Monday, January 26, 2009

How Good ARE We?

From time to time when I am doing club fitting for golfers, I have experiences where I am simply amazed. These experiences continue to reinforce my belief that there are golf clubs that are JUST RIGHT for specific golfers. And when this happens I get inspired all over again about being a clubfitter.


One of the first of these experiences happened this past summer. I was doing a fitting for a golfer who had not played golf in a few years, about 70 years old. I put a 6 iron test club in his hands, very soft flex, and he IMMEDIATELY hit beautiful shots and said the feel of the club was amazing. I could tell that the connection between him and this test club was right. He continues to enjoy the irons that I built for him. There is no way that he would ever have been able to buy clubs with the specs I made for him at a golf shop.


I had a bit of a different but equally pleasant experience this past weekend. I was working with a client who wants me to build him a new set of irons, and we were discussing some of the iron head options that we will be testing soon. Near the end of our meeting, he said that sometime he also wants to have me look at his putter and putting setup, and I said why not now. He set up over the ball, and was in a great putting position.....his eyes just behind where he set the putter on the ground.


BUT I also noticed that he was toeing the putter slightly upright when he set up. I held the putter for him in this position and let him see what he was doing. We both agreed that once I bend his putter about a degree more flat he should have a perfect putting setup with the putter sitting flat on the ground at address and his eyes just behind the ball.


All well and good. But the NEXT part was the payoff. He said that he has a tendency to PUSH his putts and has some fear of three putting - he would almost prefer to miss greens and hit chips close to the hole for easy up and downs than have long putts. We agreed that the REASON he was pushing his putts was almost certainly that he was ADJUSTING for the fact that he presently putts with a putter that starts with the toe slightly up!


So what you say? Well, what this experience says to me is how much we can actually sense when our clubs do not fit us - so we adjust for the lack of correct fit, and sometimes overcompensate for say putters that are too upright, or in other cases shafts that are too stiff or too short.


One of the things that clubfitters are trained to do, as another example, is to limit the number of shots that we have players hit when we are doing things like length fitting. We do not typically allow a player to hit more than 3 shots with a given length club - and look at where the impact on the club is using impact labels. Why 3 shots - because all players will START ADJUSTING for a club does not fit them after a few shots, and so you will not get good length-fitting results if you allow more than 3 shots.


We as golfers do everything we can to try to compensate for clubs that do not work for us. Sometimes this adjusting works pretty well, and we never realize that if we had clubs that really fit us, we would get a lot more of those "a ha!" feelings on the golf course that result from playing with clubs that are a good match for our personal swings.


Once I bend this putter for my friend and he has some on the course putting results with the new setup, I will report the results back to you in this blog!


Tony

Monday, January 19, 2009

A Surprisingly Good Day!

My dream for this Monday was to get to play golf, which should normally be possible in East Tennessee. But a combination of snow today (maybe the only snow day this year?) and my getting a cold kept me from doing that.

SO......I decided to read one of the two golf club-related books that I purchased for myself over the holidays. I read - cover to cover, have not done that in a long time - "The Mad Science of Golf," by Philip Moore. Phil is a clubmaker, but this book is about way more than clubmaking. If you are looking to read something that truly might help you to identify strategies to help you play better golf, I am not sure you can do much better than reading this book.

I could discuss for pages the concepts that he discussed in the book but two of them stick out to me in terms of what I love about building great golf clubs for people....

MAKING SOLID BALL CONTACT. As I get older, I think I am understanding more and more how this can help me and others play our best golf. I used to be able to hit my 8 iron 150 yards, and often still think I can - but normally get much better results if I back off to a 7 iron or 6 iron for a 150 yard shot. Helping people to play clubs that they can use to Make Solid Contact is a big part of what I do when I fit people to the right club length, flex and flex profile, and club and shaft weight. One of my friends who I play with (Dr. S, you know who you are) never seems to attempt to hit the ball hard (except some drives after poor holes, but we all do that?) but always seems to make great contact. When you hit the ball solidly your confidence soars, you relax and enjoy the game more. This is a great concept to pay attention to.

HAVING THE RIGHT SET OF GOLF CLUBS. Phil Moore suggests this is the most important thing that he does when he fits players for clubs - getting them to play clubs that they can hit well. To me this includes things like playing more lofted fairway woods so you can get the ball airborne, playing hybrid clubs maybe even down to your 5 iron instead of playing irons that are harder to hit, and not carrying a lob wedge if you cannot hit that club well. Again, all of this revolves around that "confidence" word - if you hit solid shots with the clubs that you have, you are a long way toward being able to score well in golf.

In the end then the day was not so bad after all................but still hoping for good weather on Friday!



Tony

Monday, January 12, 2009

Those Great "Year End" Specials on OEM Drivers?

I continue to find it interesting when I get emails from different suppliers of OEM golf clubs advertising their year end driver specials.

At the same time, all of us are now seeing advertisements for the new great innovations in drivers - the coming 2009 models.

I guess all of this makes me want to pose a question......if that great driver from a year ago is now marked down by $100 to $200, what does that really mean? Does it mean that driver was not really worth the $399 (and sometimes more!) that players paid for it when purchased early in 2008?

