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Posted
Shot a 78 yesterday at Las Positas (over-watered muni track in Livermore, CA) with my kid brother yesterday. Finished with 7 straight pars and only 29 putts. Pretty solid for being my first time on a course with my new driver, 3-wood, & hybrid (wife gave me awesome birthday presents LOL)...

My Equipment:
Driver: 9.5* R9, 73g Fubuki stiff | 3wood: 15* R9 3 Wood, x-stiff shaft | Hybrid: 19* Lynx Hybrid, reg. flex | Irons: MP-68s (4i-PW), 5.5x flighted |
Wedges: 52.08*, 56.11*, & 60.07 Vokey Spin-Milled | Putter: Pixl L1.8, 33.5" | Balls: Pro V1x |


Posted
New to the game of golf. First time out I hit 47 on the front 9. 109 on the full 18 and now 3 months in I haven't shot better than 119. I am getting worse!

Posted
88 @ Dunes West (45/43).

"Life's tough. It's tougher if you're stupid."- John Wayne


Posted
Did 70 today on a short par 70 course, backtee. Yesterday did 72 on par 72 course, clubtee. Made 6 birdies.

Right now golf seems so simple and easy...

Posted
Shot a 75 today on a par 70 from the back tees. Had three birdies in a row on the back nine to shoot -1 on the back. Playing from the fairway makes this game a lot less complicated.

Posted
horrible, terrible round today, shot a 92 with 6...(that's right 6) 3 putts.....1 was 6ft away for a Birdie on a long Par 4....and ended up with a 5, I'm a horrible putter

Posted
38 (+4, 3.1 diff) . A bit of practice for tomorrow's competition. A swing thought of "straight right arm" helped a lot.
In the bag: Titleist 909D2 9.5°, 906F2 15°, 585H 17°, AP2 710 3âPW, Vokey SM 52.08 & 58.12, Studio Select Newport 33", Pro V1X.
Home course: Lenzie Golf Club. Working on: ball striking.

Posted
39 (+12) on a par 27, 9-hole course (Par 3).

Driver: :cobra: BiO Cell (10.5º)

Wood: :ping: G15 3 (15.5°)

Hybrids: :callaway: Diablo Edge: 3 (21º), 4 (24º)

Irons: :callaway: Diablo Edge: 5-PW

Wedges: :cleveland:588 RTX CB 50º, Paradise Black Chrome II Sand Wedge 56º


Posted
honestly i dont even know how to measure it, thats why i joined up to discuss specifics and also equipment.

my friend and i are piss poor golfers though.

Posted
41/45 for an 86


Started out fantastic, got stuck waiting for the group in front of us for 2 holes and let it go to my head. Fell apart for about 6 holes, before recovering

In my bag

Driver - c3 bullet 10.5 degree
Woods- c3 bullet 5 wood
Hybrids- 3dx 3 and 4Irons- 3dx 5-pwWedges- Purespin golf tour series gw,sw,lwPutter- antiguaBall - :taylormade: Burner TP


Posted
Had a decent day today. Shot a 77. 40 on the front, 37 on the back.

Par 3 that you have to hit into the wind over water, I hit it a little chubby and it landed about 2 feet from the edge in the water. Chipped up and 2 putted :/

And I had 2 three putts :( (40+ ft)

4pars 3 bogeys 1 double 1 birdie on the front.
6pars 2 bogeys and a birdie on the back.

Posted
From the blue tees (6876 yards 71.9/127) an 82 for a differential of 9.0, 43/39, 9 FW, 8 GIR, 30 putts. 2 birdies, 8 pars, 5 bogies, 2 double and a triple. Only the second time I have had a sub 40 score for nine holes.

Posted
I was 4 over through 13 holes. Figured the 14th, a par 5 would be my last since it was getting dark. Couldn't even see if my 100 yard 3rd shot was on the green. It was 15-20 ft and made the putt. Played the next three holes 2 over in the dark for a 77.

My cart partner had a GPS app on his cell phone and gave me a bad yardage on another par 5. Should have par it at worst, but took a bogey.

4 fairways, 9 GIR, and 31 putts

Posted
Shot 45 on 9 holes (par 35, differential=11.8). Best score ever. Kept everything to double-bogey or better, finally. Started with a double, but it was a very narrowly missed bogey. Then went par-bogey-bogey-bogey-birdie which felt awesome. The birdie was on a short uphill par 5. Hit a perfect drive to a bit past the 200-yard marker, then sort of bladed a hybrid. It got a few feet off the ground and ended up flying just off the ground on exactly the fade arc I pictured, just right along the ground. Found it in the fringe at the front of the green---it'd have been perfect if I'd just stayed down into it. Still pitched it across the long green to 2 feet, almost putting it in for eagle, then made the tricky steeply-banked putt for birdie.

