WATCH: Cameron Smith shows incredible skill with a perfect cartwheel shot
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Cameron Smith showed off the incredible talent the PGA Tour has been missing out on during practice ahead of his recent LIV event in Chicago.
The winner of the 2022 Open Championship was actually stopped after getting in the way of a cart.
Golf coach Ryan Moque was on hand at Bolingbrook Golf Club on Wednesday, grabbing his phone in time to record the 31-year-old hitting what could be described as perhaps the easiest shot ever to hit a fairway.
It went down the carriageway… it felt so light you wouldn't even think it was off the road
25 ft pic.twitter.com/VeIzNez1vc
— Ryan Mouque (@ryanmouquegolf) September 11, 2024
There was even a photo of the iron to show the little touches that were being made.
You dropped it but not too much… here's a 6 iron pic.twitter.com/tvU4wgzsaz
— Ryan Mouque (@ryanmouquegolf) September 12, 2024
Smith has long been regarded as a putting specialist, an Australian golf master at navigating all types of challenging greens.
He understands the importance of sticking to what works best for him, which is why he doesn't even use a practice stroke but visualizes his putt before talking to his ball.
“I wouldn't say that I really work on my tempo a lot,” he once said. “I don't practice strokes, so I like to visualize them and feel them more, rather than feel them physically. I think I like to visualize it.”
Smith admits that he ignores the popular myth of soft hands in hitting.
“Probably the best advice I ever got, you know, I used to hold the putter a little bit, and that led to some. [bad] things to open and set up,” Smith said. “So I was told to grip the putter more.
“As silly as it sounds [doing this] actually work the right muscles, and from there, the putter just swings itself,” he adds. “So stop holding the putter so soft – it's a myth.
“I try to minimize the movement of the wrists, and I think it happens naturally with a tight grip. I don't like to let the putter flow too much. I don't like soft hands, and actually prefer to hold the putter firmly and think that the wrist hinge kind of happens on the stroke.
“I'm not trying to bend [my wrist] too much, or be a robot here and have no wrist.
“I'm not trying to put a wrist together. I almost want to feel like my body is moving away from the ball – which happens naturally, especially with the right wrist in good position. [on the grip] if you take your body off the ball.”
WATCH: Rickie Fowler pulls off a monster 126-foot putt in this clip from the vault
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