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Tyler Ferrell is the only person in the world named to Golf Digest's list of Best Young Teachers in America AND its list of Best Golf Fitness Professionals in America. Meet your new instructor.

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Lower Body Stability - Putting

Keeping your lower body stable provides a solid foundation for a repeating stroke. Some of the best ways to work on this include:

  • Standing on unstable object
  • Visually monitoring the alignment of your thighs or pelvis
  • Staying in contact with something up against your thighs until you finish the stroke
  • Keeping a quiet eye

Playlists: Putting

Tags: Putt, Set Up, Backswing, Drill, Beginner

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Okay, so the first key to starting a put online is having a stable anchor having lower

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body stability.

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And basically what I mean by that is I don't want your hips or your pelvis or anything

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below your waist to move during the putting stroke.

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If you take a look at YouTube and you look at some of the best putters in the world, what

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you'll see is that they're going to keep their hips relatively square or relatively stable

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during the entire putting stroke.

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But I typically see with a lot of amateurs as they take the putt in the follow-through,

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sorry, in the thru stroke or the down stroke, the lower body is actually going to lead

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or open up.

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What that will do and what that is akin to is if I had this putters swinging and here's

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my stable center that it's swinging around.

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If this stable center is rotating as it's swinging, I'm going to have a lot of kind of inherent

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variability to where the face is going to be pointed.

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That's why it makes it so difficult to get the ball to start online.

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So most of the time I have players who can resolve this issue simply by increasing the amount

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of feedback because you may not be aware that your lower body is moving.

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So the first thing you want to do is you want to check in a mirror.

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So I'm going to pretend this camera is my mirror and I'm going to get this out of here.

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I'm going to get set up so that I would be facing and putting towards the mirror.

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You can do this if you have a full length mirror either in your bedroom or a hotel room.

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What you're going to do is you're going to take notice of something in the background and

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you're going to see what your thighs are pointing at.

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In this case from the camera's point of view, they're pointing more or less at this black

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line.

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Then after I take my stroke, I'm going to check in this follow-through position that they're

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still pointing at that same place because if they're rotating open either in the backswing

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or in the follow-through, again, that's going to cause some of this inherent inconsistency.

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Some other ways that you can practice it are to increase the level of sensitivity for

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your feet.

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So any unstable object is going to make you more aware of when you shift weight.

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So here I have a couple of these dynodisks that you can get at perform better or any other

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sporting good store.

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So you would stand on here.

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It's going to be very difficult for me to have perfectly stable lower body but in the follow-through,

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if I were to shift, I would have to have a much major adjustment and so therefore you would

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see and you would feel that your lower body was moving.

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You can also use either a half foam roller to stand on or one of these swim noodles works

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pretty well.

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I love these because they fit in your golf bag and they're just about the right density

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that if you place them under your arch, you will feel if you go heel toe or if you have

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any type of forward and backward movement, a little bit less sensitive on the side

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to side.

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So you can put this in your bag and you can practice either when you're on the road or

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beforehand.

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Just try to find a stable position to put from and then go ahead and take practice strokes,

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making sure that you're not feeling any weight shift.

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Another option that you can do is you can take shoe boxes and fill them with golf balls

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and stand in practice in your bare feet because then you get a lot of sensitivity.

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But because you can't really do that one on the golf course, I tend to prefer these two.

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So give that a try.

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Double check your lower body stability and don't move on until the next step until you

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can consistently, at least half the time, we'll call that consistently.

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Until you can consistently keep your lower body stable during the pungs rope.

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