Picking The Right Golf Club In Every Situation

By Owen Jones


There are various aspects to playing golf. On the highest degree, there is yourself and there is your equipment. There is just one thing that you are able to do about yourself and that is improve it by correct thought and practice. However, it is very much easier to change your equipment.

Needless to say, you should buy the best equipment that suits you. This means purchasing your golfing equipment from an expert who can see what you require. When you have the best equipment - golf clubs and balls - that you can afford, you have to learn how to use them.

Learning how to use your golfing equipment well involves practice, but also understanding which shot every club is best for. This is arguably more important than purchasing the best clubs that you can afford, because even if you have the best clubs in the world, using a putter when you ought to be using an iron will be most harmful to your game.

This knowledge comes with experience, obviously and you can substitute for information by hiring a decent caddy, but really, you should know for yourself too. This involves coming second in hundreds of games against an opponent, but you do not learn much by playing someone less able than yourself.

This is where enthusiasm or love of the game comes in. You have to be able to put up with losing frequently in the early days and this is very hard for a competitive individual. Enthusiasm and determination will carry you through this initial learning period, although hopefully you will learn something new from every game you play all your life.

Here follows a bit of broad common sense about choosing the correct club for the beginner.

The novice golfer is almost never proficient, naturally, so hitting the ball too hard is hardly ever a problem. Getting around corners or obstacles is also beyond the ability of the novice, therefore distance is the priority and that means using the heaviest golf clubs until you are within easy range of the green.

When you are within 50 yards of the green, you can make some attempt at choosing the right club for the shot. When on the green, it is fairly common knowledge to use a putter. If you drop into a sand bunker on the way to the green, the sand wedge appears the obvious choice. The name is the give-away here.

If you are playing with decent people, not good golfers, they will normally be all to glad to help you decide on the correct club, until you start winning. If they won't advise you, play with someone else. After all, golfing is a game and it is supposed to be enjoyable.

You will soon learn the essentials of what works best for you and you will spend the remainder of your life refining the knowledge you learned in the first few months of becoming hooked on the wonderful game of golfing.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment