PingManT Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 Yes, much easier to play from the fairway than behind some trees … lol. I bought the PingG430 last year and getting decent distance and more consistent accuracy. For me a good trade off. Rob Person 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IndyBonzo Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 3 hours ago, benrd5420 said: The answer to this question for me has changed after moving from Arizona to Ohio. When I live in Arizona, I would have leaned into being more aggressive and tried to get more out of my driver distance wise. Since moving to Ohio, that has shifted. Many people have already eluded to this here, but it all comes down to what the penalty is for the errant shot. In Arizona, the rough can be penal but doesn't tend to get grown up too much and is rarely wet and sticky. Additionally, if you really spray one right or left your real danger is not less lost balls (assuming the course is not lined with houses), but cactus and things that want to bite and sting you. When you find the ball, getting back to the fairway is usually a pretty open shot. Since moving to Ohio the courses are much more likely to be tree lined, have thicker rough, and play much more wet. If you are not landing in the fairway you are getting no rollout, and your next shot is at a significant disadvantage if not blocked out completely. So for me, losing distance loss is negligible if you aren't having to bunt back to the fairway. Still, all this considered, max I think I would give up is 15 or so yards in the end, which in the end is a club, club and a half. No surprise, Indiana golf is the same. I would gladly give up 10-15 yards distance in order to be assured I always have a decent second shot, whether that be from the fairway or first cut. Avoiding trees, bunkers, lakes, houses, and the ball-magnet cart paths is key. That's why I hit the mini driver and hybrids more and more often off the tee lately. PingManT, CudaKota66, Rob Person and 1 other 4 Quote Working at getting better ... and very slowly getting there. Paradym Max 8* ( Shogun Blue M0 Otto-Phlex) Brnr Mini driver 13.5* ( FX 3.0 140 M1 Otto-Phlex) Paradym X 4 and 5 Hybrids Maltby TS1 (shafts: Tour 120S) RTX6 Zipcore 53*, and 58* mid wedges ( wedge shafts 6.5) Frontline Elite 1.0 Gloves My Official 2024 TaylorMade Qi10 Review: https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/62804-taylormade-qi10-drivers-2024-forum-member-review/?do=findComment&comment=1014200 My Official 2023 Red Rooster Sussex Glove Review: https://forum.mygolfspy.com/topic/58614-2023-mgs-forum-member-test-red-rooster-sussex-golf-glove/#comment-911042 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wade L Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 Yes, yes, yes. just sold my year and a few months old Mizuno JPX 923 HM irons with lightweight Recoil 460 R shafts. Currently playing a 20 year old set of PINGs until I decide which new clubs will get me better dispersion and distance control. I hit the center of the face more often than not and like knowing when I miss. The JPX 923 HM's were forgiving to a fault. Almost too long. I will definitely sacrifice some length for control and workability. Rob Person and IndyBonzo 2 Quote as of May 7, 2024 Driver: Titleist TSR2 9° w/ GD Tour AD DI-6 SR Wood: Titleist 913D 15°/19° w/Diamana D+ 82g Hybrid: Ping 425 3 19° Alta CB 70g Irons: Titleist 913D 15°/19° Diamana D+ 82g Wedge: Mizuno T22 54°/58° degree w/ UST Mamiya Recoil ESX 460 F3 Putter: Scotty Newport 2.5+/Odessey White Hot OG1 SL (alternate Balls: Maxfi Tour X / Bridgestone B-RX / Titleist Pro V1x (depends how I feel that day) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lyle Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 That is a very difficult question. I love distance but keeping it in play and being able to keep it safe and give yourself opportunities is definitely the name of the game IndyBonzo and Rob Person 2 Quote Driver- Gen6 Tensei white 75g xflex tipped 9 degree 3 wood- proto hybrid- proto irons- mp52 gw- 50 degree sw- jaws 56 degree lw- 64 degree putter- bat attack bag- ball- Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nannypops Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 I just changed my Epic Flash from 9 degrees to 10 degrees. My accuracy is much better, almost always keeping drives in the fairway. I’m giving up some yardage I’m still evaluating which is better, distance or accuracy. I’m leaning towards accuracy Rob Person and IndyBonzo 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Indy_Oz Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 4 minutes ago, IndyBonzo said: No surprise, Indiana golf is the same. I would gladly give up 10-15 yards distance in order to be assured I always have a decent second shot, whether that be from the fairway or first cut. Avoiding trees, bunkers, lakes, houses, and the ball-magnet cart paths is key. That's why I hit the mini driver and hybrids more and more often off the tee lately. Same. 3 wood and 18* hybrid are my fairway finders for tighter courses. When I last played Prairie View, I used 3W on half the tees and driver only a 3-4. My muni for league, mostly driver as it's so open. IndyBonzo and Rob Person 2 Quote 2024 WITB: Driver: Ai Smoke Max 9* (@8*) w. Denali 60g 6.5 (XS) FW woods: TSR2+ 13* '2W' w. Mitsubishi Tensei White 75X & TSR2 21* 7W w. Mitsubishi Tensei White 75X Hybrid: Stealth+ 3H (@18*) w. Hzrdus Smoke RDX Red 80/6.5 Irons: 5i-PW: '17 P790 w. Tour C-Taper Lite 115X (Currently Testing: 4i-PW: 2024 P770 w. Rifle 6.0 (+1/4")) Wedges: 50/09 MG4; 56/12 MG4TW Raw; SM9 60/04L Putter: Phantom X7 Ball: TP5x // Chrome Tour // Maxfli Tour X Other: . Gogogo Sport V-Pro rangefinder; Woode Hybrid Stand Bag; Nitron push cart. 2024 Tests: Callaway Whitebox Test- Chrome Tour & Tour X Balls 2024 Sqairz Velo Shoe 2024 Taylormade P770 Irons (ongoing) "...pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space, 'cause there's bugger all down here on Earth!"- Eric Idle Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shapotomous Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 If the course is wide open then I will take a grip it & rip it swing. If not then I will grip down and take a 90% swing, hit most fairways and have minimal dispersion with 20 yards given up. The guy I beat two weeks ago in league play said he would give up 30 yards to be in play for his 2nd shot. I was in play consistently 50 yards behind him but his 300+ to somewhere unknown on the planet had him hitting two tee balls on three holes and he was in his pocket when those were equally in @Yellow Ball revenge territory. IndyBonzo and Rob Person 2 Quote Modern Bag: G410 LST 10.5*, Hzrdus Smoke RDX 6.5 Flex; 915F 3w, Diamana S+ 70 S flex; Mavrik 18* 5w; JPX 919 HM Pro 4i; JPX 900 Forged 5 - PW, PX LZ 6.0; Edison 2.0 49*, 53*, 57* KBS Tour 120 S; Heppler Fetch; Ball - MTB-X; Bag - Jones MyGolfSpy Edition! Shot Scope H4, MG600 Rangefinder Classic Bag: Driver - Persimmon; 3w - Speed Slot; 5w - Tour Block; 3 - pw - Dynapower; sw - Ram Tom Watson; putter - bullseye standard or flange. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Golfzilla70 Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 It's funny, i play with a lot of longer hitters (longer than me anyway) and i carry the ball anywhere between 235 and 245 yards, and it'll roll out another 10-15 yards on normal days. And i'm probably more accurate than most (i'm about a 3 handicap). And those long hitters all wish they had my accuracy. I've actually been much longer, but age has slowed me down. And i can tell you, i'd rather ALWAYS have that threat of the big bomb in me than not ever having it at all, like i do now. You don't know what you have until you can't have it anymore. Rob Person and IndyBonzo 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dr. Coach B Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 Being that I have worked SOOOO hard in the weight room, speed training, and dialing equipment to get the yardage I have now, off the tee I am not willing to give up any yardage. BUT, I would give up a club length with my irons to be more accurate on approach shots. IndyBonzo and Rob Person 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
huggydougy Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 Yes of course IndyBonzo 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Brad Easter Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 (edited) I just had back surgery and I have to use a shorter driver. I’m using a 43 inch D4 driver. It’s very straight and good for 220 yards. The weight of the head is 220 grams. I have three of these 9.0,10.5,13.5.I use the 13.5 plus 2 degrees which is now 15.5 degrees as a 43 inch 3 wood very accurate and long.I’m a golfsmith and I like making clubs work for me. Edited June 1 by Brad Easter Rob Person and IndyBonzo 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dweed Posted May 31 Share Posted May 31 I guess I'd give up 10 yards for a 10-15% increase in fairways. Rob Person and PrismFlopper 2 Quote D- Ping G 400 SFT 16*- Adams Tight Lie 19*- Adams Tight Lie 4H- Ping G 400 5-U- Ping G 400 SW- Nike 56*- Ping Glide 2 P- Sub70 004 Mallet Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Markfalto Posted June 1 Share Posted June 1 For those that choose accuracy over distance keep the 9,10 degree driver in the bag and go with a 15 degree shorter shafted 3 wood or a 18 degree 5 wood, more loft produces more backspin less side spin which in parts tighter dispersion Rob Person 1 Quote Have had a passion for golf since my childhood days. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PrismFlopper Posted June 1 Share Posted June 1 Is this a general accuracy for distance or can I give up yardage for a % of accuracy. Cause I generally hit it pretty far but when I really get after it my accuracy drops so if been swinging slower to get better accuracy. For instance my 4iron goes on average 235 just due to I’m younger and I work out and have flexibility, but if I pipe it I can get up to 250 but has a tendency to fade 20-30 yds off line. So technically I am sacrificing distance for accuracy just by swinging slower. Rob Person 1 Quote Been playing for about 2 years in total. Winter breaks and a 6month period when I got sick. Starting to feel like myself again and recently played a “okay” round. I currently have custom fit Cobra LTDx irons/wedges, a Vokey 60(cause my short game has been the best part of my game, and a Maverick 9 deg. Driver. Driving is the worst part of my game so My 4 iron usually takes alot of the long game abuse. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wolfstrum Posted June 1 Share Posted June 1 (edited) I am a high handicapper (this year’s goal is to get below 100). To achieve that goal I am putting my focus on consistency. When I consider a gear purchase I evaluate how it will help deliver consistency. As my consistency improves I will start working on accuracy and from there I will look at improving distance. I am trying to improve all parts of my game while picking one part to emphasize. At the moment my emphasis is on my irons. I made some changes in the off season to my iron swing and am seeing the result in more consistency with those clubs. That consistency has already lead to improvements in accuracy and added distance. Stroke gained is the key. From all the examples shared in this thread, the path to strokes gained varies by player, course, ability, conditions, hole, and situation. Most importantly make sure you are having fun. Edited June 1 by Wolfstrum Rob Person 1 Quote Switch hitter, RH Driver, LH Irons Callaway Mavrik Driver (RH) Sub 70 3i Driving/Utility iron (LH) Maltby STi2 4i-PW, GW (LH) Mizuno MP R Series 52 degree Wilson Jim Ferrier Signature SW (LH) Mizuno TP Mills blade putter (LH) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JRSADLER Posted June 1 Share Posted June 1 At my age I cannot give up much more distance as a senior golfer, Longer par 4 holes are already 3 shots to get on the green. No, I am not interested in giving up distance for accuracy. Maybe 30-40 years ago, but not now. Rob Person 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aguybadatgolf Posted June 1 Share Posted June 1 Depends on how much distance you’re giving up and how much accuracy you’re getting in return. According to shot scope my playing average is 303. I’d be willing to lose 20 yards to gain 5-10 yards tighter dispersion. More than that and I feel it’s not worth it. Strokes gained data shows hitting it further is always better unless your in a hazard chisag and Rob Person 2 Quote Tester Opportunities 2024 Ping S159 Wedges 2023 Zebra AIT3 Putter The Bag Driver - Paradym Ai Smoke MAX Driver with Project X Denali - 6.5 3W - Paradym 15° with Kai'li™ White - X 3H - Gen5 0311 19° with Ventus Blue Velocore - X Driving Iron - 699 Pro 20° with UST PROFORCE V2 Hybrid White/Yellow - X Irons - 6-PW 699 Pro in black with Dynamic Gold X100 Wedges - S159 50, 54, 58 Dynamic Gold X100 (TESTER) Putter - KING 3D Printed Agera Armlock Putter , Zebra AIT 3 (On time out) Ball - Z-Star XV or Pro Plus Tester for 2024 Ping S159 Wedges 2023 Zebra AIT3 Putter Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rob Person Posted June 1 Share Posted June 1 18 minutes ago, aguybadatgolf said: Depends on how much distance you’re giving up and how much accuracy you’re getting in return. According to shot scope my playing average is 303. I’d be willing to lose 20 yards to gain 5-10 yards tighter dispersion. More than that and I feel it’s not worth it. Strokes gained data shows hitting