Six-time DP World Tour winner Joost Luiten showed GolfMagic a fantastic putting drill that will improve your putting from short to long range. "If you d...
If I spend time on this putting green, not really focused, start to miss a couple of putts, your confidence goes down and you start to change things - it's important that when you practice, do it with 100% focus." "You can't do this enough and for a lot of amateurs, it begins just by spending time on the putting green. A winner of two KLM Opens in his home country of the Netherlands, Luiten does this drill in every putting green practice session. "If you don't do it for anything, then your focus isn't at 100%. "It's good to put something on it too. If he doesn't hole a putt within those attempts he has to start the drill over again.
Patrick Reed been one of the more active Americans to play on the DP World Tour and says he doesn't see a big difference between doing that and competing in ...
It just shows that the LIV guys are still ready to play and hungry for competition.” “I've played on the PGA Tour and European Tour at the same time. “The guys have been supportive and acting the same way to me as if whenever I was playing on the PGA Tour,” he said. I don't see any difference between me playing the PGA Tour and here and playing on LIV and here. “I feel like we have a mutual respect, the guys on The European Tour and myself. And when Billy [Horschel] won here last year it felt like the same as if a normal player won from over here. Inevitably, he was quizzed more on his experiences off the course at the end of a controversial week marked by conflict between those of a LIV persuasion and those more inclined to an establishment view. We need to allow the guys to play, be competitive and do what we do best. “The guys that are on LIV are really, really good golfers,” he pointed out. Long before the former Masters champion committed a large chunk of his future to the endlessly lucrative but less-challenging entity that is LIV Golf, he was a member of the European Tour (he is now an honorary member of what is now the DP World Tour). “I enjoy the different questions we get asked on a links,” he says. The pair combined for a better-ball score of 58, one or other making birdie on each of the last nine-holes.
Lee Westwood, after his final round at the BMW PGA Championship, talks fan reception, a LIV player court case — and a "fantasy world."
“I have not encountered any animosity from the other players this week,” Westwood said. Before the trial comes, Westwood will play in LIV’s final four events, though he said he wasn’t sure when he would play again on the DP World Tour. [LIV Golf](https://golf.com/news/whats-liv-golf-event-really-like-i-found-out/), and he and 17 other LIV golfers are playing the BMW PGA on the DP World Tour, ahead of a trial that should determine whether he and other LIV players can play more DP World Tour events in the future. Earlier in the week, McDowell offered that there shouldn’t be a trial, Anyway, you knew the proceedings may get at least a little awkward, and [comments ahead of the tournament](https://golf.com/news/rory-mcilroy-jabs-liv-players-testy-bmw-pga/) suggested as much. I might play a couple in there. And the exchange went as well as you may think. “Any idea which way the wind is blowing? I think the general public just want to go out there and see good golf no matter where it’s being played or who’s playing it.” “Obviously you know, Her Majesty passing away, everybody is a little somber and downbeat, but they look like they went out there and really enjoyed their golf today, the fans, as we did and tried to give them something to enjoy. The question of fan reaction these days is not without other meaning, and that brings us to LIV Golf. In July, at the Open Championship, Westwood tied for 34th.