Practice Drills You Can Work on on a Small putting green

April 09, 2026
Practice Drills You Can Work on on a Small putting green

If you've invested in a putting green for your Kennewick backyard, you already know the key benefit: practicing on your own schedule, in your own space. But simply rolling a few balls around isn't going to make a difference on your scorecard.

The upside? You don't need a large green to see real improvement. With the right drills, a small residential putting green can do more for your short game than an infrequent trip to the course ever will. Here's what to practice — and how to measure your progress.

Smaller greens force you to be precise. Every putt counts, every miss is clear, and your feedback loop is tight. Whether your setup sits on putting green turf from a new synthetic grass installation or you've had your artificial putting green for years, these drills work on any surface and any size.

Drill #1: The Gate Drill (Distance Control)

What you need: Two tees and a ball.

Set two tees just slightly wider than your putter head, about 6 inches in front of your ball. Your goal is to send every putt cleanly through the gate without touching either tee.

Why it works: This drill reinforces your face angle and your stroke path at the same time. Miss the gate, and you know exactly where the problem is.

Measurable goal: Make 10 consecutive putts through the gate from 4 feet before increasing distance to 6 feet.

Drill #2: The Clock Drill (Consistency from All Angles)

What you need: 4–8 balls.

Place balls around a single hole at equal distances — start at 3 feet at first — like numbers on a clock face. Work your way around the full circle, trying to sink every single one.

Why it works: Every putt has a slightly different break and angle. This drill reveals your weaknesses on heel-side and toe-side putts you might normally avoid.

Measurable goal: Complete a full clock (all 8 balls) without a miss. Once you can do it at 3 feet, advance to 4 feet.

Drill #3: The Ladder Drill (Speed Control)

What you need: 4 balls and a line of tees.

Set tees at 3, 6, 9, and 12 feet from the hole in a straight line. Putt one ball to each tee, trying to stop each ball as close to the tee as possible without rolling past it.

Why it works: Speed control is where most amateur golfers lose strokes. On a fake grass installation, the surface roll is consistent, which means this drill gives you reliable, repeatable data on how hard you're actually hitting.

Measurable goal: Land all 4 balls within 6 inches of their target tees, three rounds in a row.

Drill #4: The One-Ball Routine (Pre-Shot Focus)

What you need: One ball, one hole, a set routine.

Pick a putt. Read the green. Go through your full pre-shot routine — stance, practice stroke, breath, go. Repeat with purpose, not speed.

Why it works: On the course, you only get one shot. Most at-home practice misses that reality. This drill develops the mental habit of locking in before you stroke.

Measurable goal: Sink 7 out of 10 routine putts from 5 feet, with a full pre-shot process every single time.

Drill #5: The Pressure Game (Make It Competitive)

What you need: A scoring system and a friend — or just yourself.

Set a 10-putt challenge from a set distance. Every made putt earns a point. Every three-putt costs a point. Set a target score before you start.

Why it works: Artificial stakes create real focus. Your outdoor putting green becomes a practice ground that actually simulates on-course pressure.

Measurable goal: Exceed your target score three sessions in a row, then raise it.

GETTING MORE OUT OF YOUR SETUP

The right surface makes a huge difference in how well these drills apply to the course. A quality Kennewick artificial putting green installed by professionals rolls true, holds tee placement, and doesn't wear out under repeated use. If your current putting green turf is patchy or slow, you may be training bad habits without realizing it.

A proper synthetic grass installation or fake grass installation by a team like Southwest Greens of Eastern Washington means your practice surface performs like a real course green — so the skills you build at home actually carry over when it matters.

START SMALL, BE CONSISTENT

You don't need an hour a day. Twenty minutes of intentional drilling on your residential putting green — three or four times a week — will outperform hours of casual ball rolling. Pick two of the drills above, track your results, and raise the bar once you hit your targets.

Your short game is where scores are decided. Might as well work on it from your own backyard.

READY TO INSTALL YOUR OWN TEE LINES?

Artificial tee lines aren't just a updated upgrade — they're a smart, economical decision that delivers results in performance, durability, and reduced overhead. Whether you're refreshing a driving range, adding an outdoor putting green, or redesigning your entire practice facility, synthetic grass installation is worth a serious look.

Ready to see what the right surface can do for your Kennewick course? Contact the Southwest Greens team, and let's plan what your facility needs.

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