Can a tee, a string and Inputt help improve your putting? Golf for Beginners recently put this training aid to the test - results below.
Golfers know that proper speed and correct alignment are essential to rolling solid putts. We also know that you "drive for show and putt for dough", which means that you may be able to get away with a wayward drive but the importance of dropping in that final putt for par (or sinking a bogey putt when a hole "blows-up" on you) is essential for improved score and handicap.
That being said, Golf for Beginners was eager to test Inputt - any training aid that can help improve our "1-putt percentages" would be a boon to our game!
Inputt is a portable, rectangular guidance system which teaches a repeatable putting stroke.
Like any training aid, you have to use it repeatedly to see results. The website states that "when used correctly, Inputt helps you put the ball in the same place every time. Even if you miss the hole, the ball should come to rest at the same place when using the device." Stance and stroke are corrected so golfers can focus on stroke.
Inputt strengthens "muscle memory and creates strong neural pathways through repetition."
Setup of this training aid is rather simple - the string and tee used are guidelines to position the Inputt so that, when you stand behind it and take your stroke, you are properly aligned. Inputt comes with access to several videos. Here is the Inputt setup video posted on their site:
We have only been using the Inputt for about a week - the Inputt website states that "repetition and consistency are the keys to controlling your putt."
My husband also tested Inputt and had this to say, "Inputt works to correct your stance and stroke path. It can help you develop a repeatable putting stroke and puts it into your muscle memory. It does, however, take consistent practice to accomplish this - four to five days a week for several weeks to start to see results. I don't know how many people are that dedicated. This is much better for the serious golfer."
Designed for lefties and righties, the Inputt flips over and is the same on both sides.
If you are serious about improving your golf game, like to try new training aids and want to lower the number of three-putts per round, you might be interested in INPUTT.
Have you tried this golf training aid? Let us know your thoughts on this golf blog and on Twitter @Golf4Beginners.
Showing posts with label golf training aid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label golf training aid. Show all posts
Thursday, March 22, 2018
Monday, November 03, 2008
European Tour Shanghai's PGA Tour golfers on road to Dubai. Mickelson swing changes tested at HSBC and Thumb Caddy training aid
Click here to listen.
The European Tour is sending a message to PGA Tour players, loud and clear, that a new era in golf is beginning with the 2009 season.
A new spruced-up tour, in which the European Order of Merit has been replaced with "The Race to Dubai" offers a $10 million pie at the end of the season with another shared purse after the season-ending Dubai World Championship.
Phil Mickelson may be defending this week at the first stop on the Euro Tour, the HSBC Champions in Shanghai, but guys like Anthony Kim and Camilo Villegas are ready to pounce. Villegas, for example, is not content to just play, he's "definitely going there to win." Mickelson, on the other hand, is hoping that swing changes he has been working on since 2007 will finally take effect. We discuss a few of these swing changes in this week's show.
With players like Padraig Harrington, Sergio Garcia and Adam Scott working towards another FedEx Cup-like purse on the European Tour, how soon will it be before golfers like Anthony Kim "jump ship" entirely and shift alliances? Or, perhaps one day, the PGA Tour might be forced to "merge" with the European Tour forming one huge conglomerate. Then there would be no more "off-season", no more "silly season" and viewers would be able to watch their favorite golfers throughout the year!
As Garcia noted, "Some of the tournaments we play in the Middle East ... are bigger than the ones they play in the U.S. You get good players there, so world rankings points increase. At the end of the day, that's what the big players do it for."
Of course, if Tiger Woods has any input, his new golf course in Dubai might just host one of these events. Woods' foray into golf course design is yielding several new courses, possibly with a consideration towards building his own "mini-tour". It is conceivable that Tiger could one day be "tapped" as the head of this global Tour...perhaps aptly named the World Tour! Who knows...stranger things have happened!
We also review Thumb Caddy, an inexpensive training aid which helps keep hands in their proper position throughout the golf swing.
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"Shiny Tech" courtesy of Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)"
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