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***Official 2025 Golf Thread, Woz humble brags high butter cuts*** (25 Viewers)

2024 was a weird golf year for me.

Highs:
  • Trip to Bandon Dunes. I think if you love golf, you have to find a way to make a pilgrimage there once in your life.
I'll echo this. I think my trip there cost me six or seven grand. Played all the courses. In hindsight, I would have happily paid 20 grand or more for that experience. So, so great.
Hmmmmm I have that option this summer. I think quoted ~$10k (group offering has a few "ballers" with their own private jets an ****). I already committed $4k to a Pebble trip in November, though. Not sure if I can get away with two trips in one year.

Happy to fill your seat if you're too busy.....

Bandon is my dream trip. We were planning to go this upcoming October, but the change in their reservation system (turning it into a total lottery) turned my group off and the trip fell apart. Obviously Pebble is amazing though. Likely better weather, easier to get to and Pebble itself is probably more of a bucket list course than any of the courses at Bandon.

At Bandon you run the risk of blow you off the planet, round-ruining weather and it SUCKS to get there. But the per-round cost is much cheaper (even in peak season, first round of the day only costs like $370...and then 2nd round is half price) and you get FIVE top 100 public courses (plus the 2 short courses). Obviously you can play Spyglass and Spanish Bay, but IMO...unless you have a way onto Cypress, Bandon is the better trip.

I think my dad, my brothers and I are going to Big Cedar Lodge this fall. Nothing official yet, but its at the top of the list. Would LOVE to do the Bandon trip with them, but my youngest brother is only a VERY casual golfer and I dont think my dad (just turned 75) would be able to make the walks there 4 or 5 days in a row.
Big Cedar is awesome. Buffalo Ridge is so underrated and two fun short courses (Top of the Rock, Mountaintop) as well. Bandon is great but for all the reasons you mentioned it takes just a bit of shine off.
 
Ball striking all of a sudden terrible. Just slapping it around. Can still drive it and depend on my short game, but irons are unreliable. Usually a plane issue. No real compression. Back to basics
 
Any recommendations for new woods? I got a new set of irons last year (Callaway Smoke), so time for the next level. I've received a green light for a driver this spring and a strong maybe for a 3 wood by summer. Hybrids may be a year out, but we'll see how much we sink into our home improvement budget.

I got a club fitting with a highly regarded local pro for xmas, so we're good there, just hunting for some ideas before setting that appointment. Not in any rush, coaching responsibilities heavily limit my availability through mid-May, so it's possible I don't tee one up until Memorial Day weekend.
 
Any recommendations for new woods? I got a new set of irons last year (Callaway Smoke), so time for the next level. I've received a green light for a driver this spring and a strong maybe for a 3 wood by summer. Hybrids may be a year out, but we'll see how much we sink into our home improvement budget.

I got a club fitting with a highly regarded local pro for xmas, so we're good there, just hunting for some ideas before setting that appointment. Not in any rush, coaching responsibilities heavily limit my availability through mid-May, so it's possible I don't tee one up until Memorial Day weekend.
Whatever wood best fits your specs along with whatever shaft best fits your specs. 😊
 
Any recommendations for new woods? I got a new set of irons last year (Callaway Smoke), so time for the next level. I've received a green light for a driver this spring and a strong maybe for a 3 wood by summer. Hybrids may be a year out, but we'll see how much we sink into our home improvement budget.

I got a club fitting with a highly regarded local pro for xmas, so we're good there, just hunting for some ideas before setting that appointment. Not in any rush, coaching responsibilities heavily limit my availability through mid-May, so it's possible I don't tee one up until Memorial Day weekend.
Whatever wood best fits your specs along with whatever shaft best fits your specs. 😊
This might sound like a dismissive answer but it's accurate. Whatever the fitting says to get, get it. The shaft is at least as important as the head brand. You may end up with a Titleist/70g shaft or a Srixon/40g. It's all in your swing and that's what fittings are for.
 
Any recommendations for new woods? I got a new set of irons last year (Callaway Smoke), so time for the next level. I've received a green light for a driver this spring and a strong maybe for a 3 wood by summer. Hybrids may be a year out, but we'll see how much we sink into our home improvement budget.

I got a club fitting with a highly regarded local pro for xmas, so we're good there, just hunting for some ideas before setting that appointment. Not in any rush, coaching responsibilities heavily limit my availability through mid-May, so it's possible I don't tee one up until Memorial Day weekend.
FWIW, idk how good you are or if others who know more will disagree, but I find the hybrid to be the most important, consistent, and most used club in my bag. If or when I ever update clubs and get re-fit, if I can't pay for the whole bag at once I'm definitely going hybrid first in purchase order.
 
