putt actually needs to do to go in, you would be amazed that we ever make anything outside of 10 feet.”

Mike Shannon – a putting coach at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra, Florida, who has worked with more than 150 tour pros and was an early adopter of technology – put it succinctly: “If you want to get better fast, you can learn a whole lot more quickly in here (in his putting studio) than you can out there on the range.”

Most tour pros have no reluctance to seek help with their putting, and they follow up frequently. Like Fortune 500 CEOs who want to measure every bit of their business, pros want to know what they don’t know. They not only practice, they measure what they practice: aim, stroke, speed control and results.

Everyday amateurs, not so much.

“It can be eye opening,” Shannon said. “That happens for sure. … It’s fun to be able to bring a player in, and within an hour we know exactly which direction they need to go.”

There are plenty of putting technologies that can help a player these days, with SAM PuttLab being among the most popular. Science and Motion has sold more than 2,000 of the units around the world since its inception in 2003 introduced a new methodology to measuring a putting stroke.

Christian Marquardt, managing director for Science and Motion and one of the device’s inventors, said that golf instructors Hank Haney and Dave Pelz were among the first to grasp the SAM PuttLab’s potential.

“They were completely stunned that we were able to measure this data on putting, because at that point there was only video available, no data,” Marquardt said. “Nobody knew about putting, measurements, dynamics.”

The company frequently upgrades its machines and software to give more control to the coaches. The latest offering is the SAM PuttStudio, a fully integrated system that provides 3D replay, high-speed video, ball tracking, balance analysis and green-reading training on a tilting practice platform.

The company focuses on selling the basic $7,000 PuttLab to coaches and not players themselves, as many players might struggle to interpret all the data. Coaches can take courses on PuttLab to learn how to help students of all levels.

One of the key measurable aspects of a player’s putting is consistency. If a right-handed player aims 2 degrees left, for example, but pushes the ball toward the hole consistently, that might not be a problem. If that push varies too much, it could be the kiss of death.

“In putting, there is not really a model, so we have different strategies,” Marquardt said. “At the same time, we see these professional players are extremely consistent when putting. So we know the consistency levels for all the different aspects we measure very precisely. …

“If you have a consistent pattern, you are able to produce a consistent result. What you do, your stroke, might include some functional problems, but particularly in putting, you might have compensations. If you are consistent, that is the foundation of solid putting.”

Angelotti said his PuttLab system measures consistency as a standard deviation of all putts hit with the system in 2018. Tour pros frequently exceed a consistency level of 75 percent and approach 100 percent, while amateurs might have aspects of their putting that measure as low as 10 percent.

Marquardt said that while all the data can be overwhelming if improperly interpreted or applied, the focus remains on the individual student.

“It is very important to understand that putting can be about the individual,” he said. “It’s like a fingerprint. If you just go for model technique, it can be very difficult. We need to take care of the integrity of you as a person in putting. This is very important.

“If you find something that works for you, just try to make it consistent. Find a way to work on it so that it becomes a pattern that is repeatable to where you can build up your mental skills to trust what you are doing.”

This story didn’t have a very happy start, what with all my missed putts. The ending is yet to be written but is trending in a much more satisfying direction.

Angelotti attributed my bad aim and pull stroke to years of my right hand over-rotating through my stroke. He prescribed a pencil-style putting grip with the shaft running between my thumb and forefinger of my right hand, which eliminates much of the slap from my stroke.

He also had me practice with the ball resting on a mirror, allowing me to look down and make sure my dominant left eye is directly over the ball at address. I incorporated a couple of others drills, such as suspending a string several inches off the ground between two sticks. The taut string runs past the hole and allows me to see a straight line. I also can use the string as a guide for my putter’s alignment aid.

I’m not a completely reformed putter by any stretch, but the results have been encouraging. After two months of regular practice, I am making considerably more putts inside 10 feet. Adding to my confidence was a recent practice session in which I made 87 6-footers in a row while using the mirror and string. Before my introduction to technology-based putting lessons, I would have been lucky to make four out of five from that length.

“Players should take putting lessons to, one, better understand what they do,” Angelotti said. “And two, to have a game plan for improvement. If you’re just guessing, you’re not going to get anywhere. You might have a couple of wrongs that make a right every now and then, but most of the time you’re just going to keep getting it wrong.”

