RJaco1: My worst issue is putting. Any advice to improve that?
Okay. This is the first time I've put this out there for general consumption.
The key to putting is reading the moving dots and knowing how long it will take for your putt to reach the hole. I didn't come up with this before TM tier, so I can only speak with certainty about Tourney greens. I'd suggest opening practice mode on a hole with a very flat green. Several good choices at StA and BPB. Time how long it takes to putt various distances. Don't trust your 1000 1, 1000 2 count. There are a bunch of free stopwatch downloads out there. I use the one from http://www.online-stopwatch.com/
When putting, when you switch to reverse view, the dots start off like they are in a race. Pick the one that's in the middle, speed wise. How far does it move in the time it will take for your putt to reach the hole? That's how far to aim left or right as appropriate. (If you've got all day, you could time all the dots and calculate an average, but the above down and dirty should decrease the number of 3 putts you card.) If putting uphill subtract a bit for each inch up. (You'll be hitting harder, so putt will get there a little earlier.) Putting downhill? Reverse is true, but exaggerated even more.
Double breaker? Find the dot for both breaks. Time them.Subtract. Just make sure you move the marker the correct direction. Yeah, I've messed that up once or twice when in a hurry.
Once you've got it down for flat greens, practice on one with some good ups and downs. Darn near anywhere on Oak will do. See how much each affects the tale of the dots.
Of course the old saw is still true. Forget putting. Learn to get your approach close and ram 'em home.