There's no chance someone makes the switch to One Length.
I did--
Will give this a listen tonight.
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There's no chance someone makes the switch to One Length.
Listened to the podcast. Enjoyable discussion. JB is a confident and persuasive guy. But nope to one length. I like how my game is growing and have zero interest in trying to figure out things like long wedges and short long irons. Niche stuff for a unique and very small group of players. I will enjoy seeing the n=1 experiment and will bet money right now that person decides to love them primarily out of respect for getting the opportunity, not outcomes.
I do want to see the metal detector putter!
Interesting segment on the perfect player for this. Interesting to see if the 7 iron length garners performance or is really a placebo effect on the golfer. Swinging with confidence with long irons would be beneficial.
I listened to the podcast, and have my own preconceived notions/ideas regarding One Length irons (I had the opportunity to hit a couple different offerings thanks to @ChristopherKee). However, I'm not sure I could give a full set an honest run. Primarily because, in my mind, the stepped set (woods, OL 4-9, shorter length wedges), and what I will call a "plateaued" set (woods, OL to the transition iron, variable length to the bottom) make more sense. To me the OL concept of a "single swing" - somewhat of a misnomer since the top of the bag still has longer and variable length clubs - is aimed at players who have difficulty consistently striking the longer irons (which I do). Also, amateur ball striking tends to improve as club length decreases, while punishment for mishits is far less in the shorter "scoring" irons than in the longer irons. In my mind, the OL concept offers diminishing returns here. Also, one thing Adam pointed out is the added challenge of using the wedges/scoring irons for partial and "touch" shots when they are all a single length. It's a new learning curve that can be avoided with one of the above alternate configurations. Secondly, but also important, is that the foul weather months are upon me and the opportunities to get these out for comparison/play will become too sparse for me to provide meaningful feedback in the coming weeks. One of you warm weather folks can be the guinea pig on this one
What is to figure out? Unless your set doesn't have a 7 iron.
LoL. It's different. I think the scoring irons and wedges are what make me cringe. I like the shorter length for control and feel at that end of the set. I have an expectation that longer there would have less control. I don't really want to have to figure out choking up either. I would likely adapt fine to the lower irons. I have no doubt Cobra has done a good job setting these up for gaps and buy 100% into the ease of hitting modern clubs regardless of loft. But I don't see how one length is an improvement.
Im not sure I agree with the above as a blanket statement.
See what happens when you compare a PW for golfers to a 60* over the course of a few rounds.
What is to figure out? Unless your set doesn't have a 7 iron.
Did you give the part a listen where we talk about the misnomers?
Yes, much more complex than same shaft on different heads. To your point, swinging different clubs with weighting and MOI to groove the same swing.
I don't score well enough to fear change.@golfunfiltered had one part right. Golfers do fear change
Im not sure if you listened to the show, but what choking up? That wouldn't change for distance gaps anymore than it would now. Your distances should be the same.
I have to think there would be some transition time required to dial those choked/partial shots in with OL clubs. A GW wedge that weights as much as a 7i is going to require more head speed to hit the ball a given distance than a standard GW. That's going to take some time and practice to figure out.
So genuine question. If I were to hand you a new set of irons (not OL) or a new driver, how long does it take you before you can play them?
I hear all the time about how hard is it to change, but it doesn't seem to be the case at THP Events, so am really curious.
Honestly, I think if you hand me a new club and I grab it at the club house and hit a bucket of balls, I would probably have a fine day, assuming it wasn't a blade type club. probably not going to hit everything (100%) pure or on line. I am also a high cap, so would take it after the course to the range.
this happens in the golf league, where people get new irons throughout the season. First thing we do is take a turn hitting them on the range. An Example - G400 took three swings and then started hitting them really well. If they are beneficial, I think taking some practice cuts and then figure it out.
Not all of us.@golfunfiltered had one part right. Golfers do fear change
That's something that I've been wondering about as this discussion has gone on. I dont take partial swings into account for yardage until I get under 100 yards, so my current 50* wedge. Anything PW to 4i is my normal swing. Do many have different swings with each club to close distances to smaller than 10 yards gaps?Why? If you hit your 7 iron a certain distance and swing it a certain way. You would swing your GW the same and it would go the distance expected.
I hear about the partial shots and choked up playing, but I rarely see it. In fact in most threads discussing it, the overwhelming response is people dont like that now and have more wedges so they dont have to.
Why? If you hit your 7 iron a certain distance and swing it a certain way. You would swing your GW the same and it would go the distance expected.
I hear about the partial shots and choked up playing, but I rarely see it. In fact in most threads discussing it, the overwhelming response is people dont like that now and have more wedges so they dont have to.
Well then I think you are psyching yourself out over some major change with OL. The irony being that you probably grab the 7 iron to test, which is exactly the club most grab in the instances above, nothing changes.