Last Friday I played Daytona Beach Municipal after very heavy rain on Thursday night. The good news is that I was hitting most greens in regulation. The bad news is that I was not playing the conditions. Here are a few putting tips for after heavy rain on the course.
The Tale of Two Greens
Water that hits the top of the mountain will roll off and down the mountain until there’s some place for it to pool. The same is true with greens. Water will flow away from the high point on the green to the lower parts. Where the water runs off into the rough or away from green, it’s going to be dryer than where water might pool.
What’s important to know is that after a big rain, parts of the green are going to dryer and harder than other parts. I saw this big time on the third hole when the ball plopped on the green and died. That’s not uncommon for a high approach shoot, but two holes later, a low bump and run pitch shot landed on the green and stopped. Wow, what’s going on?
Taking the knowledge that the greens were soft, I went for the flag on the next hole, hit two feet in front of it and watched the ball fly off the green. What happened?
The Light Bulb Moment
Whether a green slopes from front to back or back to front, the high point is dryer and harder. A pin location at the lower softer part means go for the pin. The pin at the higher dryer and harder part means to go with the higher lofted club and get the ball up in the air.
Missing short on a soft green means you’re going to be really short. If the pin is on a ridge where the green will be harder, a low runner may still fly off if it strikes the harder dryer portion of the green.
As far as reading greens is concerned, the problem is likely to be different speeds at different parts of the green. A dryer part of the green will have more speed, while the wetter or damper portion may be much slower.
A long uphill putt on a wet green against the grain may require a bazooka like stroke to make it to the hole. On the same green, a putt along the high ridge may be much much faster.
Play It Wet
My advice is to get out on a wet course if you can. Set the affects on you approach shots, chipping and pitching. Experiment on different parts of the green to see how the heavy rains affect different types of putts. Hey, these putting tips might just make you the big winner in your next skins game.