it further is always better unless your in a hazard That's what I think too. No more than 20 yards, but get 50% better dispersion/accuracy? Sign me up! Of o get to the point where either improves naturally, I may reconsider the balance aguybadatgolf 1 Quote WITB- Driver -Titleist 910D, 3w- Titleist 910F, 5hy/7hy- Titleist 910H, 6-PW - Stix , 52⁰, 56⁰, 60⁰ - Stix , Putter- AI-ONE DB / Lombardi Tour 34 custom Just an old newbie golfer, trying to learn and improve 1 club at a time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rob17452 Posted June 2 Share Posted June 2 I have a terrible slice which I am working to correct, I have been practicing swinging between 50 and 75%. I have noticed that during my range sessions by doing this I am getting a straighter ball flight, but my distance is down anywhere from 30-40 yards. My next step is to try this swing technique on the course. For the time being if I can hit more fairways and save strokes on lost balls and punch-outs then I would be willing to accept the yardage loss. Rob Person 1 Quote DR Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Golf88 Posted June 2 Share Posted June 2 Honestly depends on the course. If I can spray it around a bit and the rough is lighter I will choose distance over accuracy. If the course is a bit tighter with heavier rough, more hazards, etc then I will absolutely choke down on the driver and play for accuracy. So for me it wouldn’t be all or nothing it would be based on the conditions and the course. Rob Person 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Swood1994 Posted June 3 Share Posted June 3 To me there’s a happy medium of distance versus accuracy. I say accuracy as I don’t necessarily think that means fairways. Like others have said it depends on the course. I also am a little longer off the tee so if I could give up 10 yards to stay within the first cut left or right I think that’s a fair trade off. Rob Person and Byrnzee 2 Quote Current WITB: Driver: Paradym 10.5 Ventus Black 6S (currently Testing AI Smoke) Fairway: ST-Z 230 3-Wood (15°) HZRDUS Smoke Black 6.0 60 Official Test Hybrid: ST-Z 230 Hybrid (19°) Ventus Blue HB-8 Official Test Irons: MP-18 MMC (4-9) Wedges: Vokey SM8 (46.10F, 50.12F, 54.14F, 58.12D) Putter: Select Squareback 2 34.5 Ping Corded 88G PP58 grip double taped Ball: Pro-V1 Reviews: 2023 Red Rooster Sussex Glove Official Forum Test 2023 Mizuno Long Game Official Forum Test 2024 Skytrak+ Official Forum Test Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ChuckZ Posted June 3 Share Posted June 3 I find it so much easier to score from the short grass than in the rough. Played with a young man last week who hit the ball 300 yards, but he never knew where his drives would go. Mine much much much shorter but in the fairway. Guess who scored the best. Also he was bad with math. Accuracy is always best, but a good combination of both works best. Good distance and great accuracy. Rob Person 1 Quote Driver - TSi3 10.75* - Fujikura Speeder 661 TR Fairway - TSi2 14.25* - Fujikura Motore Speeder VC 6.1 Fairway - TSR1 17.0* - Fujikura Vista Pro 65S Hybrid - TSR1 19.0* - Fujikura Atmos Red Tour 75 Hybrid - TSR1 23.0* - Fujikura Atmos Red Tour 75 Irons - T350 (2023) - 5-48W - True Temper AMT Red 95g-107g Wedges - Vokey SM9 - 52.08F, 56.10S, 58.08M ** GolfPride MCC +4 Midsize Grips (all woods/irons/wedges) Putter - 2023 Scotty Cameron Super Select Squareback 2 35" ** Superstroke 1.0 Pistol Grip Golf Ball - TITLEIST - Prov1 (2023) Golf Bags - TITLEIST - Cart 14 (black), Mid Size Tour (black/white) Golf Glove - FootJoy (StaSof), Shoes, Apparel and Outerwear Rangefinder - Bushnell Pro XE Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KINGWinston Posted June 3 Share Posted June 3 Reading the responses have been interesting. Finding the balance between distance and accuracy is a battle for me. I make this decision a few times alone out on the course. I try to let the hole/course dictate that. If there's trouble where I tend to miss or my target area is tight, I'll hit my safe drive which is way more accurate and sacrifices some distance if i HAVE to be in play. If there fairway is pretty wide or I feel like an errant shot wouldn't hinder me too much, I'll give that one a ride. That being said, I really think the course you're playing should influence your shots. Also, we all seem to associate distance and accuracy with the driver but if I had the choice of some distance or accuracy with my irons, I think that answer is accuracy 99/100. Rob Person 1 Quote Driver: M4 - 10.5* Fairway: M4 3-Wood Hybrid: M4 3H - 19* Irons: Nike 4i VRS Irons: M4 5-AW Wedges: 52* MyMG2 & 60* MGIII Tiger Woods Putter: 2024 Spider Ghost Ball: ProV1 - #14 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KINGWinston Posted June 3 Share Posted June 3 5 hours ago, ChuckZ said: I find it so much easier to score from the short grass than in the rough. Played with a young man last week who hit the ball 300 yards, but he never knew where his drives would go. Mine much much much shorter but in the fairway. Guess who scored the best. Also he was bad with math. Accuracy is always best, but a good combination of both works best. Good distance and great accuracy. I seen an earlier comment about rather being 20-40 yards further in the rough than back and in the fairway... while that may work for a hole or two, long term, you need to be in the short stuff to score. you sacrifice accuracy out of the rough before you even hit your shot. I've got a buddy who will bomb the ball all over the place and when he connects on a good one it looks awesome but I always hit him with the "I'll see ya whenever you get up there" Accuracy is king Rob Person 1 Quote Driver: M4 - 10.5* Fairway: M4 3-Wood Hybrid: M4 3H - 19* Irons: Nike 4i VRS Irons: M4 5-AW Wedges: 52* MyMG2 & 60* MGIII Tiger Woods Putter: 2024 Spider Ghost Ball: ProV1 - #14 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NM01 Posted June 4 Share Posted June 4 2 hours ago, KINGWinston said: I seen an earlier comment about rather being 20-40 yards further in the rough than back and in the fairway... while that may work for a hole or two, long term, you need to be in the short stuff to score. you sacrifice accuracy out of the rough before you even hit your shot. I've got a buddy who will bomb the ball all over the place and when he connects on a good one it looks awesome but I always hit him with the "I'll see ya whenever you get up there" Accuracy is king Strokes gain says the exact opposite. Being closer to the hole even in the rough than further back in the fairway. Proximity to the hole goes up, green hit goes up, putting stats improve. if one can get out of normal rough with a wedge hitting from the fairway with a 7i isn’t going to make them score better. Then when you combine strokes gained with course management you get systems like decade which accounts for when there maybe trouble or not enough room for ones dispersion pattern, then you make a smarter choice but you don’t go going up 20+ yards just to score better. The difference in fairways between handicaps isn’t that large so more fairway hits don’t lead to a better score or strokes gained .that data is posted in this thread if you care to read it. Data>feelings Rob Person 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KINGWinston Posted June 4 Share Posted June 4 20 hours ago, RickyBobby_PR said: Strokes gain says the exact opposite. Being closer to the hole even in the rough than further back in the fairway. Proximity to the hole goes up, green hit goes up, putting stats improve. if one can get out of normal rough with a wedge hitting from the fairway with a 7i isn’t going to make them score better. Then when you combine strokes gained with course management you get systems like decade which accounts for when there maybe trouble or not enough room for ones dispersion pattern, then you make a smarter choice but you don’t go going up 20+ yards just to score better. The difference in fairways between handicaps isn’t that large so more fairway hits don’t lead to a better score or strokes gained .that data is posted in this thread if you care to read it. Data>feelings What stroke gained stats exactly? For what handicap player? While I don't completely disagree (I'll take 40+ yards all day) but the yardage difference isn't generally that drastic so let's assume a 20-25 yard difference. There are more variables from playing out of the rough, starting with the rough itself. Those stats, just like any other sport I've played, only tell one side of the story. An extra 25 yards is amazing but does it help when you're right behind a tree and have to chip out or forced to lay up? If we're talking pro's than absolutely being a little off line in the rough isn't a problem but i was say the shot dispersion on this thread is a tad bit different that tour pros. Data helps but I've never been driven by data in any sport i played, if you are it can become a fault. Sometimes you have to go with feel/flow of the game. Rob Person 1 Quote Driver: M4 - 10.5* Fairway: M4 3-Wood Hybrid: M4 3H - 19* Irons: Nike 4i VRS Irons: M4 5-AW Wedges: 52* MyMG2 & 60* MGIII Tiger Woods Putter: 2024 Spider Ghost Ball: ProV1 - #14 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chisag Posted June 4 Share Posted June 4 13 minutes ago, KINGWinston said: What stroke gained stats exactly? For what handicap player? While I don't completely disagree (I'll take 40+ yards all day) but the yardage difference isn't generally that drastic so let's assume a 20-25 yard difference. There are more variables from playing out of the rough, starting with the rough itself. Those stats, just like any other sport I've played, only tell one side of the story. An extra 25 yards is amazing but does it help when you're right behind a tree and have to chip out or forced to lay up? If we're talking pro's than absolutely being a little off line in the rough isn't a problem but i was say the shot dispersion on this thread is a tad bit different that tour pros. Data helps but I've never been driven by data in any sport i played, if you are it can become a fault. Sometimes you have to go with feel/flow of the game. ... Good points. There is a HUGE difference between a low index player and a high index player advancing a ball on a par 5 as near the green as possible with a hazard left and the fairway sloping right to left like a hole at my home course. Anything to the middle left of the hard and fast fairway will find the hazard. There is a big bunker on the right and better players will challenge the bunker trying to just skirt it and have the ball move left not the green. Being in the bunker for a 30yd shots isn't that difficult and well worth the risk and we often just hit over it. But when you don't know where your miss is going to be and the left side is so penal, laying up with an iron is really a better play. ... Next is short siding yourself. Better players know where to miss their approach shots on long par 4's or 2nd shots into par 5's. If the pin is tucked on the right side with deep rough next to a green that slopes away from you, the miss will be left. Higher index players don't really have that option if they hit it left and right, so picking a club that keeps them short of the green is usually a better play. Not lay back to a 100yd wedge but something a little short of the green ... And then there are deep difficult bunkers, trees, water or other hazards that can mean an errant shot is almost a sure double bogie. I think the ability of any given player and how they are swinging that day are big factors in deciding how far to advance the ball. ... Having said all that, my game did take a jump when I started advancing the ball as far as possible when prudent and stopped laying up to a wedge yardage. I think most low index players find the same. But mid and high index players need to know their strengths and tendencies before deciding to hit the ball as far as possible and just play smart. Rob Person and KINGWinston 2 Quote Driver: Qi10 10.5* ... AutoFlex Dream 7 SF405 Fairway: Qi10 5 wood ... Kai'Li Blue 70r Hybrids: G430 Hybrid 22*... Alta Hy70r Irons: P770 5-pw ... Steelfiber i80r TP UDi 4 ... Steelfiber i80r Wedges: MG3 46*/50*/54* MG4 58* ... Steelfiber i95r Putter: Custom 5.1 (no alignment) 33" Ball: '24 TP5x/Maxfli Tour X Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NM01 Posted June 4 Share Posted June 4 (edited) 51 minutes ago, KINGWinston said: What stroke gained stats exactly? For what handicap player? While I don't completely disagree (I'll take 40+ yards all day) but the yardage difference isn't generally that drastic so let's assume a 20-25 yard difference. There are more variables from playing out of the rough, starting with the rough itself. Those stats, just like any other sport I've played, only tell one side of the story. An extra 25 yards is amazing but does it help when you're right behind a tree and have to chip out or forced to lay up? If we're talking pro's than absolutely being a little off line in the rough isn't a problem but i was say the shot dispersion on this thread is a tad bit different that tour pros. Data helps but I've never been driven by data in any sport i played, if you are it can become a fault. Sometimes you have to go with feel/flow of the game. Nothing helps behind a tree regardless of where you’re at or if you are in the woods. But all strokes gained stats show it’s better to be closer to the hole than further away regardless of handicap. Course management strategies incorporate strokes gained into picking targets and distance. The closer one is the better their proximity to the hole is. The