==================================================== Newsletter - Issue 122 Date 12/17/09 ==================================================== ==================================================== Equipment - Books - DVD's - Instruction ==================================================== I just finished reading a book called: Mastery: The Keys to Success and Long-Term Fulfillment by George Leonard Although this book does not deal exclusively with golf, I would recommend it to anyone that seeks mastery at anything they do - including golf. One of the themes of the book is to actually appreciate and enjoy your "practice", whether it's medicine, law, golf, or sweeping streets. Here is where there is a direct application to golf. In golf, we reach plateaus in our game that we sometimes remain on for quite a while, then - like a light bulb going on - we break through and move on to another plateau. Sometimes we have regressions, but eventually we break through to the next level as long as we keep practicing. This book gave me a new appreciation for practice. I've always enjoyed practicing anyway, but now I am a disciple of loving your practice for what it is as a separate entity, not necessarily for where it will take you. Approaching practice this way definitely improves the quality of your practice by reducing the anxiety for results. You allow it to be enjoyable. You'll get there when you get there, just keep practicing correctly. The book sells for around $10 at http://www.amazon.com/, and if you go there it allows you to look inside the book before you buy. The book has a "Zen" -ish feel to it, and if that doesn't bother you, it will really help you ground yourself mentally in your approach to the game. Plus - it's a quick read and it's inexpensive. 2 thumbs up on this product! Enjoy, Tom ==================================================== TCT Quick Tips - More on Grooves ==================================================== Lee Clapp, a Callaway Golf Rep friend of mine reminded me that the groove rule applies to any club with 25 degrees of loft or more, which can include some hybrid clubs. Thanks for the heads up Lee, it's easy to get tunnel vision towards wedges for this rule. I did a little more research on the groove rule and found a Free E Book on the groove changes, it's very comprehensive.... http://www.groovesurvey.com/download.php Enjoy, Tom ==================================================== Golf Tip: 8 Simple Rules for Buying Golf Equipment ==================================================== With Christmas around the corner, many of us will be buying golf equipment as a gift - or for ourselves with a gift certificate. I saw this article on Frank Thomas's website at http://franklygolf.com/ and thought that it might help my readers out, so here it is - enjoy. Be honest. What you really need is a swing change. But what you really want is a new driver. Or a sand wedge. Or a putter. And you want it so much, you're not merely dropping hints to anyone who'll listen, you're tearing out catalog pages and leaving them on the living room coffee table. The trouble is, like everything in golf, buying equipment isn't as easy as window shopping. It's a world of precision, and all that precision is designed to help you enjoy the game. Still, it can be confusing, whether you're buying for yourself or someone else. Let me show you the best way to approach the buying process. Go slowly and study the information in these eight simple rules, and you just might get what you need -- and what you want. 1. Know your skill level Despite what the ads say, you are either a beginner, an intermediate player (somebody who shoots 80 to 95, let's say) or an advanced player (someone who consistently breaks 80, or about 7 percent of the male golf population and less than 1 percent of the female golf population). Each level of player needs something different. Beginner: This group needs as much help as possible. Believe it or not, that often means less equipment, not more. You don't need to go through an extensive fitting program, because you really don't know how to swing yet. Ask for clubs that fit your strength and general posture when you stand to the ball properly. A basic set that includes two or three woods (choose from the following: Driver with a 10-13 degree loft, 3-, 5- and/or 7-wood) and a handful of irons (5-, 7- and 9-iron, pitching wedge, sand wedge) and putter are plenty. That's not to say you shouldn't buy a full set of clubs, just put the rest of the set in storage until you need them. The clubs you buy should be forgiving. Oversize, perimeter-weighted clubs will help you enjoy the game. Intermediate: This is the bulk of the golf nation and who most new equipment is designed to satisfy. You can have your pick of any clubs you want, but I'd focus on forgiveness. You want your misses to stay in bounds. Most companies will be happy to tell you which of their irons are most forgiving. As for comparing or testing various clubs from competing manufacturers, some are more worthwhile than others. One interesting concept is a special project from club design expert Ralph Maltby called the Maltby Playability Factor, which rates clubs in terms of forgiveness. But the only comparison rating that really matters is yours. Advanced: The entire cornucopia of golf equipment is at your doorstep, but even for you, I'd still lean toward clubs that offer forgiveness. Still, you are on the verge of being able to play irons that mix perimeter weighting with a more traditional-looking blade design. Don't make the switch, however, unless you believe you are being held back by your current equipment. 