We all know that is a game set in a game and those that are managed on the black arts Excel typically those that go home with someone money in your pocket
Willie Park Jr famously said that the man who can putt is a game for everyone and in the rarefied atmosphere of the Pro Tours today that is has never been more realistic. The player is the ball so far, with such accuracy that the man who settles the best putt tournaments and championships on the greens. It has always beenbut never more so than today, where everyone, it seems, is a unique ball striker. Moderate players can make a hot strip in which the hole as big as a bucket and have the ball drop with inexorable certainty, but not least, the stripes and the golfer who wants to build a long career, must be consistently able to putt well .
So, here we present the final list of the greatest putter who ever lived, deliberate, with two exceptions. Women are excluded because they did not putt women.And who wields a long putter is excluded because they have already admitted by the enormity of the bag that they are not on the greens are infallible (and because it does not) on a golf application.
25. Billy Casper
In 1959 U.S. Open winner Gary Player once said that, with only a tiny hint of irony: "I'm sorry for Casper, he can not putt a lick. He missed three 30-footers today." Casper Analysis hated his game, and once, when asked about the technology, said:"How does a seagull fly? How does a centipede get all that work legs at once?"
Thanks Billy.
24. Ken Brown
One of the qualities that many people in this list that it moves with a nice, quiet slow - and there never was a slower player than Brown. Best friend Mark James said: "When he was over a putt you never sure would come first to his back or darkness." But the difficulty deliberate method helped sink more than Brownits fair share.
23. Phil Mickelson
One of only two left-handers in the list (along with Bob Charles), he is always good, but often inspired. U.S. Open last year, he and Retief Goosen putted the lights out on some of the toughest, fastest and most restless greens ever produced for a major, and of course at the Masters, he simply looked as if he were, he would hole all knew that he saw . And he did.
22. Nick Faldo
Especially in his younger days, Faldo was remarkably gifted,with the same kind of free-flowing, rhythmical action that marked his long game and he himself said in his autobiography that in those days he did not believe he would never miss. When he rebuilt his swing over two long years he neglected his implementation but then devoted himself so well, with six majors was the result.
21. Lee Trevino
Unorthodox in everything he did, grew up poor, Trevino and his education in golf came in cash equivalent, that he could ill afford,lose and against opponents who do not pay it unwise to - few things are putting a bug in more quickly. In the wake of the Mexican genius developed a solid, consistent, repeatable action that would not work for everyone, but certainly not for him.
20. Jose Maria Olazabal
Ollie's driving issues have an almost perennial part of his career, but yes, God is you, is one of the most effective measures in place in the world. You need just two thingsRight to the hole a putt - the pace and direction - and this man gets a hell of a lot right time.
19. Walter J Travis
Golf writer Charles Price summed up the Australian who played by the turn of the last century with the words: "Travis from such vast distances that his opponents claimed he could putt the eyes out of a squirrel out of holes." He did not play until he was 37 and three years later won the U.S. Amateur.
18. Isao Aoki
Thepopular Japanese player has had arguably one of the most idiosyncratic of all the action, but awkward when it looked like it was in force. He wanted the ball with the putter head of the address pointed to heaven, in a way that you are afraid he would dig his heel into the ground made during the stroke - but he never did. The first Japanese superstar led the way on the greens.
17. Brad Faxon
Some say that if Brad did not putt, he would probably not on tour, but he is blessed with one of thesmooth and effective implementation of strokes have ever seen, and you do not make two Ryder Cup teams on the implementation of its own. He is consistently rated number one by his fellow professionals - of whom most would sacrifice their first born Faxon for a stroke - and she should know.
16. Walter Hagen
The Hague practically in possession of the USPGA Championship as it match play and match play where it is dominating the best putters. This also explains his Ryder Cup record of 9 won 7, halved 1 and lost 1stHe had all the gamesmanship and psychological tricks, but they do not work if you do not recur, and he could.
15. Ernie Els
Despite these two sad missing on the 18th Green in Open last year, has in the course of his career, Ernie has been a textbook putter. His reading of the greens is excellent, but like so many other truly great, is smooth and unhurried, but the acceleration of the rhythm of his stroke, which raises him into the ranks of the best.