[lawrence-related id=778033956,778033895,778033715]

Open or closed: Golfweek’s Best top 25 resort courses

Amid the international coronavirus pandemic, more than half the top 25 courses on Golfweek’s Best list of resorts are temporarily closed.

After weeks of trying to keep their courses open during the international coronavirus pandemic, more than half the top 25 courses on Golfweek’s Best list of resort tracks have shuttered their operations temporarily or plan to this week.

Several of these resorts, stretched from the Atlantic to the Pacific, have posted to their websites or sent emails that operations have been halted. At others, the courses remain open while the hotel operations have ceased or been dramatically curtailed, and some are maintaining full operations.

Several of the top 25 are northern courses that have not started their golf seasons yet and as of now are still planning to open when their seasons begin.

Related: Live look at Pebble Beach, Bandon Dunes and more

The situation is fluid and likely to change for some of these resorts that do remain open. Several of the courses that have closed have posted that they plan to reopen in April or May. Following are details on each.

 

1. Pebble Beach Golf Links

Pebble Beach, California (pictured atop this story)

CLOSED

Reopens April 17. The entire resort is closed.

 

2. Bandon Dunes (Pacific Dunes)

Bandon, Oregon

CLOSING

The resort will suspend operations March 26 and plans to reopen April 6.

 

3. Pinehurst (No. 2)

Pinehurst, North Carolina

OPEN

The courses remain open, but all lodging operations have ceased. Limited to-go dining is available.

 

4. Whistling Straits (Straits)

Mosel, Wisconsin

CLOSED, OUT OF SEASON

The courses are scheduled to open in April as weather permits, but all lodging and dining at Destination Kohler is closed.

 

No. 7 on Old MacDonald at Bandon Dunes

5. Bandon Dunes (Old Macdonald)

Bandon, Oregon

CLOSING

The resort will suspend operations March 26 and plans to reopen April 6.

 

6. Bandon Dunes (Bandon Dunes)

Bandon, Oregon

CLOSING

The resort will suspend operations March 26 and plans to reopen April 6.

 

7. Shadow Creek

North Las Vegas, Nevada

CLOSED

MGM has ceased all casino and entertainment options until April 16.

 

8. Kiawah Golf Resort (Ocean Course)

Kiawah Island, South Carolina

OPEN

The resort has modified its services and dining availability, but the courses are open. The pro shops are closed, with booking and check-in being handled remotely.

 

9. Bandon Dunes (Bandon Trails)

Bandon, Oregon

CLOSING

The resort will suspend operations March 26 and plans to reopen April 6.

 

10. TPC Sawgrass (Players Stadium)

Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

OPEN

The Players Championship was canceled, but the golf courses are open for play.

 

No. 3 at Spyglass Hill (Ben Jared/PGA Tour)

11. Spyglass Hill

Pebble Beach, California

CLOSED

Part of the resort at Pebble Beach, which reopens April 17.

 

12. Sand Valley (Mammoth Dunes)

Nekoosa, Wisconsin

CLOSED FOR SEASON

The resort plans to open its two courses April 24 as planned after standard winter closures.

 

13. Sand Valley (Sand Valley)

Nekoosa, Wisconsin

CLOSED FOR SEASON

The resort plans to open its two courses April 24 as planned after standard winter closures.

 

14. Streamsong Resort (Red)

Bowling Green, Florida

OPEN
Group caddies are mandated instead of normal carrying caddies to promote maintaining a recommended distance between people.

 

15. Streamsong Resort (Black)

Bowling Green, Florida

OPEN
Group caddies are mandated instead of normal carrying caddies to promote maintaining a recommended distance between people.

 

Gamble Sands (Courtesy of Gamble Sands)

16. Gamble Sands

Brewster, Washington

OPEN

The course opened earlier than planned after a mild winter.

 

17. Kapalua (Plantation)

Lanai, Hawaii

CLOSING

The course will close March 25 and plans to reopen April 30.

 

18. Arcadia Bluffs (Bluffs)

Arcadia, Michigan

CLOSED FOR SEASON

The course will open as planned April 1 after the winter season.

