Putters: Golf chiefs plan limits on belly and broomhandle clubs
Golf's ruling bodies have proposed to limit the use of long-handled putters.
Players would be banned from anchoring any strokes to a pivot point, such as their chest or midriff, from 2016.
Golf's rule change explained
Three of the past five majors have been won by players using longer putters, but the Royal & Ancient Club and US Golf Association want changes.
"Our concern is that anchored strokes threaten to supplant traditional putting strokes," said R&A chief executive Peter Dawson.
Extended putters would still be allowed but would have to be used as a free swing away from the body.
Anyone who breached the new rule would be subject to a two-shot penalty in strokeplay or the loss of a hole in matchplay.
Traditionalists argue that anchoring putts has changed the fabric of the game, reducing the effect of nerves - twitches in the putting stroke known in golf as "the yips" - and helping provide a pendulum motion that can improve consistency.
"If you anchor one end of the putter to your body, it is taking away one of those frailties," said Dawson.
"The majority of golfers will understand why we have done this. There will be some players whose careers have become dependent on the anchored putting stroke. They do have three years to find another method if the rule change is confirmed."
"There should certainly be no asterisk alongside the major wins of Simpson, Bradley and Els. They were playing within the rules of the day, just as Bobby Jones was when he was winning his majors with a concave sand wedge that was later outlawed."
The proposed rule would apply at all levels of the game, which is played by 60 million people worldwide.
It would prohibit "strokes made with the club or a hand gripping the club held directly against the player's body, or with a forearm held against the body to establish an anchor point".
Long-handled putters have been used for more than 30 years, but their popularity has increased over the past two years, with an estimated 15% of professionals now choosing this method.
"Throughout the 600-year history of golf, the essence of playing the game has been to grip the club with the hands and swing it freely at the ball," said USGA executive director Mike Davis.
At the 2012 Open in July, Ernie Els sank the decisive putt with his belly putter to thwart Adam Scott and his broomhandle version.
Keegan Bradley at last year's US PGA and Webb Simpson at this year's US Open triumphed with an extended putter anchored in their midriff.
"I'm obviously not happy with the ruling, but I respect the USGA," said American golfer Bradley.
"They make the rules, and I'll adjust appropriately. I'm going to accept the challenge and hopefully do well when they do ban it."
Those calling for changes have included 14-time major winner Tiger Woods.
"I just believe that the art of putting is swinging the club and controlling nerves," he said.
"Having it as a fixed point, as I was saying all year, is something that's not in the traditions of the game."
Long putters: Players for and against
FOR
"You've got some guys who have been using this style of putter for almost 20 years so it's a little bit of a scary position that they're in" - Keegan Bradley
"To change something that drastic, it needs to be based off facts and not what certain people think the tradition of the game looks like" - Webb Simpson
AGAINST
"We swing all 13 other clubs. I think the putter should be the same" - Tiger Woods
" The fact is, if somebody invented the belly putter tomorrow, it would not pass. There's no way they would let it through " - Padraig Harrington
A three-month consultation will take place on the proposal during which players and manufacturers can comment.
Asked about suggestions that some players may take legal action over the new rule, Dawson said: "We will defend our position all the way up the legal system."
Whereas other golf clubs are restricted to a maximum length of 48 inches, putters can be any length.
Some players may opt to continue using longer putters but with a free swing, as Angel Cabrera did to win the Masters in 2009.
"We are conscious putting in a more upright style may help those with back ailments or other mobility issues," said David Rickman, the R&A's rules director.
"We believe golf is intended to be played with hands and arms away from the body.
"Putting and chipping can make up nearly half the strokes played on a golf course and making this change is in the long-term interests of golf as a whole."
Golf rules on certain strokes have been changed in the past. It was decided around a century ago that the ball must be fairly struck and not be pushed, scraped or spooned.
In 1968, a "croquet" style of putting was outlawed and snooker or billiards-type strokes are also banned.
World number one Rory McIlroy is among those supporting the proposal.
"Fully agree with the anchoring ban. Better image for the game of golf, skill and nerves are all part of the game. Level playing field in '16," said the 23-year-old on Twitter.
The putt that won Ernie Els the Open
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Comment number 173.
SFG30th November 2012 - 18:08
M Stoker - no one will quit the game. Oldies can't reach the greens in regulation yet I never hear we need to make the ball go further to keep them in the game!
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Comment number 172.
M Stoker30th November 2012 - 15:23
Long putters require no less skill than others, it is very easy to push or pull a put and the weight and line of a put still must be judged as they would no matter what putter you use. It would be unfair on the amateur game to ban them as they can keep older people in the game for longer getting exercise that they cannot get in other areas, do we really want to discourage that?
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Comment number 171.
Kingy30th November 2012 - 11:29
Kingy
This decision comes nearly twenty years after the arrival of the first anchored putters and frankly that is not good enough, to be fair to all parties if this was going to happen it should have been done a long time ago. Lets hope that the decision to regulate the golf ball isnt as slow in coming.
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Comment number 170.
SFG29th November 2012 - 15:39
Charlessy - because that would be silly, wouldn't it?
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Comment number 169.
charlessy29th November 2012 - 15:35
why don't they just ban the use of our arms as well!!!
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Comments 5 of 173