Putting makes up over 40% of the strokes in an average round. Despite this, most players practice putting by dropping three balls on the green and hitting them loosely toward a cup while talking to their buddies. That isn't practice. It's a waste of time.

If you genuinely want to stop losing strokes on the green, you need the same analytical rigor you apply to your driver. That is the exact purpose of the Putt Scorecard Strategy and the Dartboard method.

The Dartboard Method

Knowing you missed a putt is useless data. Did you pull it? Did you push it? Did it die six inches short on the low side?

The Dartboard interface treats the hole as the center of a grid. When you train with PuttMind, you do not just log a miss. You drop a pin on the exact location the ball stopped. Run that drill 50 times, and a scatter plot appears. It is the unvarnished truth of your stroke mechanics.

Isolating the Failure

If your misses cluster low and right, you have a specific mechanical flaw. If they cluster high and short, you have a completely different problem. Correlating that scatter plot with distance shows whether you're misreading the slope or just hitting bad putts.

This strategy categorizes your strokes instead of just counting them. The algorithm identifies the primary failure mode instantly. You stop practicing "putting" in general, and start running specific speed drills on right-to-left breakers outside of 10 feet. Because the data proves that is exactly where your money is burned.

The Path to Zero

You cannot fix what you cannot measure. Every pin you drop feeds the engine, and the engine spits out the exact drill needed to eliminate the flaw. Map the miss, isolate the variable, and fix the stroke.