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What'd You Shoot Today?


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76.
Hit 2 fairways.
Hilarious.

905R
LD-F 3-Wood
755
Vokey Oil-Can 252-08 degree
Cobra C Wedge 56-11 Vokey Oil-Can 260-08 degree Scotty Cameron Newport 2 35'' Pro V1x


112 (59/53) on saturday, 113 (61/52) yesterday and 107 (55/52) today. Not that it affected scores but intense fog saturday morning and some of the slowest play I've seen in a long time the last 2 days.

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Chris, although my friends call me Mr.L

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

95 today. Not bad for a newbie. I was able to straighten my slice with my driver some by closing my stance a little. My putter was nowhere to be found. That's where I need the most practice at this point.

What I'm hitting:

XL 5000 set: includes driver, 3 & 5 wood, 4 & 5 hybrid, 6-PW, and sandwedge


I shot a legit 95! My first time breaking 100. I shot it at http://www.minorparkgolfcourse.com . It's an easy course but it helps my confidence. If my short game was better and I didn't have all those 3 putts on the front........oh my, what could have been!

Driver:TaylorMade R580 XD Stiff
3 Wood:Wilson FY-brid 15*
Hybrid:Adams A3 Boxer # 3
Irons:Titleist Square Toe 4
Irons:Callaway X-20 5-PWWedges:Adams Tight Lies GT SWPutter: Ping Anser 2Ball: Wilson Ultra or Precept Lady IQ180 or Bridgestone e6+


Shot 102 yesterday during a 4:40 minute round. Just a bad day all around. Everything went wrong, I lost focus, and then it just got worse. Very humbling day.

9 days without playing was not a good thing. Really struggling off the tee lately...getting into a lot of trouble. A lot of pull hooking going on....switching to hitting the 3w for a while.

Saturday - 47 on the front & 43 on the back.
Sunday - 43
Yesterday - 44


Shot a 77 yesterday. Not a bad score for me but could have been so much better. My putter really lets me down. Front 9 I shot even par but had 3 birdie putts in the 4-7 foot range and missed them all. Back nine, I shot 5 over missing several short par putts. Going to put the Odyssey belly putter back in the bag today.

 Sub 70 849 9* driver

:callaway:  Rogue 3 & 5 woods, Rogue X 4 & 5 hybrids

:tmade: SIM 2 6-gap irons

:cobra:  King snakebite grove wedges 52 & 58*

 :ping: Heppler ZB3 putter

 

 


85 yesterday... Im in a horrible ballstriking slump. However, I practiced and tried some new thyings after my round. Then before dark, I walked 1-3, which are the hardest three holes on our course, and I went birdie, bogey, par. so maybe I've figured something out. I'll walk 9 after school today and see what comes of it

Callaway FT-9 Tour 9.5* with Prolaunch Blue S| Adams InSight XTD A3 15* FW | Adams IDEA a3 hybrid irons | Callaway 52* X-Tour Forged wedge | Titleist Bob Vokey SM56* | PING Day putter

Favorite Ball: Srixon Z Star X

Home Course: Majestic Pines GCage: 16


Shot a 91 yesterday.....it's an improvement. Since I've been playing consistently I've been all over in the 90's. Every time I play, something is off, whether it be irons or chipping, something ruin's my round. I can say this much though....no more 90's...I'm getting my head together and putting all this crap behind me.

Driver: Sasquatch 9.5 Stiff
Rescue: Mid 3
Irons: 3100i/h (4-S)
Putter: Dual Force
Ball: One Black

Very disappointing stuff today, first tee shot was a cracker as well. Did not play good at all and although it was gale force winds - I should be able to hit the ball decent in those conditions.

Most disappointing for myself was lack of hitting greens on par 3s, always too short or a few scuffed tee shots, out of the 5 par 3s on the course - I scored 2 3s and 1 4 and 2 5s.

Last few holes were a huge improvement so get back on that horse as they say. Shot a 100 overall on a par 73 course. I don't know about you guys but once I play poorly I just want to get out again and play again, maybe go later tonight for 9 holes

I played twice in Sunday. The first round was an ugly 47 at White Lake Oaks. I started tripple, tripple, par, double. I did hit some very solid drives and managed to play the last 5 holes 4 over after the 8 over start.

The second round was better. I shot an 8 over 39 at Heather Highlands in a make up round for my Wednesday league. I did sputter down the stretch finishing bogey, bogey, bogey, double and bogey. My wife shot a best ever 45 and we took all 6 points.
Driver: 9.5° 905R Stiff Aldila NV 65
3 Wood: 15.° Pro Trajectory 906F4 Stiff Aldila VS Proto Blue
Hybrid: 19.0° 503 H Stiff Dynamic Gold S400
Hybrid: 21.0° Edge C.F.T. Ti Stiff Aldila NVS
Irons: 775cb 4-GW w/S300 Sand Wedge: Vokey 58° Puttter: Laguna Mid-Slant Pro PlatinumBall: ProV1Bag: Li...

Played much better today. 72 with 4 birdies. Belly putter stays in the bag, at least for now.