 

19. Sea Pines Resort (Harbour Town Golf Links)

Hilton Head Island, South Carolina

OPEN

The course is open, but the Inn and Club at Harbour Town has been closed through April 16. The PGA Tour’s RBC Heritage Classic was canceled.

 

20. Streamsong Resort (Blue)

Bowling Green, Florida

OPEN
Group caddies are mandated instead of normal carrying caddies to promote maintaining a recommended distance between people.

 

No. 18 at Fallen Oak (Courtesy of Fallen Oak)

21. Fallen Oak

Saucier, Mississippi

CLOSED

The Beau Rivage Resort and Casino has ceased all operations temporarily, including golf.

 

22. Four Seasons Resort Lanai (Manele)

Lanai, Hawaii

CLOSED

The resort has shuttered all operations until April 30.

 

23. Omni Homestead Resort (Cascades)

Hot Springs, Virginia

CLOSED FOR SEASON

The Cascades Course is scheduled to open as planned May 1 after the winter season. This Omni property is still open, but eight others have closed.

 

24. Sea Island (Seaside)

St. Simons Island, Georgia

CLOSED

The resort is closed until May 15.

 

25. Blackwolf Run (River)

Kohler, Wisconsin

CLOSED, OUT OF SEASON

The courses are scheduled to open in April as weather permits, but all lodging and dining at Destination Kohler is closed.

[opinary poll=”do-you-feel-comfortable-playing-golf-ami-HcK9NO” customer=”golfweek”]

Instruction: Jack Lumpkin, Brian Harman find success with ‘old-school teamwork’

Brian Harman skipped football practice one day when he was 11 to take a lesson from Jack Lumpkin. All these years later, they’re still together.

Brian Harman skipped football practice one day when he was 11 years old. His mother, Nancy, drove him from their home in Savannah, Georgia, to Sea Island, where he took an hour-long lesson from Jack Lumpkin, a fixture on every list of top golf instructors. Growing up on a golf course, Harman had picked up the game on his own, but he wanted to find out what one of the best teachers thought of his ability.

“He didn’t tell me to get lost,” Harman said. “He told me I was doing well and come back in a few months and he’d check me again. For me, that was like a rite of passage. I started going once every six months, and our relationship just grew from there.”

That initial lesson was equally as meaningful for Lumpkin, who knew talent when he’d seen it and from Harman’s very first swing knew he’d seen something special.

“There was no doubt in my mind that he was going to be a Tour player if he was inclined to do that,” Lumpkin remembered. “After that first lesson, I couldn’t wait to see him again. I used to wait to see his name in my lesson book because I just knew how good he was going to be.”

All these years later, Harman, 32, and Lumpkin, 84, are still together. Their hard work has made Harman a two-time PGA Tour winner, most recently at the 2017 Wells Fargo Championship.

“Jack is Brian’s safety net,” said World Golf Hall of Fame member Davis Love III, a fellow Lumpkin student. “He’s like ordering your favorite comfort food at a restaurant.”

Lumpkin played on the PGA Tour in 1958-59, but he was married and had two young kids to think about and accepted a position as an assistant golf professional. He learned the ropes under Masters champion Claude Harmon, father of Butch, at Winged Foot, and was head professional in 1968 at Oak Hill Country Club when it hosted the U.S. Open. 

Lumpkin moved back to his native Georgia and, in 1976, joined the Golf Digest Schools with the likes of Jim Flick, Davis Love Jr. and Bob Toski. He came to Sea Island Resort as its director of instruction on Jan. 1, 1989, seven weeks after Love Jr., his best friend, died in a plane crash.

Lumpkin, the PGA Professional of the Year in 1995, is the type of pro who has forgotten more than most instructors know. Harman describes him as “old-school,” while embracing the latest technology such as V1 Golf, a swing analysis tool, Swing Catalyst, and TrackMan launch monitors for dialing in performance, but never as a crutch.

When Harman won his first PGA Tour title at the 2014 John Deere Classic, Lumpkin was one of the first people he thanked. Their work together has a certain rhythm that Lumpkin calls “guided discovery.” Rather than spoon-feeding a swing fix to Harman, Lumpkin has a habit of subtly mentioning how he likes a move made by a certain player. That player’s swing may just so happen to be on the screen in Lumpkin’s office for them to review. 

