Sports | golf Johnson's Green Jacket Revives Putter Company Small red dot means big business for TN company By Doug Sweeney Posted Apr 7, 2008 9:45 PM CDT Copied A SeeMore m3 putter is shown at the SeeMore Putter Company headquarters Thursday, April 3, 2008, in Franklin, Tenn. SeeMore makes putters using RifleScope Technology to aid golfers. (AP Photo/Bill Waugh) The 2007 Masters did more than propel champion Zach Johnson to the center of the golfing universe, it also revitalized a small putter company. The SeeMore Putter Co. first rose to prominence when the late Payne Stewart used their club to win the 1999 U.S. Open but after Stewart died sales sputtered—until Johnson won the green jacket, reports the Associated Press. The owners of the company say they were filling about two orders a day before Johnson’s win, but afterwards they “were doing one every five minutes.” The putter employs a fairly basic concept: there is a red oval on the heel of the club, behind the shaft. When a golfer is positioned over the ball properly the shaft obscures the dot. Read These Next Michael Skakel breaks silence on Martha Moxley murder. She was married at 12. At 25, she faces execution. Diane Ladd, who played the salty Flo, dies at 89. MAGA infighting intensifies over divisive Tucker Carlson interview. Report an error