 Sub 70 849 9* driver

:callaway:  Rogue 3 & 5 woods, Rogue X 4 & 5 hybrids

:tmade: SIM 2 6-gap irons

:cobra:  King snakebite grove wedges 52 & 58*

 :ping: Heppler ZB3 putter

 

 


Wish I could've played today, but It's thunderstorming here and I have to finish a project for school.


Tomorrow brings a new light though

in the bag

Driver: 909D2 9.5° Oban Devotion Shaft

3 Wood: G10 15.5°
Hybrid: 3dx RC 20° Ironwood 

4-PW: MP-57's S300

Wedges: 51° MP-T Black Nickel 56° Vokey Spin Milled 

Putter: Tracy II 35" Iomic Grip 

Ball: Pro V1x


I played great today. The entire season I've been struggling. Today, everything clicked. I've been spending a ridiculous amount of time on my game (practicing for about 2 hours and playing for about 3 hours) for the past 3 weeks. It's finally paying off. I didn't hit one bad shot today.

To cut to the point, I shot +2 37 ...This is one of my lowest ever. I had previously been shooting 42-44 the past few weeks, this was, I hope, my coming out party...

I was due.

Driver Ping G10 10.5*
Hybrids Ping G5 (3) 19* Bridgestone J36 (4) 22*
Irons Mizuno MP-57 5-PW
Wedges Srixon WG-504 52.08 Bridgestone WC Copper 56.13
Putter 33" Scotty Cameron Studio Select #2


I shot my best round ever today. I've been playing roughly a month and a half now, and I shot a 75 at a par 68 course today. 9 Pars, 2 Birdies, couple doubles which killed me, but hey, I'm happy =]

I drove the green on 18, went off the back of the fringe, skulled a chip and went to the other side, and chipped in for birdie - my shot of the day. =]

"Everything will be ok in the end. If it's not ok, it's not the end."

Started playing - April 25th, 2008

In my bag: FT-5 Neutral Driver 9° 990B Irons Rifle Flighted Shafts (3-PW) Scotty Cameron Newport 2 Midslant Vokey wedges 252*08,256*12 and 260*04 PROV1xSequoyah National - A Robert Trent...


86 on Saturday, 92 on Sunday, 87 on Memorial day, 90 yesterday. I am making more pars than ever. Still making a few impulsive bad swings every now and then. But I am narrowing down my bad swing causes. I think they are

1) from the tee at par 4s over 420 yards.
2) everytime I try to reach a green with my three wood.
3) Long irons played without regard to the lie. Impulsive..just insufficient thought.
4) my fancy for my 60* wedge. I have resolved never to hit it from the fringe again.

In the bag:
905R 9.5* Fujikura Speeder S
X 15* Fujikura R
X 19* Fujikura S
4-P MP-14 TT DGS300 53* 588 Gunmetal MP series 56-14 TT wedge MP-R 60-09 Rifle SpinnerDFX Two ball Pro V1


Shot 42 on the front 9 at my local muni. Pretty good score considering that I played from the blue tees (7294 yards with 3616 on the front). It helps my game to force different clubs into my hands than I am accustomed to.
4 pars
4 bogeys
1 dub
0 FWYs
2 GIRs
14 putts
-LBB
***********************************

Bag: Bagboy NXO Revolver
Driver: Dymo STR8-FIT Tour 9.5
3w: Nike T405w: Nike T40Irons: Mizuno MP-33 3-PWSW: Nike SV Tour Black Satin 56/10LW: Nike SV Tour Black Satin 60/06Ball: Nike TA2/SPN

shot an 80(9 over) today. Swing still feels great scores are consistent but really am craving consistent 70's. However, the 9 over today is bringing me realistically close to getting and maintaining a single digit handicap.

In my Hoofer:

Driver: Big Bertha Warbird 9*
3Wood: Big Bertha
Irons: Eye2 BeCu 2-PWWedges: 56 & 60 RTG 588Putter: Sedona