“Then he lets me figure it out until it becomes second nature and I own it,” Harman said.

RSM Classic: Rounds 3 tee times, how to watch

The fall portion of the 2019-20 PGA Tour season wraps up this week with the Tour’s annual stop at Sea Island Golf Club for the RSM Classic. The event used the new-look Plantation Course and its neighboring Seaside Course for Thursday and Friday’s …

[jwplayer B46M9AK9-9JtFt04J]

The fall portion of the 2019-20 PGA Tour season wraps up this week with the Tour’s annual stop at Sea Island Golf Club for the RSM Classic.

The event used the new-look Plantation Course and its neighboring Seaside Course for Thursday and Friday’s rounds. Saturday and Sunday’s golf action held only on Seaside.

RSM Classic: Scores | Photos | Tee times, TV info

Tee times

Round 3, 1st tee

(All Times Eastern)

Tee time Players
9:20 a.m. Matt Jones, J.T. Poston, Keith Mitchell
9:30 a.m. Chesson Hadley, David Lingmerth, Michael Thompson
9:40 a.m. Mark Hubbard, Shawn Stefani, Matthew NeSmith
9:50 a.m. Hank Lebioda, Cameron Tringale, Dylen Fritelli
10 a.m. Ryan Armour, Davis Riley, David Hearn
10:10 a.m. Nick Watney, Mark Anderson, Vaughn Taylor
10:20 a.m. Tim Wilkinson, Tim Herron, Kyle Reifers
10:30 a.m. Webb Simpson, Will Gordon, Alex Cejka
10:40 a.m. Alex Noran, Dennis McCarthy, Doc Redman
10:50 a.m. Henrik Norlander, Brian Harman, Kyle Stanley
11 a.m. Scott Brown, Brendon Todd, Kyoung-Hoon Lee
11:10 a.m. D.J. Trahan, Ricky Barnes, Fabian Gomez
11:20 a.m. Tyler Duncan, Sebastian Munoz, Rhein Gibson

Round 3, 10th tee

Tee time Players
9:20 a.m. Bill Haas, Mackenzie Hughes, Brian Stuard
9:30 a.m. Scottie Scheffler, Troy Merritt, Stewart Cink
9:40 a.m. Luke List, Rory Sabbatini, Scott Stallings
9:50 a.m. Brandon Hagy, Talor Gooch, Jim Herman
10 a.m. Adam Long, Austin Cook, Maverick McNealy
10:10 a.m. Harry Higgs, Ryan Brehm, Peter Uihlein
10:20 a.m. Chase Seiffert, Ben Crane, Luke Donald
10:30 a.m. Russel Knox, Jim Furyk, Adam Hadwin
10:40 a.m. Doug Ghin, Davis Thompson, Kramer Hickok
10:50 a.m. Tyler McCumber, Anirban Lahiri, Scott Harrington
11 a.m. Satoshi Kodaira, Zach Johnson, Patton Kizzire
11:10 a.m. Vincent Whaley, Rob Oppenheim

TV info

Saturday
Golf Channel: 1-4 p.m.

Sunday
Golf Channel: 1-4 p.m.

[lawrence-related id=778012490,778012433,778011841]

Capsized cargo ship catches the eye at RSM Classic

Back in September, the Golden Ray, carrying 4,200 vehicles, listed and tumbled before capsizing off the Georgia coast.

[jwplayer m1K82kAd-9JtFt04J]

At first glance, you’re not quite sure what it is.

Then you start to wonder if it’s supposed to be there.

What exactly is that off the Georgia coast?

Viewers of the PGA Tour’s RSM Classic most certainly want to know.

RSM Classic: Scores | Photos | Tee times, TV info

Well, it’s a capsized cargo ship, a 656-foot-long behemoth named the Golden Ray.

Back in September, the ship, reportedly carrying 4,200 vehicles, listed and tumbled in St. Simons Sound shortly after leaving Brunswick, Georgia, and bound for Baltimore, before capsizing.

Twenty people were quickly rescued. Four others were pulled off the ship a day later. The ship is owned by Hyundai Glovis, based in South Korea.

