7 Iron
Know a person who always practice with his 7 iron. He will practice with other clubs, top the driver, pull the long irons, hitting fat with the wedges and he always return to his 7 iron.
Other golfers have advised him that he has to play or practice other clubs in order to be able to score lower, many times it is his driving or chipping that costs him most. I say 14 clubs are actually too many. If this person I know can play his 7 iron so well, he might as well just use 7 iron for teeing off, for 2nd shot, for approach shot and for chipping. He will score better with a 7 iron and putter if he is confident in it and he can shape all different shots at any distance.
It is his bad practice in one 7 iron that costs him, not because he did not master other clubs. It is because of his unskillful 7 iron that will cost him.
Wednesday, July 26, 2006
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2 comments:
If he can play the 7 iron so well, then why is he not able to play other clubs well? I think there is a fundamental issue here. Either the stance, swing, ball placement, and so forth is at fault. Perhaps his flaw in the fundamental swing mechanics produces less error with his 7 iron, not because he play it well.
Personally I tried 7-iron, SW and putter on 9-hole many times. My 7-iron performance is same with my 4-6 irons. Ask him to try a game with 7-iron game on a REGULAR course and he will find out himself.
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