Testimoial
Shingo Katayama Japanesse PGA
From: Atsushi Komiyama <xxxxxxx@XXXX.XXX>
Date: Mon, Jun 6, 2011 at 8:57 PM
Subject: Shingo Katayama
To: info@face-on-putting.com
To whom it may concern,
My name is Atsushi Komiyama with RAS in Los Angeles and manage Japanese golfer Shingo Katayama.
Shingo came across your putter and wanted to see if he can he receive a sample putter to test out.
Please let me know.
Thank you,
Atsushi
**********************
Atsushi Komiyama
Route American Sports Inc.
2950 Columbia Street
Torrance, CA 90503
xxx-xxx-xxxx cell
310-781-1111 office
310-781-1112 fax
xxxxxxxxxx@xxxxx.xxx
www.usa-ras.com
**********************
From: Atsushi Komiyama <xxxxxxxx@xxx.xxx>
Date: Mon, Sep 19, 2011 at 2:26 AM
Subject: RE: Shingo Katayama
To: Patrice Dionne <pat@face-on-putting.com>
Patrice,
Shingo used your putter last weekend and finished 2nd place in Japan.
He asked that you provide him a duplicate back up putter.
Thank you,
Atsushi
Date: Tue, Sep 4, 2018 at 8:14 PM
Subject: Mike SMith
To: Patrice Dionne <pat@face-on-putting.com>
Patrice –
I just wanted you to be the first to know that in the last 4 weeks, I shot a 64
followed by another 64 two weeks later, and then, just last Friday I shot a
“61” – all, of course, using the GP putter!
How would you like me to send a testimonial or put it out there on social media?
I’m happy to do whatever you would like….
Thanks,
Mike Smith
Date: Wed, Sep 5, 2018 at 1:47 PM
Subject: Re: 3 Head cover
To: Patrice Dionne <Pat@face-on-putting.com>
Thank you Patrice!
From: Michael Birzon <floridainsu@aol.com>
Date: Sun, May 6, 2018 at 11:25 AM
Subject: Side Saddle Putter
To: Pat@side-saddle-putting.com
First, I want to thank you for making a great putter. I play on the Golf Channel Am Tour and although I am a high-handicap golfer, I have used the GP putter to great advantage. Over the past 3 years, the putter has allowed me to win 14 tour events, including 3 major championships (The Disney Masters, Kiawah Island Masters and the Trump Doral Masters in my division).
************************************
Name: Eric H. Gjerde
Email: eri……..@gmail.com
Message:
Hello Mr. Dionne,
I had joined the Beverly golf and Tennis club two years in Massachusetts and started to play golf at least three times a week this past year. Lets just say my game was a bit rusty. I was a scratch player when I was 15,16, 17 and on my high school golf team. I left the game to have a family and build a career and pick a college that did not have a golf program. I love the game but when I returned I developed the yips. I could not shake it. I would get comments that I have the swing of a 2 handicapper but I putted like a 20. I agreed with them. Anyway I met a fellow by the name of Dave Modugno club member who purchased your putter. He elected to customize his own face on putter but let me use his. The GP putter has lowered my handicap to a 7 and all the guys in the club say I should be a 2 handicapper right now. I am very surprised not more people are playing with your putter or at least side saddle. Wish you the best of luck. Everyone knows the secret to my success. I am planning on being a scratch golfer next year. I was also very good student in physics so I knew just by watching your videos you had a very good idea.
Wishing you a successful 2018!
Best of luck promoting your putter. It is very well made.
Everyone comments about the quality.
Regards,
Eric H. Gjerde
Dear Pat (or Patrice?),
My new putter arrived on 12/5 as scheduled. I was delighted by the craftsmanship, the materials and the beauty of it; it is a first class putting instrument. In that regard it can easily hold its own with putters from major manufacturers. In addition, I was born and raised in Durham, NC, so it’s neat to have a custom (boutique?) putter made in Raleigh. I consider it a good omen that the first putt I tried on our course was a 40 footer that I drained! My wife’s jaw dropped. I just shrugged.
I’m a 71yo retired physician (Duke Med School ’66) living in CA to be near our son and his family. We live on a golf course in a 50+ seniors development. Not that long ago I carried a single digit handicap, but for the last year I have suffered from the yips. I do have a mild intention tremor affecting mostly my left hand, but I became unable to control my right hand in the putting stroke. I would miss a 40 foot putt by 10-15 feet to the right due to an uncontrollable spasm in my right hand. I had to grind over two foot tap-ins, and I began to record 40-putt rounds. The birdies I once made became a thing of the past. I stopped competing because I was only contributing to prize funds, with no chance of winning anything. My handicap is now in the 12-14 range, and recently I often couldn’t come near playing to that. Of course I tried everything: left hand low; claw grip; belly putter; Kuchar lock to left forearm; Michelle Wie bizarre crouch; mid-length counter-balanced shaft, etc. After watching your video, I tried using my belly putter face-on. Although the shaft angle is much greater than 10 degrees, I immediately improved, but as you might guess, I had lots of topped putts because the heel was too high off the ground. You have provided me with a device that is designed for face-on putting and is even customized for my height. I’m on my way. The worst part is the furor that develops when my buddies see me putting face-on for the first time. Lots of trash talk that is distracting: “What the H…?”; “That’s not legal, is it?”; “Wait until 2016!” and so on. I’m telling them “Leave it for the 19th hole, will you? I don’t carry on like this when you putt!’” I’ll let you know how my handicap drops.
