I think USGA and R&A believe they are doing what is in the best interests of an incredibly small percentage of course owners and designers by making certain prestigious clubs viable with their current layouts longer, and hypothetically making certain other prestigious clubs and courses viable in...
A draw-based driver is one that sets up closed at address, is more upright, has more offset, is weighted to have heel-side bias, or some combination of all of those things. It's not forgiving to someone who struggles with a hook.
Retention of ball speed across a higher percentage of the face is the only definition of forgiveness I've seen that makes a lick of sense. Having more of the club face react to impact as if the ball had struck the hottest part of the face.
Tot Hill Farm. It's downhill, long, slopey, and looks like it's cut out of a mountainside. It's not Mike Stranz' best course I've played, but I think it's the most Mike Stranz course I've played.
If I were going in for a ball fitting, I'd want to use my 6-iron because it's either the longest club I can say I have a decent amount of consistency with, or the shortest club where I can say mis-strikes aren't uncommon, but aren't so egregious as to be shots I can just toss out.
Scottie Scheffler. He had an almost unsustainably good year tee-to-green. It only makes sense that he will regress towards the mean. But no one wakes up one day and is a great putter.
I think my issue is not so much the idea that the ball might get rolled back but the mechanics of how will have outsized impact on certain subsets of golfers far more than others. If the USGA forces a ball that spins more, for example, the longest hitting pros won't be impacted nearly as much by...
The golf swing is predicated on rate of force production, which is a function of acceleration, which can be improved by two things: proprioceptive timing (getting your body in the right position at the right time in your golf swing) and strength (as muscles are needed to accelerate and...
Love 'em. I like that it's a nice looking sweater with a hood so I can have something to keep a cold wind or hot sun off my neck. I don't need the front pocket, and I don't like bulky clothing. Got a Johnnie-O 1/4 zip hoodie that is, to me, the perfect sweater.
Right now, for the first time in as long as I can remember, I am putting really well. Took 27 holes to get warmed up at Kinderlou, but in the past few trips to the course I have been putting really well for me. Certainly helped me scare 40 in 9 a couple of times in November.
I've been thinking about dumping the 58° for that matter. If I had to hit 10 shots to, say, 80 yards, I'm generally going to be more consistent with half-swing 54° shots than full-swing lob wedges. Yes, there's flopportunities out there where the 58° really is the only viable option, but the...
Inevitably I'll laugh off a missed approach shot and then absolutely stub a wedge, and then I feel like a dummy I can't hit a 12 yard shot and I'll be in the wrong headspace on the next hole, and things go downhill from there.
So I have this rule (thanks to my stupid workplace having a no "hoodie" rule but not a 'no hooded sweatshirt' rule) that I will totally wear hooded shirts that don't blatantly advertise a brand or location. To me, that is what separates a hooded sweatshirt from a hoodie in all the arguments I've...
For me it's Cleveland. When it comes to wedges you can argue about technology or whatever, but ultimately it comes down to a confidence...faith. You have to believe when you set that club behind the ball you'll get the shot you put into it. And for me, that's a Cleveland wedge. I know Roger...