I have enjoyed your posts over the years and loved your point of view on various subjects and have agreed until this one, although it is with 2 years of testing under the belt. This is the first technology that I have seen in my 20 years that is not some rehashed concept. Heavy heads and backweighting have been around for ever but never in the ratios of the patented Heavy Putter mass technology. It was good enough to give up my business and jump onboard.
I've said for years that a good putter could putt with a sidewalk brick attached to a shaft and that a lousy putter had better just live with the curse.
My feelings exactly but I used soup can and broom stick for my explanations. We did some testing at a golf course with golfers of all abilities and as usual the pro pooh poohed the idea saying that unless it can truly change the stroke of the average high handicapper it is just another putter, our response was bring him on. About an hour later out comes the pro with his member and said lets see what your putter can do for him. We proceeded to watch this guy hit putts all over the place but none had any idea where the hole was. After we put the putter in his hands he sank the first one from 15 feet and 2 more on top of it and even if he missed it was right next to the hole. I personally played golf with a women who from the lady's tees was down the middle and on the green in regulation or 1 over and proceeded to play ping pong on the green to the tune of 3 to 4 strokes minimum. After watching this for 8 holes I asked her to use my putter from 10 feet and watched as she put the ball right next to the hole. I then had her hit 4 more putts of 8 to 20 feet and each and every one was at tap in range. She asked how much and I told her, the response was great, Well mine only cost 5 dollars at Walmart. These experiences and many more have proved to me that this putter can actually help the average golfer more than the pro and that is our target market.
Charlie
