By
Tom Wishon
A lot of technology has gone into golf equipment, and considering it actually
is rocket science (or at least derived from it), you may need some help to
get the most out of your next purchase, whether it¹s a driver, hybrid, putter
or even a sleeve of balls. I've been designing and fitting clubs for decades,
and from my experience of helping golfers find the best clubs for them, I've
picked up some information that you can use the next time you walk into a
shop.I highly recommend working with a professional clubfitter, but
following these 10 tips could be the next best thing.
1. When buying a
driver, shorter is better than longer, closed is better than neutral. Many
of today¹s drivers are sold with shafts 45 inches or longer; the average
driver on the PGA Tour is 44.5 inches. What do the pros know that you don¹t?
The longer the club, the harder it is to hit squarely. Anyway you slice it,
shorter is better with woods. Speaking of slicing, a fault likely caused by
an open clubface at impact, getting fitted for a driver with a closed face
angle will help.
2. Consider making your 3-wood your "driver." Do you hit
your 3-wood as far as your driver? Then you don¹t have enough loft on
your driver. For most golfers, even 11 degrees of loft isn¹t enough, so why
not buy a 3-, 5-, 7-wood combination instead of the traditional driver,
3-, 5-wood configuration and put three clubs in the bag that will actually
help you? Most golfers could drop five strokes with just that simple
change.
3. Don't even think about including a 3-, 4- and possibly even a
5-iron in your next set. Over the past 25 years, manufacturers have been
gradually and silently lowering the loft on their irons in order to say their
products "hit it farther." As a result, the 3- and 4-irons have so little
loft that they are virtually unhittable for the average golfer. The
solution? Hybrids. Which leads us to...
4. The trick to buying
hybrids is to match them exactly to the irons they are replacing. The
idea here is to replace your long irons with easier-to-hit hybrids that go
the same distance—not longer or shorter. Make sure to replace your long
irons with hybrids of the same length and loft to avoid distance
gaps.
5. Don't confuse hybrids with fairway woods. They are separate
animals. To me, hybrids should be iron replacements, but there are hybrids
out there that have the same lofts and lengths as fairway woods, which can be
confusing. After all, fairway woods are just as easy to hit as hybrids, so
what's the point? But here's a rule of thumb: If you sweep shots cleanly off
the turf, fairway woods are for you. If you have a steeper swing (you tend to
take divots), you'll be better off with hybrids.
6. There is no such
thing as one-size-fits-all golf
clubs. You don't buy suits off a
one-size-fits-all rack, so why do
the same with clubs? Golfers come in all
shapes, sizes and swing
skills, necessitating clubs with different lengths,
weights, lofts
and lie angles. If a club is too long, too light or too heavy,
you
will not consistently deliver the clubhead so it is square at impact. If
the lie angle is wrong, the heel or toe will be up, leading to a
push or a
pull even if you make a perfect swing.
7. When
selecting wedges, think
about your home course. Are the greens
small, fast and elevated? You need
plenty of loft. Are the bunkers
filled with lots of soft sand? Your sand
wedge should have
more bounce or a wider sole. Is the turf firm, resulting in
a lot of
tight lies? You'll want less bounce.
8. Check the "three Ls"
when you putter around. Does your new putter look like a branding
iron or
does it have a classic shape? Whatever the case, if you get
the three
Ls—loft, length, lie angle—wrong, it doesn't matter what
it looks like. You
won¹t putt well. At impact, the sole must be
parallel to the ground and the
loft must be correct; the combination
imparts a true roll. Nothing else will
do. A putter with the wrong
length and lie angle will cause pushes and
pulls. Too little or too
much loft will cause the ball to bounce and roll
off-line.
9. The
worse you are, the more you need custom-fit
equipment. Custom
clubs are not just for low handicappers and pros. They
could
play well with garden tools. The worse (or newer) you are, the more you
need clubs that match you and your swing properly. The game has
enough impediments. You don't need another with ill-fitting
clubs.
10. Don't forget about the ball. Ball technology is so
much better
that you no longer have to choose between a rock and
marshmallow. In general,
you want a ball with low spin off a driver
and high spin off a wedge. But
most golfers should remember
three things: distance, distance, distance.
Extra yardage off the
tee is far more important than a bit more spin around
the
greens.
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