14. LorenRoberts
It was Loren Caddy, who has christened it the first time with the dreadful monicker Boss "Moss," but the nickname held more than enough grounding in reality to have. Together with Faxon Crenshaw and consistently has been the man most envied by his colleagues and at least break a putter over his knee too.
13. Hale Irwin
Yes, he is famous missed one-inch putt for a playoff for the Greens, however, that 1976 was the result of carelessness. And yes, with the exception offamous 1990 effort for 72nd Hole of the U.S. Open at Medinah, he is not known for making bombs. But he's done with the help of the master's work - three putting rare, so that anxiety-putts and second punch when he has to do.
12. Paul Runyan
Recalls still on the U.S. tour as the nature of the enemy that everyone hates. He was a small, slender driven man, who was permanently outside of all - often by a wide margin - but up and down better than almostAnyone who has ever lived. Won the USPGA in 1934 and '38, when it was still match play, and if the quality of the opposition was brilliant.
11. Greg Norman
It will be remembered the numerous inventive ways he was just the second in majors but none of them came on the greens, where he was as good as anyone else. He left a 40-footer on the last green to know in the '84 U.S. Open to force a playoff with Fuzzy Zoeller, that he did it, and takes the bottle and technology. And if he was hot,Nobody was able to scorch around a golf course better.
10. Ben Crenshaw
Widely regarded by his peers as the best ever seen her have, Crenshaw smooth, unhurried rhythm of the keys to his success. Tom Kite, Crenshaw grew up in Texas, once said of him: "I do not know, Ben always missing a putt from the time he was 12 until he was 20." He made a point not too many that either. Inevitably, his only two major successes came in Augusta, where implementation is the first game that youneed to bring.
9. Bobby Jones
Be faithful to the master putter, "Calamity Jane" throughout his career, and she remained faithful to him off, making a considerable number of success. Between 1923 and 1930, when he played Jones in 23 of the majors for which he is eligible, and won 13 of them - a strike of 62%, which no other player has come close to matching. And many had to put it down. In most respects he was simply the greatest.
8.Seve Ballesteros
Missing a putt to Seve was a personal insult, and he hated to be hurt. From the beautiful hand-pumps excesses of St Andrews 18th green when he beat Tom Watson in the '84 Open, the miles and miles of putts he holed up in the Ryder Cup to beat the hated Americans, Seve played on the green just as he has all over the place without fear. He was aggressive, courageous and frightened, at the end of his career, never heard of one coming back.
7.Tiger Woods
When Phil Mickelson was in March this year asked the U.S. magazine Golf, he should vote for a five-footer for his life to make, he said: "Tiger, gun, because he made more clutch putts under the" when all I have ever seen have had other than perhaps Nicklaus. He went on to quote the sliding 5-footer against Bob May 2000 at the PGA Championship and the blow he feet in the Presidents Cup in the dark from 15-18. As Phil said: "He's made a lot of 'em." Great putters makeif they are, and it has probably never seen anyone more in tune from the 10-foot and under, when it counts.
6. Jack Nicklaus
His awkward, such as cancer course, bent over the ball, bending the right knee and with his full weight on the left side, never looked like the most aesthetically beautiful thing in the Gulf, but few actions have been effective. His best day came in the '86 Masters, his last major, as he exercised an oversized MacGregor Response putter to devastating effect on thepinch back nine until the green jacket from under the eyes of Seve Ballesteros and Greg Norman, but that only the most recent of numerous memorable day was the short grass for the daddy of them all.
5. Peter Thomson
The Australian Open, the first of five championships, three of them in a row, is probably the most neglected several major champions in golf history. His softly spoken, relaxed attitude of the depth of his stubborn determination to win, and he probably had the disguisedsmooth, and best-looking cherubs of people on this list. It was not quite as effective as some, but was a thing of beauty, and it has done the work.
4. Young Tom Morris
Bob Ferguson, who won the Open three times in a row, "said the man was the first to achieve the feat:" Tom Morris would putt and before the ball was halfway to the hole turn away, say, the boy carried his club: "Select this from the hole, my boy." And that was in the days whenGreen like sheep grazing tracks (which, incidentally, they often were), and clubs were made from the jawbone of an ass. It is important, but do not make the distinction between Tom Morris Jr. and his father, the putt for a tennis ball into the Grand Canyon.
3. Sir Bob Charles
The first left-hander and New Zealander to win the Open (1963), Charles is now 65 and has just announced that next season will be his last as a golf professional, after almost 50 years showhis fellow professionals, as it should be carried out on the greens. So well and consistently remained his putting, he won 23 times on the U.S. Senior (Champions) Tour, at an age when many others are fighting the yips, and he has 70 tournament victories in total. Came first in importance as a 18-year-old amateur prodigy, when he won the NZ Open and he has not stopped winning since.
2. Bobby Locke
The South Africans in all, he was unconventional. He was not even named Robert butwas christened Arthur D'Arcy - Bobby came from his habit of bobbing up and down in his pram. He trusts wore a white cap, shoes and T-shirts (including a tie) and dark trousers, in which he carried his handsome frame down the fairways with such serious elegance, his death would have to be that of a royal ship compared to the Thames. His golf game and out-of-the-ordinary, this was to send each recording at least 40-feet right of target and pulls them back into the game.But it was on the greens, where he broke the hearts of the people and he always held the view that any round of golf was more than 28 putts badly. He won four Opens and when he went to America, they laughed till he won six times in a short time with such dominance that ever-changing Islands U.S. Tour's rules so that he could not go back. One of the Americans, he suggested, Lloyd Mangrum, "said 1982:" The son of a bitch was Locke the hole a putt over 60-feet of peanutbrittle. "
1. Sir Michael Bonallack
Quite simply, in the eyes of many, the former secretary of the R & A is the best putter ever staged. As a lifelong amateur, he was never tested against the best professionals, but many of those who witnessed him in action agreed that he was incomparable. Like so many masters of the green, he remained loyal to a putter and had an idiosyncratic style all his own. Peter Alliss said of him: "Michael Bonallack was a remarkable player. He hada superb short game that all of his own making. If the implementation took a big, wide track with his nose almost sniffing the ball and had a short, jabby swing but all putts went in the hole. "Sir Michael honors in the amateur game are just too many to mention, but also five amateur championships and four British Amateur titles. It said in English Amateur in 1963 at Burnham & Berrow, he up and down, two 22-times agree in 36 holes against Alan Thirwell. Much too modest towith this assessment, he nevertheless was the best.
Definitely not on the list
Ivan Gantz, early U.S. tour pro, for hitting himself in the head when he was famous for a short blow missed, and once even knocked off.
Larry Nelson, who once said with commendable honesty: "I play every year and waited for a week, maybe two, when I putt."
Clayton Heafner, of which each farmer Cary Middlecoff said: "The only time he was able to putt, when he was madenough to hate the ball into the hole. "
If it were lost
Tom Watson, aggressive, fearless in his early days and never minded knocking five yards past because he would always get a return.
Now he is not
Ben Hogan, another fabulous swinger of a golf club in his 50s, but could not putt to save his life.
Tony Jacklin, Lee Trevino never the same after breaking his heart and took off the bag for the machining of '71 Openoverall.
Peter Alliss, Lost it at the Italian Open, when he was in the middle of the round remaining two-footer.
Sam Snead; Rescued for a while by sidesaddle but if that was banned, he was back on the yips.
Honorable Mention
Bernhard Langer, for the yips with, and overcoming three times, which is unique only at the highest level.
It was almost in the Top-25
Arnold Palmer, always wonderfully aggressive, but hisCollection of more than 80 putters show how to fight it sometimes.
Retief Goosen, one of the most consistent Holer-outs in the world, and his two U.S. Open is a measure of its ability.
David Toms to win, and rarely three putts WGC Match Play could only drive it to the next level.
Great potential to join
Paul Casey, Luke Donald, the combination of iron play it and Casey's putting wrapped up last year's World Cup of Golf.
Adam Scott, his best a wonderfulPutter, but not from its best often enough.
Stewart Cink, roll it from anywhere
Mike Weir, won the Masters on the greens, but not really consistent enough.
Sergio García: Currently we worried about his inconsistency, but has the stroke and imagination to a world beater.
Thanks To : Sneed