Does anyone actually carry/use a club like this?
I see clubs like this and I can’t help but think why? 60 degree would be the highest I’d ever have in my bag and I don’t see any pga/professional players carrying anything like a 72 degree.
For those of you that carry a higher lofted wedge do you really find it helpful/beneficial to your game and where and when do you find yourself using a club like this?
Not a post to trash on this type of club just trying to understand
Got fired today, went right to the course, had one of my best rounds!
Ironically, my firing lined up well with me uncovering a little too much foul-play than my boss would have liked. Pretty weird to have been fired two months after my performance review that was graded as “exceeded expectationsâ€.
Went right to the course and played one of my best rounds! Thought I’d share.
What’s the easiest way to get the sag out of the middle of this homemade golf “net�
I decided to try to make a homemade golf net because I realized I had these 2 really tall poles, so I hung a heavy duty canvas tarp
(10 x 12) from the 2 poles and now I don’t know what to do about the sag in the middle… I’m too stupid to figure it out myself so please help
Plastic/polymer drivers?
Recently saw the pics for the Callaway AI Smoke, and thought they had built a driver with a plastic/polymer body.
I realised that wasn't the case on closer inspection, but wondering if anything like that has been done? Googling just brings up toy clubs for toddlers.
USGA rules don't seem to restrict material composition in this case, so I'd be intrigued to know of there's any history or research in this space?
Feels like plastics have come a long way in recent years so brittleness would be less of a factor; I'd be surprised if it hasn't been tried.