How to prepare your putting for Medal of Honor Golf Course in Fort Meade, Maryland.
Medal of Honor Golf Course. Greens are bentgrass. Practice green available. For most players prepping here, lag putting and 4–6 foot pressure putts are the highest-leverage focus.
3/5
Standard — build a steady putting routine
An 18-hole championship course that began as a six-hole layout in 1930 and expanded to 18 holes in the mid-1940s. The course features rolling terrain with tight fairways lined with mature trees, sand bunkers, and water hazards, with small contoured bent grass greens that present challenging putting conditions.
Why putting prep matters at Medal of Honor Golf Course
Medal of Honor Golf Course plays as a 18-hole course.
Ernest Stanley's design philosophy shapes the green complexes here.
RECOMMENDED ROUTINE
20-minute pre-round putting routine
Adapt timing to your practice green availability and arrival window.
1
3–6 foot start-line check
Hit 10 putts from short range and watch your face control. Pick one ball mark or grass blade as a target — this is your line accuracy check before everything else. Bentgrass holds its line cleanly, so misses from this range are usually face-angle errors, not green reads.
5 min
2
15 / 25 / 35 foot distance ladder
Build your stroke-length feel for the most common lag putt distances. Three putts at each distance. The goal is getting the second putt inside the leather, not making the first.
8 min
3
Uphill / downhill speed calibration
If the practice green has slope: hit 5 uphill and 5 downhill putts from the same distance. Hit at least 5 putts each direction. This is where the practice green tells you what the course will play like today.
5 min
4
Pressure finish
Make 8 out of 10 from 4–6 feet before leaving. If you miss two in a row, reset the count. The goal is leaving the green with confidence, not a number.
2 min
What to track with TrueRoll
Four metrics worth watching during your prep sessions at home or on the road before playing Medal of Honor Golf Course.