Club Fitting

Club fitting is the science of building a proper golf swing. People come in all shapes and sizes, and off the rack clubs do not work for everyone. To be properly fit, a golfer must judge not only the subjective aspect of fitting, but also the objective known quantity of data presented during a club fitting. A good club fitter will present all the data, and then make a rational recommendation of what will work…most of the time.

I suggest that every golfer gets fit for golf clubs. I also suggest that every golfer should understand that there are different ways to fit. It’s just like making your grandmother’s spaghetti sauce, a little bit of this, mixed with some of that, and somehow it always comes out tasting somewhat like what you remembered, or not. The same can be said of club fitting, the science behind a fitting is sound, the X-factor is the inconsistency of the golfer and the “feel” principle. Feel is a subjective quantity. It differs from person to person, and you can’t adequately quantify feel….because there is no way to measure feel against a standard.

The Keys to Club Fitting

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Hybrid Golf Clubs

Hybrid golf clubs have been the hot new thing in golf the past few seasons, and if you don’t own one, you should.

bridgestone j36 hybrid golf clubWhat is a hybrid?

If you have been playing golf for a while, you know that your long irons are the toughest ones to hit. The long irons (3 and 4) are difficult to hit because of their longer shafts and lower lofts. The real reason is that they have a smaller clubface and thinner bottom sole. I jokingly call my 3 iron the “knife” and well it sorta looks like one. A thin sole does not promote or achieve much bounce. Bounce in long clubs is important if you don’t have a very compact and repeatable swing, especially when coming out of the rough. Long irons tend to close down when gnarly grass gets between the face and the ball. Another drawback to long irons is that they are tougher to “frame” the face with the ball. The lack of loft and the length of the club tend to make the ball look smaller than it is. To get the ball airborne and flying a respectable distance you will need to have ample clubhead speed to overcome the clubs lack of loft. Failure to achieve proper clubhead speed will result in a “hot” low shot, which will usually end up in trouble. The development of the Hybrid golf club helped conquer some of the inherent difficulties of striking long distance shots that fell between that of irons and woods.

The hybrid is a mixture between a wood and an iron. The key to a hybrid is that it has the best qualities of both, and it really is easy to adapt to your game.

The typical hybrid replaces a long iron. It does this by being similar in length, while more substantial in head size. Again the most notable feature is the bounce and depth of the club. While it has less depth than a wood, compare a hybrid to an iron and whoa! The increase in overall depth allows for a lower center of gravity and an increased MOI.  So it really gets the ball airborne.

Check this out. A great video from Titleist, and PGA Pro Todd Anderson from Sea Island Golf Club in Georgia..


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Golf Club Fitting a Multi-Level Approach

In order to improve your game, you need three things. A set of goals and a way to measure them, and a desire to learn. You also need a set of tools to get the job done. Club fitting is a process to determine what tools you need. What I’ve found during my research (online) [...]

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When to buy new Golf Clubs

Like most things, technology advances year by year. The golf club has undergone major changes and technology has led the transition. I can still remember my first set of hand me downs, Powerbilt Thoroughbred Irons.  They were about 20 years old when I got them. New Golf Pride grips were the only “modern” thing about [...]

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