David Lingmerth looks on from the 18th green during the first round of the RSM Classic on the Plantation course at Sea Island Golf Club on November 21, 2019 in St Simons Island, Georgia. (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)

During the week, the talk up and down the practice range was this remarkable sight. Golfers in the field for the RSM Classic took picture after picture of the ship and asked members of the media what they knew about it.

“That is the second most popular question I’ve been asked after ‘Can I get a parking pass?'” said Davis Love III, who shot a 2 under 68 to open his tournament week.

Removal could take more than a year

When the event is played again in 2020, the ship is likely to still be there.

The Brunswick News reported on Thursday that the Coast Guard said it’s likely to take more than a year to remove the ship, which is slowly sinking in the sand. In fact, a quarter of the ship is in sand more than 20-feet deep. That means it cannot be turned upright without breaking apart.

Players warm up on the range as the capsized Golden Ray cargo ship is seen in the background at the 2019 RSM Classic in St Simons Island, Georgia. (Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)

Crews have removed more than 317,000 gallons of oil from the ship, in an effort to stem the environmental damage. Still on board: those 4,200 passenger cars.

The cause of the capsize is still under investigation.

“It’s disappointing when I come down the 18th hole with the Commissioner of the PGA Tour, the CEO of RSM, one of his guests, and (rock star) Darius Rucker and it’s the prettiest day of the year and you see a barge with port-o-lets on it and a sunken ship in the background,” Love said.

And, for the curious, it’s been confirmed that the ship is too far out to hit with a golf ball.

[lawrence-related id=778012826,778012759,778012396]

RSM Classic odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Here are the odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets for the RSM Classic beginning Thursday.

[jwplayer B46M9AK9-9JtFt04J]

The PGA Tour’s final full-field event on the 2019 calendar takes place this week in Glynn County, Georgia, at Sea Island Golf Club with the RSM Classic.

The key stats for this week via historical data from Fantasy National are:

  • Strokes Gained: Around-the-Green
  • Strokes Gained: Approach
  • Strokes Gained: Short Game
  • Strokes Gained: Scrambling
  • Par 4 Efficiency: 400-450 Yards

My model looks at the most recent 50 rounds for each golfer in the field.

RSM Classic: Tee times | Fantasy

RSM Classic – Tier 1

Photo Credit: Adam Hagy – USA TODAY Sports

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday at 1 p.m. ET.

Webb Simpson +900

Simpson is the top golfer in the field with a rank of 12th by the Official World Golf Ranking. He finished solo third here last season and finished T-7 at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in his most recent event. He leads the stat model with top-five ranks in four of the five key stats.

Kevin Kisner +2200

Kisner won at Sea Island in 2015. After missing the cut the following year, he was T-4 in 2017 and T-7 last season. Ranked No. 34 in the world, he’s third in the field in par-4 efficiency from the key distance. He has gained more strokes per round at this venue than anyone other than Simpson (minimum 20 rounds played) since 2010, according to Data Golf.

RSM Classic – Tier 2

Photo Credit: Mark Konezny – USA TODAY Sports

J.T. Poston +5000

Poston missed the cut here each of the last three years, but he’s coming off of a T-24 at the HSBC Champions and T-27 at the Zozo Championship in far stronger fields.


Looking to place a bet on this tournament? Get some action on it at BetMGM.  Sign up and bet at BetMGM now!


Brian Stuard +8000

Stuard ranks third by my stat model this week with a top rank of 11th in the field in SG: Around-the-Green. He finished T-23 last week at the Mayakoba Golf Classic and tied for fourth at the Shriners earlier this year.

RSM Classic – Longshots

Photo Credit: Orlando Ramirez – USA TODAY Sports

Luke List +10000

List finished in a tie for fourth last season and tied for 13th in the fall of 2016.

Mackenzie Hughes +15000

The 2016 champion missed the cut each of the last two years, but he’s priced near the bottom of the board with a $10 bet returning a profit of $1500. He missed the cut at the OHL Classic the week before his 2016 victory so his current poor form isn’t a huge concern.

Get some action on this tournament by signing up and betting at BetMGM. If you’re looking for more sports betting picks and tips, access all of our content at SportsbookWire.com.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

[opinary poll=”whos-your-pick-to-win-the-rsm-classic_go” customer=”golfweek”]

[lawrence-related id=778012579,778012541,778012396]