8livesleft
Member
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2018
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Hi guys,
I'm a beginner golfer but I'm an old tennis player.
In tennis, I use "Tour" level rackets. The same that Pete Sampras and Roger Federer used. It's on the heavy side, slim profile, smaller head - all making it unforgiving. I need to hit the ball near perfect to get a good shot.
On the opposite end are "beginner or senior" rackets which are very light, huge heads, thick profile. These rackets don't require a perfect swing.
For golf, I don't really know what makes something more or less forgiving. All I know is that I should swap my long irons for hybrids. That's it.
So my question is, what specifically makes clubs more forgiving?
Thanks!
8
P.s.
I use Callaway X22 Tour irons with stiff shafts from 2010-2011.
Sent from my LG-H860 using Tapatalk
I'm a beginner golfer but I'm an old tennis player.
In tennis, I use "Tour" level rackets. The same that Pete Sampras and Roger Federer used. It's on the heavy side, slim profile, smaller head - all making it unforgiving. I need to hit the ball near perfect to get a good shot.
On the opposite end are "beginner or senior" rackets which are very light, huge heads, thick profile. These rackets don't require a perfect swing.
For golf, I don't really know what makes something more or less forgiving. All I know is that I should swap my long irons for hybrids. That's it.
So my question is, what specifically makes clubs more forgiving?
Thanks!
8
P.s.
I use Callaway X22 Tour irons with stiff shafts from 2010-2011.
Sent from my LG-H860 using Tapatalk