Thanks again,
Jim
Hi Pat
I just want to drop you a line to let you know that: a) I got the putter and b) I think with just a little practice my putting will improve tenfold! I have been playing for 55 years now, and have always been a pretty good to good ball-striker, but my putting is ridiculous. I once had a putting lesson at my club in Dallas, TX from the pro who knew that I hit the ball really well, and he told me confidently that he would have no problem helping me with my putting (for some reason, instructors seem to feel that if you hit it well it will be easy to get you to be a good putter–NOT SO!). He had me hit a few putts toward a hole about 30 feet away in a level part of the putting green–just to get a feel for where I was. After about 3 of them he said to me “Are you trying?”. It’s never got much better, even with 7 summer’s worth of teaching for Dave Pelz (I can observe you putt and make sound recommendations as to technique and procedure, but I have never been personally able to get the line and speed together). Enter your method. I have tried it a few times on the practice putting green this week, and the results have been unbelievable. Originally, I had a bit of difficulty aiming (until I reviewed your website and watched you set up. I was keeping my head more or less centered over my body. Now, I am having no problem lining up the head and my direction is virtually never off now (I used to miss 5 foot putts +/- 6 inches on a routine basis with conventional putting–my face rotated way more than I wanted it to, obviously. I am no longer pushing or pulling my putts–even the long ones. My distance control has also been much, much better. I started with the short putts (around 6 feet as you suggested) and got good at them quickly. I felt I had to try the stroke on longer putts to see if it would be as easy to keep the balls on line. I am already able to hit my 3 balls from 40 to 45 feet inside a 3-foot circle pretty routinely (I still have the occasional mishap, but even then it’s within make distance for the next putt), and often burn the cup and occasionally hole one of those. Even on the practice putting green, that rarely happened to me–even with all of my experience. I have tried very short putters, body putters, long putters, wrist (or pop) putting, left hand low, split grip, different tempos, wide stances, narrow stances, mallets, blades, shoulders start putt, arms start putt, looking at the hole while putting, eyes closed, even left handed! I even tried the side-on putting once, but my technique was poor and I found that I got the putter shaft hitting my torso and the arm not being able to go back far enough to hit a putt over ten feet. In short, if there was a method out there, I probably tried it and with little to no success. Back in the days when I used to keep my stats on putting more than I do now, I used to 3-putt one green in four that I hit in regulation. Or, roughly 3 to 4 three putts a round.
One more thing of interest (well, I found it interesting). Since you end up tilting the shaft to vertical, your putter can be used as either a left handed putter or a right handed one. See for yourself the next time that you are out playing around on the green. It may look a little odd as you are setting up, but after you do get set up, it’s the same. For a right hander to tilt the shaft to vertical, he leans the shaft 10 degrees from slightly across his body to upright by pushing the handle toward the side of his body. If you use the putter left handed, you must pull the shaft from away from your body toward you. But, the result is that the shaft is straight up and down, the toe is down and the heel is up (although the toe is now close to your body), and the ball is centered in the putterhead. If you try it, you will see that from that point on, it doesn’t make any difference. If I am missing something, please let me know. That’s it for me. I am going to have my brother try this method (this weekend will be his first effort). If possible (well, it is) he is even a far worse putter than I am. He has a lot of hip motion in his putts (he uses a body putter now–with little to no success), rotates the putter an enormous amount during his stroke and almost never, ever gets a putt over 20 to 25 feet inside 4 feet! From over 30 to 35 feet, he often can’t get the ball within ten feet of the hole! I believe that your method will almost force him to quiet down his body (there isn’t even a hint of a need for body motion using this method of stroking the ball), and he should be able to keep his face very square to the line during the entire putt. He is my height, but a left hander, so it will be interesting to see if he can use my putter while he is learning the system (his putter has a pretty flat lie angle and I think that getting his shaft straight up and down will leave the putterhead way too tilted.) We’ll see. I am sorry to go on so long but you have made me a total convert after less than one week of trying the putter. I anticipate great success after I have had time to really acclimate myself to the putter and the method. Thank you again.
Art Smith
Customer Review email
From: Jeff Blake <………@……..com>
Date: Mon, Aug 25, 2014 at 12:03 PM
Subject: Review
To: Patrice Dionne<info@face-on-putting.com></info@face-on-putting.com>
I rarely ever review anything online but, I wanted to give credit where credit is due. I purchased one of your putters about 3 months ago thinking you and I BOTH were crazy! But it was either find a cure for my putting woes or quit the game.
Well thankfully, neither of us is crazy and I am putting better than I have in years. And with only 3 months of practice. I can’t wait to see how much better I can get with this thing. I went on a golf trip with 15 friends last week. I was laughed at on the first day and passing out your business cards on the last day. lol I cannot for the life of me figure out why there hasn’t been more pros at least attempt this form of putting.
I’m thinking of getting my 5 year old to start putting this way NOW. He loves the game and is the only reason I haven’t quit the past couple of years. If he were to spend 15 years putting like this it’d be like shooting fish in barrel. Anyway……great product, great videos, and I am now your unofficial salesman.
Best wishes,
Jeff