If companies have to keep coming out with the "new greatest thing since sliced bread" to justify charging $399 for a driver at the beginning of the year, maybe that driver is not all that great for every golfer. Something to consider when you make your next driver purchase!


AND.....continuing the thread that I shared a few blog posts ago, today I received my February 2009 issue of Golf Magazine, and it had club specs for Camilo Villegas. Not unlike Stuart Appleby, Camilo plays a 44 inch length driver, and he plays a 3 wood that has 15.5 degrees of loft. I will continue to keep posting this data from Golf Magazine as I receive it, but that 44 inch driver length just keeps showing up!!


Tony

Monday, January 5, 2009

An Example Driver Fitting

I have promised my younger son, David, that I would do a driver fitting for him. He came home from Athens, GA this weekend (with our 1 year old grandson, Emerson!) and we finally had time to do this. It was an interesting fitting, and I thought some of you might like to hear some of the particulars about this one.

David hits the ball a mile, but not always straight. His primary interest in getting a new driver was not in obtaining more distance but in getting more consistency - hitting more fairways.

His present driver is a Cleveland Launcher 8.5 degree loft, 46 inch length. It has a Fijikura Launcher Gold 65 S flex shaft.

I first measured David's wrist to floor distance - it is 37-1/2 inches. Based on some correlations that I have from publications by Tom Wishon (33 years in the clubfitting and clubmaking business and one of the premier golf club designers) a first estimate of the correct driver length for David is 44-1/4 inches long - a lot shorter than the driver length he is presently playing.

I then made some measurements of his hand size to get an initial idea of the size of grip that would work well for him. He has the biggest hands I have yet measured in a golfer - the distance from his life line to the tip of his middle finger is about 9-3/8 inches. This is about an inch longer than the longest measurement I previously made for other golfers. My initial estimate is that he should be playing in grips that are at least 1/16 inch in diameter over the men's standard size. I asked him to grip his present driver, and it was clear that the size of this grip was approximately men's standard, much too small for him.

I then took some video of his golf swing (all of the fitting was done indoors at the Centenial Teaching/Fitting Facility). Based on looking at slow motion of his swing using his present driver, I found that his "tempo time" - from start of his swing to ball impact - was about 1 second, and that he "released" his wrist cock at about an 8 o'clock position (for comparison Tiger releases at about 6 o'clock, right at the ball location).

We then did testing to identify the driver length that David would hit most consistently in the center of the club. We did "impact label" testing with three different driver lengths - 44, 44-1/2, and 45 inch lengths - these tests were done with one driver head and three different shafts that could be attached to the head using the Club Conex "FAZ FIT" connector system. All of the test drivers had approximately the same D3 swingweight. The results were very clear - David hit EVERY shot in the middle of the clubface with the 44 inch driver, and the results with the other lengths were no where near as good as for the 44 inch length.

We then collected driver performance data using the Zelocity Launch Monitor. We did tests with David's present driver and with 5 other test drivers; all tests were done with the same test shaft and by adding weight (lead tape) to the head to make all test driver swingweights be approximately D3. David's average swing speed was about 116 mph (wow, what can I say....). The spin rate for the majority of his test shots was typically less than 3,000 rpm, a good range to be in but there is room for improvement by reducing ball spin.

The main purpose of the driver head testing was to identify if there was one head that produced significantly better performance results and that felt the best to David. One head did in fact provide better overall results - lower spin, slightly longer carry distance, and higher "power transfer ratio" - the ratio of ball speed to swing speed. However, David did not like the overall look of this driver head, and so the slightly better performance results were not as important to him.

The driver head that we finally decided on based on the performance testing was the Wishon 919 THI head. The test head that he hit was actually a bit higher in loft than the other test heads - 11 degrees compared to 9 degrees for the other heads - but overall performance results were comparable to those achieved with other test heads. And this particular head is one that has a high clubhead moment of intertia (MOI) and so is more forgiving of off center contact - again, remember David's desire to get more consistency in hitting fairways.

I then did some additional analyis of David's launch monitor test results to show him where there are some areas where he could improve his driving distance - in particular, lowering driver spin rate and increasing launch angle.

I used a shaft fitting program developed by Jerry Hoefling Sr. - a well respected AGCP clubfitter. Jerry's "BMT" software - butt, middle, tip - was used to identify the best candidate shaft for David's new driver. This software has a database of many available shafts where flex profiles have been measured to determine shaft butt, middle, and tip flexes. The program allows me to input the measured driver swing speed, swing tempo, and release point and choose a shaft that will be the best fit for David's swing. The shaft that is the best fit for him is the Aldila VS Proto "By You" shaft.

The final result of the fitting is that I will build David a Wishon 919THI 9.5 degree driver, 0 degree closed face, 44 inches long, with a Aldila VS Proto S shaft, and will build this to a final D3 swingweight. I will use an Midsize Star Grip that I will build up to slightly over 1/16 inch diameter over men's standard size.

And I hope that he does not use this new driver to beat his dear old dad in golf yet.....but if he beats his father in law, well what can I say!!


Tony