2. Know what you need A set of three woods and eight irons has been the standard configuration. Not anymore. Assuming you are past the beginning stage of the game, get yourself custom-fit for irons. The fitting procedure may tell you things about your game you didn't know. Like maybe you're playing the wrong shaft. Most average golfers swing clubs with shafts too stiff, and they are continually fighting the club, trying to produce that one shot out of 20 in which everything comes together. How do you know the shaft is too stiff? If you can't feel where the clubhead is during the swing, this may be one consequence, but again, it's what feels right to you. You want to feel in control of the clubhead. Regardless of how good you think you are, I recommend you take a pass on the X-Flex shaft and the 1- and 2-iron. If you put more hybrids or even higher-lofted woods in your bag, you'll likely improve your score without changing your swing. 3. Bigger is better -- Sometimes There's a reason the drivers you see in magazines are the size of a genetically mutated grapefruit. Supersize often means a greater moment of inertia. (forgiveness). Bigger also means the driver likely will be made of titanium and have the spring-like effect that provides better transfer of momentum from the clubhead to the ball (resulting in more distance). There is a point of diminishing returns, however. Once you get much beyond 400 cubic centimeters (more than twice the size of Callaway's original Big Bertha), the forgiveness factor starts flattening out ­ diminishing returns and the head gets too cumbersome. Be leery of the length of your driver's shaft, too. The best players in the world, who can have any length shaft they want, have settled on 44 or 44 3/4 inches (Tiger has even used a 43.5 inch driver). Your typical off-the-rack titanium driver has a 45-inch shaft. My advice: Go for a shorter shaft or grip down a little. There will not be any significant loss of distance, and your accuracy will improve. 4. Consider price when picking a ball The average player will not lose anything by playing the best, most expensive tour balls on the market. But the average player likely won't notice any difference in performance using the less expensive models, either. My shopping rule for balls is a simple one: If someone is buying the balls for you, go for the gold standard. If you're buying them yourself, be thrifty. Remember: Most balls today are better than the golfers who choose to use them. 5. Get on a launch monitor Science now tells us the best launch conditions for a driver at 110 miles per hour are 12 to 13 degrees above horizontal with a spin rate of 2,200 to 2,500 revolutions per minute. Slower swing speeds require higher launch angles and more spin. Science also has managed to develop good launch monitors that can evaluate this information from your swing. Use a launch monitor with caution it is a guide only and will get you into the right range of conditions you seek. The rest is up to you unless you are a super elite golfer and need to tweak your equipment. If you are hitting the sweet spot try to get a ball speed of 1.4 to 1.5 times your swing speed. If the (good) launch monitor shows you're not doing that, you may need to change your driver, your swing or both. Most drivers today are a lot better than we are so get enough loft 10 degrees to 15 degrees if your swing speed is slow (75 mph) and the make sure the shaft flex suites your swing speed. A rule of thumb is, Stiff for 90 to 100 mph, R-flex for 75 to 90mph and A-flex for below 75 and below. 6. Fill the gap in your wedge game Equitably space your wedge lofts, but always make sure the sand wedge (56 degrees) has a decent bounce angle. Today's iron lofts are about a club and a half stronger than they were 25 years ago. (Jack Nicklaus' 8-iron of yesteryear is nearly equal to some of the stronger pitching wedges out there today.) Club manufacturers have designed them that way to make us feel as if we're hitting the ball farther. The problem, however, is the loft on the typical sand wedge has remained at 56 degrees. Consequently, there's probably a gap somewhere in your wedge game. Here's what to do: Identify the loft on your 9-iron or pitching wedge (if you don't know, your club pro or the manufacturer can tell you). Decide if you need a wedge with a loft between your sand wedge and pitching wedge. You don't want more than 4 or 5 degrees loft difference between your wedges, otherwise you'll find yourself with a yardage and no full-swing club that carries that distance. Furthermore, if you buy a lob wedge (and I'm not convinced most players need one), be careful not to get one with too much bounce (the trailing edge of the club's sole is lower than the leading edge of the club). A lot of bounce, typically found on a sand wedge, is only helpful out of heavy rough or soft sand. From a tight lie, you might blade shots over the green. 7. Use clubs with proper lie angle Once you reach the intermediate level, getting fitted for irons is important. Well-struck approach shots may miss the green if your clubs don't fit you. Specifically, the issue is lie angle. Ideally, the sole of the club as it makes contact with the ball should be level with the ground. If the toe is up, then well-struck shots will go to the left and you will need to flatten the lie. If the toe is down then well-struck shots will go right, and the lie needs to be more upright to correct the flight. Make sure you're being fit for your swing, not just your setup. A good clubfitter will have you hit shots off a lie board, which is a type of mat that will leave a mark on the sole to show how to adjust the lie if necessary. If lie angle is off, it will be most obvious in short-term accuracy. 8. Invest in a lesson The best gift for a golfer, no matter who is paying for it, is a lesson. This will cost about one-fifth of the price of a good driver and one-tenth the price of a new set of clubs -- and may be better for your game. Almost as good, and even better for your quality of life, is a gym membership. Good strength and flexibility will do as much or more for your game as new equipment. It may not be as much fun as waggling that new driver, but come next summer when your workouts have made you healthier and stronger, your game should improve, too. Furthermore, an exercise regimen will help you avoid injuries. Because if you're injured, you won't be able to test all the new equipment, right? Enjoy, Tom