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> Do you putt out?, A poll to see how commonly your personal "putting policy" is u
Do you putt out?
Which choice best describes you:
I absolutely always putt out. [ 61 ] ** [36.97%]
I sometimes give myself 6 inches and closer [ 57 ] ** [34.55%]
I sometimes myself putts if I'm already cooked -- double par or whatever [ 13 ] ** [7.88%]
I sometimes give myself two footers [ 14 ] ** [8.48%]
Anything in the leather is good enough for me. [ 16 ] ** [9.70%]
I don't think twice about picking it up whenever it pleases me. [ 4 ] ** [2.42%]
Total Votes: 155
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atlanta golfer
post Jun 18 2009, 08:05 PM
Post #41





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I will give and take short putts in a friendly round or when doing match play - I go with the group. No sense being the odd man out in a social setting. But normally I like to putt everything and I do so in most of my rounds.

What really strikes me is when playing with strangers - people give themselves all sorts of putts that are 2 and 3 feet out which are missed maybe one out of 4 times by the typical golfer. They won't actually pick it up, but they will casually putt it, and then when it doesn't go in, they will putt it again while it is still moving.
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roll - gybe
post Jun 19 2009, 08:02 AM
Post #42





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I had a thought on this.

I have a buddy who is about a 2. He plays on the weekends and his game has rust, and about 99% of the time he is a little hung over from chasing tail on Friday night.


In years past, I have seen his short game be really sharp, but right now he isn't playing enough. He is a 2 because he stripes it.

He is also a pretty good putter. But he picks up 4 footers that he says he can make. He putts others out.

Now we have this other friend who gets very competitive, but he is really wild. We make him play provisionals and we rag him pretty hard about playing by the rules. It gets under his skin, and it can be really entertaining. Great friends right?

Anyway, the wild guy likes to try to get back at the 2 handicapper by demanding he putt out. The thing is the guy makes them all. I cannot recall seeing him miss one in about 6 years. Maybe one, but I'm a little hazy on it. It's pretty funny, when the wild kid makes him putt out, and the guy inevitably holes it, the trashtalking always goes up by a factor of 3 or 4. It ususally starts with something like, "That putt was so easy it was like breathing. Now this fairway looks pretty tight for your hook."

So, just because someone isn't putting out doesn't mean they can't.
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jjj912
post Jun 19 2009, 08:34 AM
Post #43





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QUOTE (ezra76 @ Jun 18 2009, 05:04 PM) *
QUOTE (dpark @ Jun 18 2009, 12:30 AM) *
When not in tournament play, the group I play with usually give putts that are tap-ins to save time. The only thing I am a stickler about is anything for a birdie (or better). I always putt those out (old Harvey Pennick saying, its not a birdie if you didn't putt it).


Same here. I'm a good chipper so put it inside a foot quite a bit. My playing partners always knock those back to me. I do it playing alone most of the time as well. If there is basically any chance I could miss the thing, I'll putt it. No point in lining up a 13inch uphill putt for a bogey save. I'm going to make that 100% of the time as I'm sure anyone would. Some days I'll just knock it in with my wedge blade for the heck of it. I guess I'd have to mention I have a solid, consistant preputt routine. If I choose to putt a 9 incher, I'm going through the whole thing. If you want to wait that 1:10 for me to do it all, so be it, lol. Also, as someone else mentioned, ESC only allows me to enter double at worst. If I miss a bogey putt, chip, whatever, I usually pick it up.


Are you saying it takes you one minute and ten seconds to make a nine inch putt? If you spent that much time on every stroke and shot an 80, you would spend an hour and a half just hitting the ball. If you were part of a foursome and each one of you took that long, the group would spend six hours just hitting the ball, to say nothing of the time required to travel between shots. Out of curiosity, just what exactly are you doing in your preshot routine? Or have I misinterpreted what you wrote?
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Bomb and Gouge
post Jun 19 2009, 08:37 AM
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I putt out 100% of the time.

Once in a while, I'll play w/ people I don't know and they'll hit my ball back to me if they deem it a "gimme". It used to piss me off but now I just roll w/ it.

If they give me something more than a few inches, I'll politely inform them that I prefer to putt out.
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jjj912
post Jun 19 2009, 08:46 AM
Post #45





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QUOTE (Eagle006 @ Jun 18 2009, 01:58 AM) *
QUOTE (dpark @ Jun 18 2009, 05:30 AM) *
When not in tournament play, the group I play with usually give putts that are tap-ins to save time. The only thing I am a stickler about is anything for a birdie (or better). I always putt those out (old Harvey Pennick saying, its not a birdie if you didn't putt it).


+1

Putting out every time, even in a casual round with friends is only going to end up in slow play.


Maybe I'm missing something here, but it seems to me that if playing tap-in putts takes so much time that it is worthwhile to not putt out, then the group has a pace of play problem that is a far bigger than a few tap-in putts.
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Bomb and Gouge
post Jun 19 2009, 08:56 AM
Post #46





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QUOTE (jjj912 @ Jun 19 2009, 08:46 AM) *
Maybe I'm missing something here, but it seems to me that if playing tap-in putts takes so much time that it is worthwhile to not putt out, then the group has a pace of play problem that is a far bigger than a few tap-in putts.



Obviously.

