Cure Putters – Best Putters of 2015 – Full Review

With a Higher MOI for more stability, a custom fit, ideal weight and better roll, no other putter offers you the performance and versatility of a Cure Putter.

In Golf, your putter is the most Important club in your bag, the one you use more than any other. Cure Putters are the most stable and forgiving putters in Golf, delivering better putting results to players of all skill levels. Want to lower your handicap? Get rid of the Yips? We can help. Pro golfers using the Cure Putter are reporting a savings from a half stroke to a stroke per round and amateurs are commonly saving between 2-6 strokes per round!

2015 Cure RX Series consists of the RX1, RX2, RX1 Tour, RX2 Tour, RX3 and RX3F.

With a Higher Moment of Inertia (MOI) Cure RX Series putters stabilize your stroke and twist less at impact for more consistent putting – better distance and directional control. Other putters and High MOI mallets don’t compare to our game improvement technology. Counter Balanced putters may feel stable in your hands, but they put the weight in the wrong place – they don’t stabilize the head. Our High MOI design puts the weight in the right place to make the putter head more stable and resistant to twisting. That’s the importance of Higher MOI and Cure Putters have the Highest MOI in the game.

Cure putters the widest range of adjustable weight of any putter. Whether you like a standard weight or a heavy putter, you can find the ideal weight to improve your putting stroke and even adjust according to green speeds. No need for lead tape on your putter

Cure RX Series Putters also feature an Adjustable Lie Angle. Ever thought about getting a custom putter fitting? No need to bend the shaft, simply loosen and adjust or change shafts for a straight or offset, left or right handed putter. It’s a DIY custom putter fitting in about 2 minutes. Golf instructors find a huge benefit by being able to custom fit any golfer during a putting lesson and show them immediate improvement.

To top it off, Cure Putters put an amazing roll on the ball. With a higher center of gravity a deeper face, and lower loft, that impacts the ball at the equator, it creates a lower more consistent launch angle and starts the ball rolling sooner and smoother to stay on your intended putting line. It’s a pure roll. No need for inserts, milled face, putters grooves etc.

Sure you still have to practice your putting drills and read the green, but you’ll get more consistent results every time you roll a putt. Guaranteed.

So before you buy another Scotty Cameron, Ping, Odyssey, Taylormade, Bettinardi, Cleveland or Seemore, get your hands on a Cure Putters and spend a few minutes with it. The results are immediate.

Cure Putters have been featured on the Golf Channel, Golf Digest, PGA Magazine, Golf Life TV, Back9Network and more.

For more information go to http://www.cureputters.com
Video Rating: / 5

Visit http://www.NUGolfAcademy.org today to learn more about training for a career in golf at National University Golf Academy.

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AUDIO FROM THE VIDEO
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I’m Ted Norby, Director of Instruction for the National University Golf Academy. What I want to talk about today in putting is, getting the putter to release. Lots been said this last year or so with the putter releasing, especially with Steve Stricker helping Tiger Woods with his putting a little bit, and they always talk about the putter releasing. Well most people start thinking about the putter releasing is the club passing the hands and that’s really not what happens. If everything’s working together because it’s a true pendulum, yes the putter is going to pass my hands and the toe is gonna release a little bit or turn over just a little bit but it’s not a manipulation of the hands. I’m not turning my forearms over, I’m not flipping the hands right there.

For most people to feel this proper release, we need to first get the club to hang a little bit better. What most people do is they walk in there, and they hold the club up in the air and they create too much angle. Steve Stricker goes to the extent where his putter head is sitting, so the toe is way down on the ground. That gets his hands quite a bit up. So that now that club head, the weight of the club is hanging underneath the hands. It can now swing, and it can release. If my hands are low and I’m holding the club up in the air, I have to flip it or manipulate the club, and it really can’t release.

So the best way to get this feeling of the club hanging is before we even bend over to the ball, take your grip, the grip is definitely gonna be into the palms a little bit more, but as your standing right up here, let the club hang, so that the wrists almost bow out just a little bit. Once I get that here, go ahead and swing back and forth a couple of times, and you’ll be able to feel the club swinging and the weight of the club almost going past your hands. As opposed to if I’m holding it up here, now I’m manipulating the club a little too much.

So, first part is to just let the club hang a little bit more as I’m taking my stroke. Then I can step up to the ball and what you’re looking for in a mirror, if you’re looking in a mirror back here is that the shaft of the club is pretty close to the forearms. Tiger Woods is one of the few that has his hands a little low, but even he gets the shaft of the club kinda working up into the lower part of his forearm. Rarely do you see any good putters with that angle this way. So, once I get the wrists out and the club hanging, I can go ahead and start taking some strokes and letting the club, release with my forearms, rather than flipping the club. The other thing I want you to do to feel the weight of the club’s swing is to take some putts and hit the putt with only the thumb and forefinger. So as I’m setting up, I’m gonna keep my thumb and forefinger on, I’m gonna keep my palms on, but open up the three fingers on both your right hand and left hand and just start moving your forearms back and forth and you’ll start feeling that your forearms, the shaft, everything has to move at the same point, but because I’m not controlling the club, the toe of the club will release just a little bit.

So, thumb and forefinger only, three fingers off and then go ahead and swing and get the shaft and your forearms to work together and you’ll start seeing that the toe of the club is releasing because of the arc, not because I’m flipping the club over. So we wanna release the club with the forearms and the weight of the club, not by flipping the hands through the ball.
Video Rating: / 5

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