Ball striking was rather bad. Hit about 3 of those blade-hybrids, and my 7 iron (all 3 par 3s) was not working. Tee shots were good, including a nice 3W with a club that usually gives me trouble. My intense short game practice really paid off with only one poor pitch, and my new putter sunk a couple long ones and only had 15 putts. All in all, this is the sort of round I've known I have in me: a good score without having to hit perfectly. Had a couple of really good recoveries to make bogey saves, so it was really rewarding.

In the bag:
FT-iQ 10° driver, FT 21° neutral 3H
T-Zoid Forged 15° 3W, MX-23 4-PW
Harmonized 52° GW, Tom Watson 56° SW, X-Forged Vintage 60° LW
White Hot XG #1 Putter, 33"


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  • Posts

    • The first post is here:   Do you have an overly long backswing that ruins sequencing and leads to poor shots? In nearly 20 years of teaching, I've found 5 common faults. You don't have to swing like Jon Rahm, but a shorter swing will probably help you #PlayBetter golf. Which is your fatal flaw? #1 - Trail Elbow Bend Average golfers ♥️ bending their trail elbows. It can feel powerful! Tour players bend their trail elbows MUCH less. A wider trail elbow creates a longer hand path and preserves structure. It also forces more chest turn; not everything longer is bad! Overly bending your trail elbow can wreak havoc on your swing. It pulls your arms across/beside your body. It requires more time to get the elbow bend "out," ruining your sequencing. The lead arm often bends and low point control is destroyed. The misconception is that it will create more speed, but that's often the opposite of what happens. Golfers often feel they swing "easier" but FASTER with wider trail elbows. Want to play better golf with a shorter backswing? Don't bend your elbow so much. #2 - Hip (Pelvis) Turn I see this all the time: a golfer's hips are only 5-10° open at impact, but he turns them back 60°+ in the backswing. Unless your father is The Flash, your hips are probably not getting 40° open at impact from there! That's more rotation than Rory! Golfers who over-rotate their pelvis often over-turn everything - trail thigh/knee, chest/shoulders, etc. They have more work to do in the same ~0.3 seconds as a Tour player who turns back ~40° and turns through to impact 40° or so. Want to shorten the pelvis turn a bit? Learn to internally rotate into the trail hip, externally rotate away from the lead hip, and do "less" with your knees (extending and flexing) in the backswing. Learn some separation between chest and pelvis. #3 - Rolled Inside and Lifted Up Amateurs love to send the club (and their arms) around them. You see the red golfer here all the time at your local range. The problem? Your arms mostly take the club UP, not around. Going around creates no height until you have to hoist the club up in the air because you're halfway through your backswing and the club is waist high and three feet behind your butt! 😄  Learn to use your arms properly. Arms = up/down, body = around. Most golfers learn how little their arms really have to do in the backswing. The picture here is all you've gotta do (but maybe with a properly sized club!). #4 - Wide Takeaway Width is good, no? Yes, if you're wide at the right time and in the right spots. Golfers seeking width often don't hinge the club much early in the backswing… forcing them to hinge it late. Hinging the club late puts a lot of momentum into the club, wrists, and elbow just before we need to make a hairpin turn in transition and go the other direction at the start of the downswing. When you're driving into a hairpin curve, you go into it slowly and accelerate out of it. Waiting to hinge is like coasting down the straightaway and accelerating into the hairpin. Your car ends up off the road, and your golf ball off the course. Give hinging at a faster rate (earlier) then coasting to the top a try. You'll be able to accelerate out of the hairpin without the momentum of the arms and club pulling in the wrong direction.   #5 - Sway and Tilt Some sway is good but sometimes I see a golfer who just… keeps… swaying… Their chest leans forward a bit for balance, resulting in a whole lotta lean. The green line below is the GEARS "virtual spine." Pros sway a bit, but stay ~90°. This sway often combines with the extra pelvis turn because this golfer is not putting ANY limits on what the "middle of them" (their pelvis) is doing in the backswing. These golfers spend a lot of energy just to get back to neutral! The best players begin pushing forward EARLY in the backswing. Often before the club gets much past their trail foot! Pushing forward (softly) first stops your backward sway and then begins to get your body moving toward the target. Push softly, but early!  
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