Friday, August 2, 2013

The New Golfer

By Fred Keigwin


Buying golf clubs is, in many ways, like getting married. Since it can be a high-ticket investment, try renting them first.

If you insist on quality but can not see yourself spending a lot of money, get golf club clones. These clubs hand over the same performance as the big name brands however, with less cost. They use the same engineering, the same specific quality specs so that you get the exact look and feel that can equate to any specific club you have in mind.

Owning new golf clubs is an exciting costly expensive investment so perhaps you will take time to get more experience playing the the golf game before going all out. But what you really want, to set yourself on the right path, is to get clubs that match your characteristics.

Critical to the performance of any golf clubs is that the clubs fit the person who is playing them. Proper fitting is the single most important factor influencing realization. As one plays more, preferences and style of club features become more obvious and intuitive thinking, as to equipment choice, grows.

Woods: The normal golfer will have a driver, called 1-wood, and a few fairway woods, 3- and/or 5-wood. A driver is the longest club, usually 45 inches long. Because of the longer length it is the toughest to become proficient with during a swing.

Irons: Golf clubs referred to as irons have grooves cut into the club face. Distance parameters determine the classification of irons such as short, mid and long irons. The irons with the highest lofts are the short irons. The short irons are the 8 and 9 irons. Mid irons are 5, 6 and 7 irons and the long irons are 1, 2, 3 and 4 irons.

Putters: Putters come in club head styles of blade, heel-toe and mallet. The varieties in length come in belly putters, standard and broomstick long putters. Putters are the most used club in the game and particular attention should be paid to fit and preference of the putter.

Utility clubs: The combination of wood and iron features in a club is called a utility club and are best for new comers who may not want to acquire too many clubs when starting out. The center of gravity on a lot of golf clubs is usually around the middle to high point on a clubface.

New players should be on the lookout for an inexpensive set of not new clubs to use until they get the hang of the game and unlocked their own individual predisposition as to club choice. Knowledge comes through experience and one can better choose the clone golf club or even brand names that shift your game to a better degree.

Everything Golf Instruction - Swing and Putting Instruction is a new guide book that any golfer will find definitive. Inspecting proven pro-quality techniques and strategies can take your game to an entirely new level.




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