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  • Posts

    • I'm not an "official" instructor but I've been helping people for a few years now. I find that most beginners never get taught a proper concept of how the swing works. I also find that most people need a better understanding of what the arms and hands do before even working on the grip or the rest of the body. This is because what your concept of how the arms work through the downswing will dictate how strong or weak your grip must be. And if your arms work correctly then you can get away with a lot of variation in the lower body and still hit the ball decently. This will be long by the way... now...I get technical because...well...if you're writing it, you have to make it understandable. So let's understand the swing structure of the left or lead arm. The clubhead is controlled by the left hand, the left hand is controlled by the left wrist which is made up of the two bones of the forearm; the ulna closest to the pinky finger and the radius closest to the thumb. The forearm is attached to but can work independently of the humorous or upper arm which ends at the shoulder joint. That's the structure you are working with. Now how each section of that structure can work in different ways so let's talk about them starting at the upper arm. You may have heard people use the term "external shoulder rotation." It's usually used in reference to the right arm but that's okay you need to understand it in the left arm as well. First off...that's not a correct term. The shoulder is a complex structure of three bones; the clavicle in the upper chest/neck area, the scapula or shoulder blade that glides across the back and the end of the humorous bone that is the upper arm. So when you hear that term what they really are saying is "external rotation of the humerus." A simple way to understand this is to think about arm wrestling. If you are arm wresting someone with your elbow on a table you are trying to force your opponents arm into external rotation while your upper arm would be internally rotating. If you are losing the wrestling match you will find that while your elbow stays in place, your forearm and hand will be pushed back behind the elbow as your humerus externally rotates. So in the golf swing we don't want to be the winner of the arm wrestling match... at any point in time! Both upper arms need to externally rotate. The right upper arm externally rotates in the backswing and stays in that position through impact or for some people just before but very close to impact. The left arm must externally rotate in the downswing from impact through the finish. Some people choose to set-up with both upper arms externally rotated...think elbows pointed at the hips or biceps up. Others will start with just the right arm in this position...some people describe it as the "giving blood" position. Others start with both elbows internally rotated...biceps facing inward toward each other. You can set-up whichever way feels best to you but in your backswing and downswing the upper arms MUST externally rotate. Now back to the left arm...with which you should try to control the swing...and the forearm. The forearm is where most people get in trouble because it can rotate left or right no matter which orientation your upper arm is in...try it...it's just how the forearm is structured to work. And this is where you MUST make the decision as to how you want the forearms to work in order to choose how strong or weak your grip must be. Ben Hogan in his book 5 Lessons uses the terms supination and pronation. To illustrate it simply grab a club in your left hand and hold it out in front of you. Rotate your forearm to where your knuckles point to the sky (this is pronation) and then rotate your forearm the other way so that your knuckles point to the ground (this is supination). When your lead forearm is in pronation (knuckles up) the ulna will be on the left side of the radius. In supination (knuckles down the ulna rotates under the radius and the radius is now on the left side of the ulna. Very important that you relate this to the position of the ulna. At the top of the backswing you should be in a position where you feel that the knuckles of the left hand are pointed to the sky. As you rotate your body open and your chest pulls your arms down and into impact you will need to be aware that your ulna stays on the left side of the radius as long as possible. This is the position instructors are trying to have you achieve by pulling the butt of the club into an invisible wall past your left leg while maintaining the 90 degree angle formed by the shaft and your forearm. You've probably seen or heard of that drill as we all have over the years. Now here is the IMPORTANT part that no one seems to ever speak of...what happens from there!?! From that position...ulna on the left side of the radius, shaft and the forearm at a 90 degree angle, hands directly over the ball...you have two choices. 1) You can keep the ulna traveling toward the target on the left side of the radius and only release (unhinge) the wrists to lower the clubhead down into the ball or 2) while you unhinge your left wrist you can rotate your left forearm from the pronated position (knuckles up) to the supinated position (knuckles down) and let the ulna rotate under and eventually to the right side of the radius. If you choose to release the club with method 1 you will need a strong grip. The clubface will stay stable and square to the target throughout the swing but you probably will lose distance and have a very spinny ball flight. If you choose to release the club with method 2 you will probably require a much weaker grip as the clubhead will be less stable as it closes down coming into impact. This method requires more timing but results in more power through impact and usually more distance. You may also hook the ball if you start with too strong of a grip or a closed clubface at address. Method 2 is what most pros use but not all. Method 1 is what causes most people to hit weak, spinny slices and requires an unusually strong grip because with method 1 the left forearm has a tendency to open more coming into impact where the ulna stays in front of the radius too long.    Here's the catch...you need to learn both releases. Release 1 is how you want to use your wedges when you want to make sure the bounce interacts with the turf or if you need to hit a cut from left to right around a tree. You'll get more height and more spin with release 1. Release 2 will let the leading edge tear through the turf taking a nice crisp divot and can be used to hook a ball from right to left. Congratulations to anyone that read through all of this! I believe that once your brain understands precisely how it needs to control the different parts of your body it can do it repetitively on command. Your swing will repeat and not fall apart from day to day. Learn how you want to use your forearms and you can choose your grip and clubface position at address. Either method will work and both methods are used by the best players in the world for different shots.
    • Day 330 - Mostly just partial swings today, so I could really focus on exaggerating my hips towards the target in my finish. 
    • Day 72 - 2024-12-11 /sees a picture of Chet after shaving with a saw, goes back to doing a little mirror work at AMG.
    • Day 147: more mirror work. Trying to hone in the backswing stuff real nice. 
    • If I was going to try to help someone fix a low snap hook without actually seeing their swing I would have to tell them to break down the problem into pieces. See if you can fix the "low" part of the problem first. A low ball flight tells me you are probably swinging level or hitting down on the ball instead of hitting up on it. Try teeing the ball higher than you are comfortable and put the ball up in your stance a little further up than comfortable...try putting it off your left heal or even the left toe. Try to feel like your club head is swinging up through impact. Try that first and see if it gets you to a high snap hook or a high pull hook.    If you want to address the hook part of the swing you are going to have to look at two areas of the swing as well as your concept of what the arms and hands do through impact. I love talking through this stuff with people but I'll only go into it further if you really want to go down that rabbit hole...you would have to say so. Swing well my friend!
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