Should Arm-lock Putting Be Banned?

Could care less about anchoring… don’t care that much about putting to be honest

I am tuning in on sunday to see the nasty bombs

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https://golf.com/news/brad-faxon-sounds-off-against-arm-lock/ Faxon seems to think so. I used to putt with the broomstick for about 2 months when you could anchor it. I only found it to be an advantage about 7-8 ft on in for me. I was definitely more consistent. It was 100% harder to let the toe close, you could really start the ball on your line way more consistently, however…I found it difficult to lag putts, so I ended the experiment. I never tried the arm bar, but it looks like with some effort you can stop the toe from closing because you are taking the yip possibility out of the situation. I do think it is anchoring it to something other than your hands. Whatever the governing bodies say…At this point, I’m not that interested…I think it would end a few peoples careers though if they banned it.

what would happen to Bryson without the armlock… :rofl::// www.reddit.com/r/golf/comments/mslpy6/welcome_to_golf/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3

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What bugs me ever so slightly is how arbitrary it all seems. If they wanted rule consistency, then pistol and flat grips would have to be banned as well. Going all the way back to Sam Snead the reasoning just seems to be “it looks weird, but someone is having success with it, so we’d better ban it.”

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Just make everyone putt side saddle. No more confusion.

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I never understood why they allowed it when they banned anchoring. Personally, I don’t think they should have banned anchoring in the 1st place. But, if you ban one then I think you should ban the other.

I don’t think it needs to be banned. It doesn’t help you read break and it doesn’t help with speed. The belly putters and other anchored styles helped maintain your setup I think so I could see the argument against those, but I don’t think the armlock does that.

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I do Arm-lock. I didn’t go to it because I was yippy however. The butt end of the club moves throughout the stroke and therefore it isn’t anchoring and there’s no reason to ban it. Additionally, it was one of the putting methods the USGA advertised as an alternative to anchoring, so they’ve already ruled on it.

I will agree that it’s an advantage for some who are willing to put in the work to learn it. For me it simplifies the set-up in a way traditional putting never did. But it took me a few weeks to feel comfortable with it, and I know several very good players who have tried it and could never get the feel. Being able to arm-lock putt is definitely a skill.

I agree that no form of putting should be banned. It’s such a different skill, and players should be able to use whatever they can come up with to get the ball in the hole.

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I don’t have a problem with armlock putting. I didn’t really have a problem with anchored putting either, but I can understand the distinction made around anchoring a part of the club to a non-moving part of the body. To take a next step would be difficult and to me, unnecessary. Do we want to ban the claw or pencil grips, or left hand low, because they’re “different”? I don’t think so.
To me, Horschel comes across as jealous. He can certainly learn the armlock method if he thinks its that much better, but I don’t think the statistics tell us that it really is. Faxon is in the business of teaching traditional putting, I can understand his resistance to something that different.

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The anchoring ban was a terrible rule and an armlock rule would just double down on that. As long as you strike the ball instead of push it, I just don’t see how it fundamentally changes the essence of golf which is "how many times do you have to hit the ball to go from point A into hole B.

I get rules to limit improvements to equipment to keep the integrity of the game. I’m old enough to remember when the R&A ball size was different than the USGA. I like the limits on driver size, etc. I can see debates on mallet putters which look considerably different than an old blade putter.

But the armlock/anchoring thing seems as silly as trying to ban flop shots or stingers. Just because someone can do them well albeit at one time looked unorthodox doesn’t make them bad.

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OR… All putting should be banned. Putting is the worst :joy:

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You know, Ben Hogan would be on your side, and his opinion should carry more weight than Faxon and Horschel combined. :joy:

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Hogan would absolutely dominate top golf!

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Did Pete Cowen just join the conversation?

He believes putting should be worth 1/2 stroke…

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Hitting bombs and hellacious seeds…

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Putting is a separate game, said Hogan. Not sure if that’s correct, but any way you want to put is ok with me. Anchoring, croquet-style, sidesaddle, armlock, even lying on your belly and using a putter like a pool cue don’t make the job easier. Nobody has proven any method to have an advantage over just swinging a putter. Abolish all the restrictions.

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Yep. I wish they would just regulate the length/specs of the putter and let people swing it as they please

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I’m with you on this issue.
All type of putter should be allowed, as long as it produce an acceptable golf stroke. As all swing clubs should be produced by a golf swing.
What they need to improve is not to ban the long putter, nor the armlock. The ruling body should take a closer look at why the long putter or the arm lock are thought after ?
The modern day tournament putting surface is slick and smooth. Like playing on a billiard table. The golfer only need to send the golf ball on the line, more with a push than a golf stroke.
I’d bet the long putters and the arm-locks will not be as successful if they were used on the putting surface in the 50’s to maybe the early 70’s.
More feel will be required to putt well, on those surfaces.
We had come to expect a smooth and fast putting surface in all major tournaments and most of the USGA sanctioned events. Can’t remember when the trend started, perhaps the U.S. Open or the Masters.

Over last week’s viewing on golf channel, I can’t help but notice a few of the golfers using the long/ arm lock putter in a questionable way.
They basically pushed the anchoring hand away from their chest an inch or so and "push " the golf ball with a “broom” sweeping motion.

I’m not trying to start a debate as the ruling body had not stepped in to ban such practice. Perhaps the ruling body deemed this putting method will not have an overwhelming advantage over the field.
Going back to my point, change the putting surface from billiard table top to what it’s like on any public golf venue. Which will require a real stroke to move the golf ball… issue solved.

This isn’t questionable, it complies with the Rule, as long as that top hand isn’t touching the body. You can see for yourself in Diagram 10.1b in the RoG.

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