Set two coins or cards just wider than a ball to create a narrow gate, five to eight feet away. Roll through without touching either side. If the ball clips an edge, your face angle or path wavered. Track consecutive makes, reset after any miss, and watch confidence rise as your putter face consistently starts the ball on your chosen line.
Create a ladder with sticky notes at one, two, and three long strides. Putt one ball to finish on each note without bumping it. Then go backward. Introduce variability by changing the order on every rep. The drill sharpens touch, smooths acceleration, and transfers well because you learn to produce windows of pace rather than chasing a single exact distance.
Adopt three controlled lengths—seven-thirty, nine o’clock, and ten-thirty—using a mirror to standardize backswing size. Pair each with consistent tempo and finish. Even without hitting real balls, your body learns distinct power windows. Later, on the practice green, map those windows to distances. The clarity eliminates guesswork and keeps your chipping decisions beautifully simple under pressure.
Place a sticky note on the carpet as a landing target. Roll a sock to finish on it softly, observing trajectory and rollout. Shift the note closer or farther, and vary your arm length to land precisely. The habit of picking exact landing spots transfers directly to grass, giving you a dependable process instead of reactive, last‑second adjustments.
Use a wedge to brush the carpet after an imaginary ball, focusing on a shallow, descending strike that makes a gentle, crisp sound. Keep weight slightly forward and rotate through. The auditory cue and balanced finish teach low-point control and face stability. Later, contact feels familiar, and your first chip of the day starts confidently on line.
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