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Posted

60 degree wedge. 100 yards and in im money

Bag: Ogio Ozone XX

Driver: :titleist: 910 D2 (Project X 7A3)

3 Wood: :titleist: 910F ;(Mitsubishi Rayon Diamana 'ahina 82)

Hybrid: :titleist: 909H 19* (Diamana Blue)

Irons: :titleist: 755 3-P (Tri Spec Stiff Flex Steel)

Wedges: :titleist: (Vokey 52* 56* 60*)

Putter: Ping Karsten Anser 2

Balls: :titleist: Nxt tour/ Prov1x


Posted

3 Hybrid without a doubt. Off the tee, from the rough, chip around the greens.

Ron :nike: GOLF Embracing my Angry Black Male :mad:


Posted

56* SW.  I don't currently carry anything under my 47* PW except this sand wedge, and I am not really comfortable on low chip n run type shots with 7-8-9 irons as I have not practiced them much.  Therefore, from 105 or so and in, it is the only club I use other than my putter.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

My Cobra Baffler Rail F 7 wood...20 degrees. I can't hit hybrids and I hit that more consistently than a 3 iron so it works. Hitting long distances out of the rough, you can't beat it. If I am ever confused on what to hit for a longer shot: 7 wood.


Posted

Wedges and putter....my $$$ clubs.

What's in Paul's Bag:
- Callaway Big Bertha Alpha Driver
- Big Bertha Alpha 815 3-wood
- Callaway Razr Fit 5-wood
- Callaway Big Bertha 4-5 Rescue Clubs
-- Mizuno Mx-25 six iron-gap wedge
- Mizuno Mp-T4 56degree SW
- Mizuno Mp-T11 60degree SW
- Putter- Ping Cadence Ketsch


Posted
60 Degree LW. It saves me more strokes more consistently than any other club. Putter is next, but some days my poor reads don't let me take advantage of it.

1W Cleveland LauncherComp 10.5, 3W Touredge Exotics 15 deg.,FY Wilson 19.5 degree
4 and 5H, 6I-GW Callaway Razr, SW, LW Cleveland Cg-14, Putter Taylor Made Suzuka, Ball, Srixon XV Yellow


Posted

Off the tee its my 5W. Good distance but more control. If I need to hit a fairway then 5W is the man for the job.

For general layups or recovery I love my 6 iron. Long enough yardage wise to get me where I need to go but short enough physically to control like a short iron.


Posted

Lately, it's my Callaway GB II 3+.  It's kept me in the fairway and goes about 20 yards longer than any other 3 wood I've hit.

Driver:  Callaway Diablo Octane 9.5*
3W:  Callaway GBB II 12.5*, 5W:  Callaway Diablo 18* Neutral
3H:  Callaway Razr X, 4H:  Callaway Razr X
5-PW:  Callaway X Tour
GW:  Callaway X Tour 54*, SW:  Callaway X Tour 58*
Putter:  Callaway ITrax, Scotty Cameron Studio Design 2, Ping Anser 4


Posted

Driver is definitely the favorite because it's the most fun to hit.  I can understand that a lot of people don't like their driver because they don't hit it well.


Posted

I'd say my 2 favorite clubs, other than my Driver and putter, would be my 4 hybrid, and Cleveland Sand Wedge. Both I can hit very well, and I can really shape the shots with the wedge. It's really old a beat up. Lot's of people have told me it time to replace it, but I just can't, love it to much.


Posted

favorite club in the bag is probably my nike vr-pro 8.5 driver.  most consistent club, ehh... 8/9/PW are all pretty equally consistent.


Posted
My go to club, is my 2 hybrid. If I am doing bad with my driver or wood. I use my 2 hybrid to get confidence back for the day and straighten everything out. I normally choke up on it instead of using my 4 iron too if not having solid iron play.

Posted

My go to club is the one that I go to after a round of golf.  The drinks are cheap and the girls are friendly, so I can celebrate a good round or forget a bad one.  Either way, I leave there happy.  In all seriousness, my 9i.  For some reason, it seems to be the club that most frequently produces the shot that I envision beforehand.

:titleist: :scotty_cameron:
915D3 / 712 AP2 / SC Mont 1.5


Posted
Originally Posted by Sandy Trap

Driver is definitely the favorite because it's the most fun to hit.  I can understand that a lot of people don't like their driver because they don't hit it well.

Sounds like something my brother would say.  He is one of those guys that swings so hard he jumps up on his drives (He is fun to play with).  Every round this is what he tells me when I ask why he swings so hard "Golf a bunch of shots crammed between 14 drives"

On the thread note 7 iron is my favorite club to hit.  Not the most accurate but I can control my distance very well with it.

