Quote:
Originally Posted by
ladders11 
First point is that the clubs used the most are 1) putter, 2) driver,3) LW, 4) SW, and 5) PW, followed by the 3W and irons. Good wedge players don't start leaving their wedges in the trunk because they don't need them.
I don't trust your statistics, but even if they're legit, some common sense tells us that if you miss the green because your irons stink, you're going to use a wedge every time. Want to use a wedge less? Hit the ball better from the fairway.
I also doubt that each single wedge is higher than "irons" unless you specifically mean "all irons separately" (as in 7-iron, 6-iron, etc.). You don't need to learn a different swing for the separate irons.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ladders11 
Second point is that what saves strokes is getting the ball close enough to make the first putt. Basically, this means within 15 feet to have a 10% chance, or within 6 feet to have a 50% chance. Nobody, including pros, can get the ball within this range from over 100 yards on a consistent basis.
Statistically speaking, you're wrong. What saves the most strokes is getting the ball in the fairway and then on the green. At every level of play golfers average less strokes from 50 feet away on the putting green than they do missing the green.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ladders11 
I would venture a guess that most people can learn not to three putt - another way of saying this would be I like my chances of getting down in two from anywhere on the green.
Exactly. But it speaks to my point about the importance of GIR, not your point.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ladders11 
I totally disagree with this. The tee boxes on a golf course should all be the same, level and reasonably uniform grass, and you are teeing it up the same. Around the greens, we have hills, rough, sand, good lies, bad lies, and we frequently have to hit to elevated greens or over bunkers.
I don't understand why you take this tone. I read your post, I just disagree with you, and so would Dave Pelz and a lot of other professionals too.
There's no tone. I asked you to read my first post, because it didn't seem as though you had.
Dave Pelz only teaches the short game. What earthly reason would he have to cite statistics which prove the short game is second or third on the list of things that matter? Of course he's going to say that. The simple truth is that statistics show that the long game matters quite a bit.
Who cares if you get up and down every time if it's for double bogey?
I'm not saying this because I like teaching the full swing. It's complex. I'll give short game lessons all day if I could - it's easier. People can incorporate the changes more easily. The short game is a simpler motion.
Around the greens you have hills, rough, sand, good lies, bad lies, etc.? You still use the same basic motions. I could extend that to say things like this: around the course we're faced with doglegs that go different directions, good lies, bad lies, hills, rough, sand, wind from different directions, elevated or lowered greens, side slopes, different pin locations, water hazards, and the fact that we're hitting clubs that are different lengths too! Yet, like the short game, the same motion covers pretty much all of it. It's not like every full swing is made with a club the same length from a perfectly flat lie with no wind, no elevation changes, and the same distance every time.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
max power 
Every bad golfer I've played is horrible off the tee, and horrible with long/mid irons; some chip and putt just fine. Every decent/good golfer I've played with has a reasonable game off the tee and with long/mid irons; some have great short games, some are mediocre. The mediocre/poor full swing game costs them far, far more strokes than a crappy short game or just a crappy day with the short game.
That's basically what the statistics will tell you, yes.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
saevel25 
Others think that to because they think getting up and down is a bandaid for a bad golf swing, it can be. Utley played very good golf on the tour with a dominant short game, but he is a rare case.
Good point. Even then I think he won a Nationwide Tour event (one) and that was about it. Brilliant short game stuff - we teach it very similarly. His book(s) show what I mean by "simple."