closer you are in proximity the better the make perecdntage goes. Feel free to go read broadies work and see for yourself or not and stay stuck in methods that data doesn’t support. some data for you https://www.golfmonthly.com/features/is-hitting-fairways-overrated-according-to-the-data-obsessing-over-the-short-grass-could-be-a-mistake Edited June 4 by RickyBobby_PR Rob Person and funkyjudge 1 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KINGWinston Posted June 5 Share Posted June 5 On 6/4/2024 at 2:17 PM, chisag said: ... Good points. There is a HUGE difference between a low index player and a high index player advancing a ball on a par 5 as near the green as possible with a hazard left and the fairway sloping right to left like a hole at my home course. Anything to the middle left of the hard and fast fairway will find the hazard. There is a big bunker on the right and better players will challenge the bunker trying to just skirt it and have the ball move left not the green. Being in the bunker for a 30yd shots isn't that difficult and well worth the risk and we often just hit over it. But when you don't know where your miss is going to be and the left side is so penal, laying up with an iron is really a better play. ... Next is short siding yourself. Better players know where to miss their approach shots on long par 4's or 2nd shots into par 5's. If the pin is tucked on the right side with deep rough next to a green that slopes away from you, the miss will be left. Higher index players don't really have that option if they hit it left and right, so picking a club that keeps them short of the green is usually a better play. Not lay back to a 100yd wedge but something a little short of the green ... And then there are deep difficult bunkers, trees, water or other hazards that can mean an errant shot is almost a sure double bogie. I think the ability of any given player and how they are swinging that day are big factors in deciding how far to advance the ball. ... Having said all that, my game did take a jump when I started advancing the ball as far as possible when prudent and stopped laying up to a wedge yardage. I think most low index players find the same. But mid and high index players need to know their strengths and tendencies before deciding to hit the ball as far as possible and just play smart. Love this post! Yeah I'm not trying to dispute distance has an overall advantage. WHEN PRUDENT is huuuuge and that's where my argument stems from, you can't bomb and gouge every hole. I hope no one is laying up to wedge yardage unless you absolutely have to. I feel like high handicappers are going to read this thread and say "exactly why I'm going to bomb it everytime" well how often are you in the rough with a shot at the green. I was looking at this questions more from the tee rather than anywhere on the course. Rob Person 1 Quote Driver: M4 - 10.5* Fairway: M4 3-Wood Hybrid: M4 3H - 19* Irons: Nike 4i VRS Irons: M4 5-AW Wedges: 52* MyMG2 & 60* MGIII Tiger Woods Putter: 2024 Spider Ghost Ball: ProV1 - #14 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KINGWinston Posted June 5 Share Posted June 5 On 6/4/2024 at 2:30 PM, RickyBobby_PR said: Nothing helps behind a tree regardless of where you’re at or if you are in the woods. But all strokes gained stats show it’s better to be closer to the hole than further away regardless of handicap. Course management strategies incorporate strokes gained into picking targets and distance. The closer one is the better their proximity to the hole is. The closer you are in proximity the better the make perecdntage goes. Feel free to go read broadies work and see for yourself or not and stay stuck in methods that data doesn’t support. some data for you https://www.golfmonthly.com/features/is-hitting-fairways-overrated-according-to-the-data-obsessing-over-the-short-grass-could-be-a-mistake i appreciate it and i'll take a look but i don't think i'm "stuck" in methods that data doesn't support. Again, data only tells you one side of the story and i think you're missing that being so data driven. you can't always live on statistics. The beautiful thing about golf is everyone has a different way or view on how to get the ball in the hole the quickest. Rob Person 1 Quote Driver: M4 - 10.5* Fairway: M4 3-Wood Hybrid: M4 3H - 19* Irons: Nike 4i VRS Irons: M4 5-AW Wedges: 52* MyMG2 & 60* MGIII Tiger Woods Putter: 2024 Spider Ghost Ball: ProV1 - #14 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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