By Lee Pace
Enter the phrase โKelly Mitchum Pinehurst 3 puttโ in a Google search box and in 0.93 seconds youโll get 3,140 results. PGA.com anointed Mitchum a โmagician.โ Heโs been fรชted on CBSSports.com and on The Golf Channelโs Morning Drive program and given a cyber pat-on-the-back by noted golf blogger Geoff Shackelford.
โItโs been pretty amazing,โ says Mitchum, a longtime instructor in the Pinehurst Golf Academy.
They say everyone has his 15 minutes of fame. Mitchumโs had a dose of golf fame in qualifying four times for the PGA Championship, one of golfโs four โmajors,โ while holding down a full-time job at Pinehurst.
Now his fame is taking a wholly different presence with a 20-second, self-produced video posted July 10 on Pinehurst.com that shows Mitchum executing a โtrick shotโ on a practice putting green โ three putts struck within one second of each other, traveling on different paths and reaching the bottom of the same hole in rapid-fire succession.
What makes the feat so awe-inspiring is that the third putt hits the hole first, followed by the second, followed by the first.
โA lot of conversations are getting started these days, โHey, I saw your three-putt,โโ says Mitchum. โItโs been interesting. I got an email from a guy in India whoโd been to our golf school a while back and had seen it. Itโs pretty amazing.โ
Itโs the product of some imagination and skill on the part of Mitchum, 44, a former N.C. State golfer and winner of the 1993 North and South Amateur. And itโs a product as well of todayโs social-media conscious world that gobbles up short and sweet bits of content like M&Ms.
By December, the Mitchum clip on YouTube had nearly 700,000 views. A Vine posting had registered more than 1.2 million โloops,โ as theyโre known on the site comprised of 6-second video clips. The โnewsโ page of the Pinehurst website where the Mitchum video is housed has generated some 800,000 views.
โItโs been remarkable,โ says Alex Podlogar, Pinehurstโs content and media relations manager. โEvery time you think itโs reached a saturation point, it gets a new life and more people find it and start sharing it all over again.
โThis clip is perfect for social media, itโs an amazing clip and itโs quick. People watch it over and over and over again. Itโs certainly taken on a life of its own.โ
Mitchum has taught in the Pinehurst Golf Academy since 1997 and in recent years has developed a set of โplaying cardsโ under the EPIC name (Engaged Practice in Challenges) that seek to enliven practice by giving golfers challengesโmake so many 6-foot putts in a row, try getting up-and-down from random spots around a green, imagine hitting 6-irons to a flag bordered by a lake. The fact that putting practice can be boring and the proliferation of trick-shot videos from golfers like the Bryan Brothers prompted Mitchum this spring to dream up a putting challenge.
โMy son Ethan is 14 years old and he loves watching those Bryan Brothers trick shots,โ Mitchum says. โHeโd say, โDad, you could do this.โ It occurred to me that there are not too many things out there putting-wise. That got me to thinking of the โwhat ifs.โโ
Early in the summer, Mitchum began toying with the idea of striking three putts from the same location and having them reach the cup in reverse order. He began experimenting during lunch and down time on the practice green at the Golf Academy. He picked a right-to-left putt of about 20 feet, and the first hurdle was to figure out how high and easy he could strike the first ball.
โThe more break I played on the first one, the longer the putt would roll and the more time Iโd have for the next two,โ he says. โThat was crucial.โ
Then it was a matter of mounting his iPad on a tripod, setting the camera to record and trying to turn the trick. He doesnโt know how many times he struck the series of three putts before getting them to ring the bell, but he does know he had about an hour of video time before the winning โtrifectaโ was struck.
โI would do 15 minutes here, maybe five minutes there, whenever I could steal a little time,โ Mitchum says. โWhen I finally made it, the camera was about out of juice. That would have been brutal to have finally made it and the camera had cut off.โ
In case youโre wondering, no, heโs not tried to replicate the โthree-putt.โ
โThereโs no way to improve on the last one. Why ruin it?โ he says.
And yes, heโs got a sequel in the works. But Mitchum is not saying what or when.
โAnything good like that, it takes time,โ he says.
Stay tuned, but you wonโt have to look too hard. In todayโs world of social media, the good stuff travels fast.
Lee Pace is a regular contributor to the Pinehurst Blog. He latest book, โThe Golden Age of PinehurstโThe Rebirth of No. 2,โ is available in all retail shops and online at Pinehurst.