Another thing: the manufacturers are coming out with this year's models right now and they're expensive. They might be worth the money (drivers are around $650 before tax and with a stock shaft) but I'd doubt it. I'd suggest sticking with the previous generation or even two prior.

I just bought a Callaway Rogue ST Max Heavenwood (essentially a 7 wood at 20 degrees) and 3 wood. The Rogue is the generation previous to the Smoke. They cost me $120/each. They were barely used demos.

I bought a Titleist TSr2 head for $150 to "upgrade" from my TSi2 - which I sold for $100.

Golf is expensive but it doesn't have to be break the bank expensive.

And I'm a big advocate of high lofted fairway woods - like 7 and 9 and even 11. And yes, hybrids too. My first true iron is a 7.
 
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Any recommendations for new woods? I got a new set of irons last year (Callaway Smoke), so time for the next level. I've received a green light for a driver this spring and a strong maybe for a 3 wood by summer. Hybrids may be a year out, but we'll see how much we sink into our home improvement budget.

I got a club fitting with a highly regarded local pro for xmas, so we're good there, just hunting for some ideas before setting that appointment. Not in any rush, coaching responsibilities heavily limit my availability through mid-May, so it's possible I don't tee one up until Memorial Day weekend.
FWIW, idk how good you are or if others who know more will disagree, but I find the hybrid to be the most important, consistent, and most used club in my bag. If or when I ever update clubs and get re-fit, if I can't pay for the whole bag at once I'm definitely going hybrid first in purchase order.
Sand traps aside, I'm decent. Put me on a course with room for error and if I'm on I can shoot par, if I'm off mid-80's. On a challenging course? I'm always due for a couple blow-ups, usually when sand is involved, so best case is break 80 and can easily shoot well into the 90's. Guessing that probably comes out to a 15 handicap give or take.

But, at the point of contact, I'm fairly consistent. Directionally challenged, which is why I'm blow-up prone, but generally steady contact. I don't have an iron under 5, that's my 185 club. I make okay contact with my 3 wood, the problem is it's ancient, so much over 200 is usually reliant on dry ground. I seem to be 225+ out more often than ~200 (par 5's), which is why I'm leaning 3 wood before hybrid, but I can be convinced.
 
Love all this fitting talk.

My coach said that Dragonfly is one of the best local places to get fitted. My plan is to get a driver next month and continue to use the irons I have until the summer then re-evaluate. That'll give me about a year of playing and practicing to then get fitted for irons.

I am very interested in the hybrid vs woods vs long irons talk too. My 4i is about 210-220 off the deck and I was already leaning towards a set that included a 3I instead of a hybrid because my swing seems to fit the irons really well...so far :lol:
 
Any recommendations for new woods? I got a new set of irons last year (Callaway Smoke), so time for the next level. I've received a green light for a driver this spring and a strong maybe for a 3 wood by summer. Hybrids may be a year out, but we'll see how much we sink into our home improvement budget.

I got a club fitting with a highly regarded local pro for xmas, so we're good there, just hunting for some ideas before setting that appointment. Not in any rush, coaching responsibilities heavily limit my availability through mid-May, so it's possible I don't tee one up until Memorial Day weekend.
FWIW, idk how good you are or if others who know more will disagree, but I find the hybrid to be the most important, consistent, and most used club in my bag. If or when I ever update clubs and get re-fit, if I can't pay for the whole bag at once I'm definitely going hybrid first in purchase order.
Sand traps aside, I'm decent. Put me on a course with room for error and if I'm on I can shoot par, if I'm off mid-80's. On a challenging course? I'm always due for a couple blow-ups, usually when sand is involved, so best case is break 80 and can easily shoot well into the 90's. Guessing that probably comes out to a 15 handicap give or take.

But, at the point of contact, I'm fairly consistent. Directionally challenged, which is why I'm blow-up prone, but generally steady contact. I don't have an iron under 5, that's my 185 club. I make okay contact with my 3 wood, the problem is it's ancient, so much over 200 is usually reliant on dry ground. I seem to be 225+ out more often than ~200 (par 5's), which is why I'm leaning 3 wood before hybrid, but I can be convinced.
No offense but if you can shoot par you are like a 5
 
Any recommendations for new woods? I got a new set of irons last year (Callaway Smoke), so time for the next level. I've received a green light for a driver this spring and a strong maybe for a 3 wood by summer. Hybrids may be a year out, but we'll see how much we sink into our home improvement budget.