Here's a lit of a few things that can actually SLOW things down on the course:

(These are often causes...but not ALWAYS)

-Beer/Alcohol
-Beverage carts
-Golf carts
-Not playing ready golf
-Marking your ball on the green when you're not in someone's line and just a few feet from the hole
-Playing from tees that don't suit your handicap/skill level
-Looking for balls that are clearly GONE
-Not hitting a provisional and having to take the 'walk of shame' back to the tee
-Holding your follow-thru and posing.
-Waiting until it's your turn before looking at a putt from different angles
-Not using a drop area
-Filling out a scorecard before leaving the green (causing people behind you to wait longer)


Oh, and if you use a caddie, give him/her the rangefinder and trust them! Don't use the rangefinder and make the caddie walk-off the distances.
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atlanta golfer
post Jun 19 2009, 10:06 AM
Post #47





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QUOTE (Bomb and Gouge @ Jun 19 2009, 09:56 AM) *
QUOTE (jjj912 @ Jun 19 2009, 08:46 AM) *
Maybe I'm missing something here, but it seems to me that if playing tap-in putts takes so much time that it is worthwhile to not putt out, then the group has a pace of play problem that is a far bigger than a few tap-in putts.



Obviously.

Here's a lit of a few things that can actually SLOW things down on the course:

(These are often causes...but not ALWAYS)

-Beer/Alcohol
-Beverage carts
-Golf carts
-Not playing ready golf
-Marking your ball on the green when you're not in someone's line and just a few feet from the hole
-Playing from tees that don't suit your handicap/skill level
-Looking for balls that are clearly GONE
-Not hitting a provisional and having to take the 'walk of shame' back to the tee
-Holding your follow-thru and posing.
-Waiting until it's your turn before looking at a putt from different angles
-Not using a drop area
-Filling out a scorecard before leaving the green (causing people behind you to wait longer)


Oh, and if you use a caddie, give him/her the rangefinder and trust them! Don't use the rangefinder and make the caddie walk-off the distances.


You left off a few of my favorites:

1. Telling elaborate jokes and stories on the tee, when the fairway and perhaps the entire hole, is all clear.

2. Ordering a custom cooked-to-order lunch at the turn.

3. Carefully walking to the back of the cart, after the shot, thoroughly cleaning the club just used, putting the headcover on, and then placing it back into it's exact spot where it belongs in the bag. Then and only then, getting into the cart so that the driver can move 20 feet forward to his ball.
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Bomb and Gouge
post Jun 19 2009, 10:08 AM
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Waiting for the green to clear when it would take the shot of a lifetime to actually hit it that far.

What's the worst that could happen? You'll roll the ball up to the green- they might not even notice it!
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bortass
post Jun 19 2009, 10:14 AM
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QUOTE (Ronzo @ Jun 18 2009, 04:07 PM) *
I have no idea how you can measure your actual progress at this game if you don't play by the rules. They are intrinsic.


+1
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Tenementrock
post Jun 19 2009, 10:18 AM
Post #50


hit your ball in the air like you just don't care


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Seems pretty common for strangers to knock your ball back to you. Instead of just rolling with it, I think it's better if we (politely) lay down the law. That way, maybe these numbnutz might learn something, it just may occur to them "Oh, I guess maybe I shouldn't be knocking these peoples' balls back to them" In other words for once let's not cater to the morons of the world. It doesn't take much you just have to show a little initiative and if anyone gets irked or offended by it then who cares, these are not people you should care to please anyways.
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Tenementrock
post Jun 19 2009, 10:24 AM
Post #51


hit your ball in the air like you just don't care


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QUOTE (Eagle006 @ Jun 18 2009, 12:58 AM) *
QUOTE (dpark @ Jun 18 2009, 05:30 AM) *
When not in tournament play, the group I play with usually give putts that are tap-ins to save time. The only thing I am a stickler about is anything for a birdie (or better). I always putt those out (old Harvey Pennick saying, its not a birdie if you didn't putt it).


+1

Putting out every time, even in a casual round with friends is only going to end up in slow play.


Here's an idea, how about instead of teeing off, just drop one in or near the fairway? I understand it's a fairly major breach of the rules, but I guarantee it will speed up play by a lot. and we all hate slow play right?
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Pepperturbo
post Jun 19 2009, 10:39 AM
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I putt out, but have been seen to take a putt inside of a 12" presuming its flat and there's no game. If there is a $$ game or I am the giver of strokers in a game I will speak up to NO gimmes especially when someone is putting for NET Par, Birdie or better.

That said, I have a group of friends that I play with now and again that take all kinds of liberties with TROG including what constitutes a gimme. When I am in their company, I play by the rules and let them play their game as it is. At that juncture I am not playing with them for the sake of winning $$ I am playing with them for camaraderie.
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Bomb and Gouge
post Jun 19 2009, 10:43 AM
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I love guys who take gimmes after they attempted the putt and missed.

"I'm giving myself that one!"

Why even make the stroke then?

This post has been edited by Bomb and Gouge: Jun 19 2009, 10:44 AM
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Ronzo
post Jun 19 2009, 12:05 PM
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QUOTE (Tenementrock @ Jun 19 2009, 11:24 AM) *
Here's an idea, how about instead of teeing off, just drop one in or near the fairway? I understand it's a fairly major breach of the rules, but I guarantee it will speed up play by a lot. and we all hate slow play right?


I like your style, bro. wink.gif
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Mr Mizuno
post Jun 21 2009, 08:34 AM
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QUOTE (dpark @ Jun 18 2009, 06:30 AM) *
When not in tournament play, the group I play with usually give putts that are tap-ins to save time. The only thing I am a stickler about is anything for a birdie (or better). I always putt those out (old Harvey Pennick saying, its not a birdie if you didn't putt it).


+1
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