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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Golfers, Step In
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<blockquote data-quote="97svt/01saleen" data-source="post: 16798668" data-attributes="member: 52393"><p>This is what came to my mind as well. If all your other clubs are good, then technically your swing should be fine. Biggest temptation is to swing too hard with the driver and you speed up your tempo. When you do this, usually the hands don't keep up with the lower part of your body. In general, new equipment does not fix bad mechanics. As far as the difference between your driver and your friends. I'm guessing when you used your friends club, you now had a "new club", "new feel", expensive, "not your club", in your hands and may have instinctively slowed down your tempo, which put you in the fairway. That is purely guess though lol. </p><p></p><p>I agree with some of the others, practice, practice, practice cannot be overstated enough when it comes to golf. Also it just comes down to how you want to play, if it is about score, then put the driver away if all the other clubs are good, and tee off with your fairway wood. Remember Henrik Stenson won the Open with a 3 wood because his 3 wood was money.</p><p></p><p>As far as getting new clubs, by all means if you want new stuff, get it, I just don't think it will be the determining factor in improving your game. In my experience, it has more to do with being comfortable and confident over the ball.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="97svt/01saleen, post: 16798668, member: 52393"] This is what came to my mind as well. If all your other clubs are good, then technically your swing should be fine. Biggest temptation is to swing too hard with the driver and you speed up your tempo. When you do this, usually the hands don't keep up with the lower part of your body. In general, new equipment does not fix bad mechanics. As far as the difference between your driver and your friends. I'm guessing when you used your friends club, you now had a "new club", "new feel", expensive, "not your club", in your hands and may have instinctively slowed down your tempo, which put you in the fairway. That is purely guess though lol. I agree with some of the others, practice, practice, practice cannot be overstated enough when it comes to golf. Also it just comes down to how you want to play, if it is about score, then put the driver away if all the other clubs are good, and tee off with your fairway wood. Remember Henrik Stenson won the Open with a 3 wood because his 3 wood was money. As far as getting new clubs, by all means if you want new stuff, get it, I just don't think it will be the determining factor in improving your game. In my experience, it has more to do with being comfortable and confident over the ball. [/QUOTE]
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