Driver: RBZ 9.5° Stiff

Woods: :nike:VR_S Tour 2.0 15° Stiff

Hybrids:  910H 21° Stiff

Irons: 4-GW Pro Black CB1 with Project X rifle 6.0

Wedges:CC Jaws 56°.14° 60°.08°

Putter: Classic 1

Ball:  Z-Star XV Pure White


Posted

PW by far.  If I can get the ball to 90 - 110 I know I'll be close to the pin.

Joe Paradiso

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

I'll have to go with the 60° lob wedge. Got my first ever birdie with it, and I can practice short stuff in my yard all day long. Seven Iron is kind of nice also.

Sincerely, Jim


Posted

Great Avatar!


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  • Posts

    • I would think of it in terms of time. The time it takes to get the arm angle into a good position to deliver the club with proper shaft lean. Another component is rotation, but that is also a matter of timing. It relates to how the body stalls to give the golfer time to hit the ball. If you have to get 80+ degrees out of that right elbow in one third of a second versus 50 degrees in the same time then you have to steal time from somewhere. It is usually body rotation. That does not help with shaft lean.  I agree in that amateurs tend to make the swing more complicated than pro golfers. 
    • I haven't been able to practice like I wanted and won't for the next week.  1. The weather sucks in Ohio this year. I have been mostly inside hitting foam balls. Just kind of my basic stuff.  2. I woke up last Saturday with a left side rib muscle on fire. If I turned or leaned a certain way it would spasm that almost buckled my knees. I have been taking a break to let that settle. I don't want to get a long term injury. I think I pinched a nerve or just aggravated a muscles.   3. I am going on a mini-vacation to Florida (screw you Ohio weather) with a friend, and rolling that into a work conference I have next week. I will be with out my clubs for a week.  I will be back next in two Fridays to hit the ground running with some warmer temps and better weather in Ohio, hopefully. I would really like to get more out on the course and the range.     
    • Day 580 - 2026-05-04 Played eight holes. Sometimes golf kicks you in the nuts. 😉 
    • I work with a lot of golfers who want more shaft lean at impact, who currently have AoAs that range from +2° to -2°, and who love to see the handle lower and more "in front of their trail thigh" from face-on at P6. And a lot of these golfers try to solve the issue by working on the downswing. They do something to drag the handle forward. Or they just leave their right thigh farther back so the same handle location "looks" farther forward. Or they move the ball back in their stance. Or they push themselves down into the ground to get the handle lower and increase (decrease?) their AoA (to be more negative). The real fix is often to get wider in the backswing. To do LESS in the backswing. To hinge less, fold the trail arm less, abduct the trail arm less. I had a case of this over the weekend. Before, the player had 110° of trail elbow bend, "lifted" his trail humerus only a few degrees, etc. The club traveled quite a bit around him, and he tended to "pick" the ball from the fairways. In the "after" swings below (which are mild exaggerations — this golfer does not need to end up at < 70° of elbow bend. These were slower backswings with "hit it as hard as you normally would" intent downswings), you can see that he bent his elbow about 70° instead of 110° and lifted his right arm an extra ~15° or more. You can't see how much less this moved his hands across his chest (right arm abduction), but it was also decreased. His hands stayed more "in front of" his right shoulder rather than traveling "beside" them so much. The two swings look like this: The change at P6, without talking about the downswing one little bit (outside of him telling me that he tends to pick the ball), is remarkable: Without 110° of elbow bend to get out (which he gets to 80°, a loss of 30°), the golfer actually loses slightly less elbow bend (70 - 50 = 20), but delivers 30° less elbow bend, lowering the handle and letting the elbow get "in front of" the rib cage… because it never got "behind" or "beside" the rib cage. If you look at this video showing the before/afters of P6, you'll note the handle location (both vertically and horizontally) and the shoulders (the ball is in the same place in these frames). This golfer's path was largely unaffected (still pretty straight into the ball, < 3° path and often < 1.5°), but his AoA jumped to -5° ± 2°. I've always said, and in talking with other instructors they agree and feel similarly, that we spend a lot of time working on the backswing. This is another example of why.
    • We had a member of our senior club who developed a mental block on pulling the trigger. I played with him to see what the membership was talking about. I timed him a few times when he would get over the ball. 45 seconds. He knew he had a mental block and would chide himself, “Just hit it!” Once on the green he was okay and chipping was a bit better. It was painful to watch him struggle. Our “bandaid” was to put him in the last tournament  tee time with two understanding players. We should have suggested to him to take a break from our tournaments. I agree with the idea that when a player realizes they have a problem, the answer is to go fix it and not return until they are able to play at an acceptable pace.
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