Adam Scott Is Anchoring His Putter Again

This is the reason why arm-anchor putting is still legal

At that place's a growing movement to ban this fashion of putting. Will it last?

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The year is 2013, and the game of golf is in the throes of an insurgent revolution.

Two years before Keegan Bradley had become the first actor to win a major using a abdomen putter. The next year, Ernie Els and Webb Simpson became the second and third, winning the Open Championship and U.S, Open, respectively. Els had bested Adam Scott, who also used an anchored long doodle, on that occasion. Eight months after Scott became the fourth anchored-putter major-winner. His win at the 2013 Masters came in the same event 14 yr-old Guan Tianlang became the youngest thespian ever to make a cut at a major championship — also using an anchored putter.

That's when golf's governing bodies intervened. That year they appear, starting January. i, 2016, that anchored putting would exist outlawed.

Adam Scott celebrates his Masters win.

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Fast forrard to 2021, and in that location's a new form of anchoring first to accept hold: and so-called "arm-anchoring," or "arm-lock" putting. Two belly doodle refugees — Simpson and Bradley — both utilise the technique, as does Matt Kuchar, Bryson DeChambeau and Volition Zalatoris, among others. At present, at that place are calls for this method to be banned, with some wondering how it fifty-fifty remained legal in the first place.

That'south why information technology's worth revisiting the dominion itself. When the USGA and R&A fabricated their decision, they were insistent that this rule change was categorically not a ban on equipment. Rather, information technology was outlawing a very specific technique.

"Rule 14-1b focuses only on the method of stroke; it does not limit the conforming equipment that may be used," the USGA wrote in its official literature on the change. Information technology even went so far equally to illustrate "permissible" ways to utilize belly and long putters under the new rules.

USGA

Ultimately, that'southward why arm-anchoring fabricated it through the new rule unscathed — the framework golf's governing bodies used for the new rule focused on the technique involved with making a "stroke."

Nether rule 10.ane, the USGA defines a stroke as: "Fairly striking at a ball with the head of a gild. The primal claiming is to direct and control the movement of the entire gild by freely swinging the club without anchoring information technology. … The player must fairly strike at the ball with the head of the club such that there is only momentary contact between the social club and the ball and must non push, scrape or scoop the ball."

NORTON, MA - SEPTEMBER 02: Bryson DeChambeau putts on the 15th hole green during the third round of the Dell Technologies Championship at TPC Boston on September 2, 2018 in Norton, Massachusetts. (Photo by Keyur Khamar/PGA TOUR)

Hither's how Bryson DeChambeau'due south 'engineer' putting style works
By: Luke Kerr-Dineen

Your ears may prick up at the discussion "anchoring" higher up, merely the USGA makes it a specific signal to clarify why arm-locking doesn't fall under that definition: "If the role player'southward club, gripping hand or forearm simply touches his or her trunk or clothing during thestroke, without being held confronting the torso, at that place is no breach of this Rule."

Why? Because the putter is resting up against an arm, which is moving freely and independently of the torso. The entirety of the club may exist moving in unison with the artillery, simply the arms are moving the entirety of the club freely. There's no fixed point anywhere, which is why information technology falls under the current definition of a "stroke."

One time again, information technology'southward a technique that was being outlawed, not a piece of equipment, nether the justification that using a club in one very specific way prevented golfers from making a free stroke. Outlawing arm-anchoring would require remaking the underlying logic for the rule in the first place, which may testify the arm-anchorers' saving grace.

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Luke Kerr-Dineen

Golf.com Contributor

Luke Kerr-Dineen is the Director of Service Journalism at Golf game Mag and Golf.com. In his role he oversees the brand's game comeback content spanning instruction, equipment, wellness and fitness, across all of GOLF's multimedia platforms.

An alumni of the International Inferior Golf Academy and the University of South Carolina–Beaufort golf game team, where he helped them to No. 1 in the national NAIA rankings, Luke moved to New York in 2012 to pursue his Masters degree in Journalism from Columbia University and in 2017 was named News Media Alliance's "Rise Star." His work has also appeared in USA Today, Golf Digest, Newsweek and The Daily Brute.

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Source: https://golf.com/instruction/rules/rules-loophole-why-arm-anchor-putting-still-legal/

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