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Have you walked into a sporting goods store with a high quality
tennis department and looked at the rackets? They are all displayed
unstrung. No tennis department in a sports store would be complete
without an assortment of string dampeners and replacement grips
either. Why? Because tennis players do not all play with the same
tennis strings, string tension, string impact feel or grip texture
and size. In addition, the rackets are also offered in different
lengths, weights and stiffness. One size does not fit all in tennis.
Ever strolled into a high quality snow ski shop and looked at the
skis, boots, bindings and poles? You’ll see a myriad of different
length skis and poles and a seemingly endless variety of boots and
bindings. Why? Because skis must always be fit to the ability of the
skier or else the skier will have a horrible time on the slopes. One
size does not fit all in skiing either.
Baseball or softball? Look at the array of bats in their huge
variety of different lengths, weights, as well as the bat handle and
barrel diameters. One size definitely does not fit all batters.
Now look at premium brand golf clubs. No matter the fact that the
big retail golf super stores carry a plethora of different brand
names among the clubs displayed on the racks, all the men’s drivers
are 45” or 45.5” long, all of the graphite shaft irons are the same
length and lie angle and all the steel shaft irons are the same
length and lie as well. Drop one inch and the same goes for the
ladies clubs too. Grip sizes are all the same for men as they are
among the women’s clubs. Driver and woodhead face angles are all the
same. The head to rest of the club weight balance we call
swingweight is all the same for the clubs too.
Yes, you do get a choice of loft in the driver. Most golf stores
stock drivers for men between 8.5 and 11 degrees, with maybe one
model here or there with a little higher loft. Unfortunately there
are a lot of golfers who need more than 11 degrees to maximize their
driver distance and accuracy. And yes, you also get a choice between
shaft flexes from L to X, but only in one model of shaft weight and
bend profile design. Golf clubs are offered in much more of a “one
size fits all” approach than the equipment in any other sport.
In case you haven’t been reminded of the fact lately, golf is a
tough game to master to the point that you can hit the majority of
your shots solid, on the center of the face, high enough to ensure
full distance for your swing, and with enough accuracy to keep the
ball in play. Clubs that fit your size, strength and the way you
swing make the task a little easier. Clubs built to some
pre-determined set of “standards” definite make it a lot more
difficult.
Because the big golf club companies have always built and sold
their clubs to some “national average” of golfer size, strength and
swing ability, whenever golfers cannot hit the ball reasonably well
the majority of the time, they blame themselves for the problem.
After all, the game is difficult to master and it can’t possibly be
the fault of the clubs, right? I mean, many of the clubs golfers buy
are used by the pros on the PGA Tour, so if they work well for them,
it has to be the golfer’s fault that he or she can’t hit more than
50% of their shots decently. Right?
Wrong. Yes, the game is difficult to master. But anyone who was
reasonably good in sports when they were in school should be able to
hit golf shots with more than a 50% success rate. The problem is
that ALL golfers need to be custom fit for many more aspects of
their clubs than a different driver loft or different shaft flex to
be able to get the most from their size, strength and swing ability.
During a television interview aired on The Golf Channel in 2005,
Tiger Woods was asked what he noticed the most about the amateurs he
plays with in the pro-am events conducted the say before each week’s
PGA Tour event. His response was that all golfers need to be custom
fit with clubs that could accent the positive things they do in
their swings and offset the chronic mistakes they make.
Are YOU still playing with standard made clubs bought off the
rack? If you are, you are definitely not going to be able to play to
the best of your ability. |