As a mini driver evangelist, I genuinely think a lot of casual players would genuinely be happier with some flavor of short, high-lofted driver. The problem is that distance is what sells woods.
How much inaccuracy does a bad golf ball really contribute? Maybe an extra 1-2 yards on a low-spin flier?
If I have a 20 yard x 20 yard green in front of me, and I'm going at it with a 7 iron, I've got at least a coin flip chance of missing that sucker entirely.
My PW and GW are very light graphite (~60gr, off my head), and SW and LW are steel.
I like the extra weight in the higher lofted clubs, helps with touch. The SW gets full-swing once or twice per round, and I don't mind the extra weight there. Never bothered me enough to consider switching.
The...
I don't play with a glove.
And I'm really weird, because if I do play with a glove (cold weather, a cut on my hand, something like that), I play with 2 gloves. Having one hand covered and one bare feels weird. So I just run around the course looking like Mickey Mouse for 4 hours.
I'm feeling good about it! I started keeping a handicap in January, just so I could put something quantitative behind my game. I'm at a 23 right now, but 3 of my last 5 rounds had diffs of 21. Things are trending in the right direction.
Driving has been great... my 13* mini driver is a legit...
San Diego munis are $90-$100 for a good course and $60 to play a goat track.
It's a desert with $600k condos. I don't know how the courses even manage to stay open.
I don't even watch those review videos.
For one, golf is a lot more about the Indian than the arrow. I've done a little club ho'ing, and all it really did was convince me to not club ho, because the differences weren't that great. Your swing is 90% of the formula.
For another, the quantitative...
Looking them up, the anti-chunk wedge is just a new spin on the old Alien wedge. In short, the design works. Alien sold a billion of them on 90s infomercials, and Cleveland and Callaway use very similar designs for their own SGI wedges. I bag one of the Cleveland ones... it's fun.
The...
Distance control with wedges is all all motor learning, and motor learning is perishable. You probably won't be clean-whiffing the golf ball any time soon, but a winter without practice will cause you to lose that sharp edge.
If your low point and contact are good, the best thing you can do is...
Nah, I don't think it matters for me.
Drag increases by the square of velocity, so a ball flying off the driver at 180 MPH would feel 2.2x more drag force than a ball at 120 MPH. So at high speed, the aerodynamic changes of different spin rates, dimple depth, etc, become much more pronounced...
Curving the ball left and right on command is some really hard stuff. If you have your face control, path control and low point that dialed in, you are already playing some very good golf.
I've found the same thing. Don't know if having a ball sitting up encourages me to flip at it or what.
Even for better golfers, a tee has got to naturally increase the launch angle, right?
I thought about mentioning that, but thought it was a driving range in general thing rather than a mat thing.
It's really tough to get practice reps off of uneven lies outside of the course.
I don't watch Youtube golf in general, but advertisers aren't giving Rick money out of the goodness of their hearts. People are definitely listening to him.