I got a club fitting with a highly regarded local pro for xmas, so we're good there, just hunting for some ideas before setting that appointment. Not in any rush, coaching responsibilities heavily limit my availability through mid-May, so it's possible I don't tee one up until Memorial Day weekend.
FWIW, idk how good you are or if others who know more will disagree, but I find the hybrid to be the most important, consistent, and most used club in my bag. If or when I ever update clubs and get re-fit, if I can't pay for the whole bag at once I'm definitely going hybrid first in purchase order.
Sand traps aside, I'm decent. Put me on a course with room for error and if I'm on I can shoot par, if I'm off mid-80's. On a challenging course? I'm always due for a couple blow-ups, usually when sand is involved, so best case is break 80 and can easily shoot well into the 90's. Guessing that probably comes out to a 15 handicap give or take.

But, at the point of contact, I'm fairly consistent. Directionally challenged, which is why I'm blow-up prone, but generally steady contact. I don't have an iron under 5, that's my 185 club. I make okay contact with my 3 wood, the problem is it's ancient, so much over 200 is usually reliant on dry ground. I seem to be 225+ out more often than ~200 (par 5's), which is why I'm leaning 3 wood before hybrid, but I can be convinced.
No offense but if you can shoot par you are like a 5
I was gonna say I'm a 14.4 and basically my line is if I break 85 it was an awesome day, high 80s I played well, mid or high 90s I played like crap.
 
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Any recommendations for new woods? I got a new set of irons last year (Callaway Smoke), so time for the next level. I've received a green light for a driver this spring and a strong maybe for a 3 wood by summer. Hybrids may be a year out, but we'll see how much we sink into our home improvement budget.

I got a club fitting with a highly regarded local pro for xmas, so we're good there, just hunting for some ideas before setting that appointment. Not in any rush, coaching responsibilities heavily limit my availability through mid-May, so it's possible I don't tee one up until Memorial Day weekend.
FWIW, idk how good you are or if others who know more will disagree, but I find the hybrid to be the most important, consistent, and most used club in my bag. If or when I ever update clubs and get re-fit, if I can't pay for the whole bag at once I'm definitely going hybrid first in purchase order.
Sand traps aside, I'm decent. Put me on a course with room for error and if I'm on I can shoot par, if I'm off mid-80's. On a challenging course? I'm always due for a couple blow-ups, usually when sand is involved, so best case is break 80 and can easily shoot well into the 90's. Guessing that probably comes out to a 15 handicap give or take.

But, at the point of contact, I'm fairly consistent. Directionally challenged, which is why I'm blow-up prone, but generally steady contact. I don't have an iron under 5, that's my 185 club. I make okay contact with my 3 wood, the problem is it's ancient, so much over 200 is usually reliant on dry ground. I seem to be 225+ out more often than ~200 (par 5's), which is why I'm leaning 3 wood before hybrid, but I can be convinced.
No offense but if you can shoot par you are like a 5
I was gonna say I'm a 14.4 and basically my line is if I break 85 it was an awesome day, high 80s I played well, mid or high 90s I played like crap.
The lowest I ever was was a 6.2. I still have never shot par. One away a couple. 2 away a bunch now I'm 7-9.... High 70s to low 80s. I have dipped into a 90 here and there still
 
No offense but if you can shoot par you are like a 5
I can shoot par on a muni type of course with sparse trees, forgiving rough, and little-to-no sand :lol: That's where steady contact and directionally challenged does not go punished! I don't track things like fairways hit and GIR, but if I did they wouldn't be great. I'm a good chipper though. If it's on that day and I'm hitting the 7-10 footers then I can make a run at par on those types of courses. That's not the case at more challenging layouts where ~5 yards wide can quickly lead to a double no matter what I do.
 
Love all this fitting talk.

My coach said that Dragonfly is one of the best local places to get fitted. My plan is to get a driver next month and continue to use the irons I have until the summer then re-evaluate. That'll give me about a year of playing and practicing to then get fitted for irons.

I am very interested in the hybrid vs woods vs long irons talk too. My 4i is about 210-220 off the deck and I was already leaning towards a set that included a 3I instead of a hybrid because my swing seems to fit the irons really well...so far :lol:
That's a really good 4i distance, IMO.

I guess the reason to have at least one hybrid in the bag is because they're typically much easier to hit out of the rough but YMMV.
 
Somewhat of a rant forthcoming here, but if you guys can take away anything from me on this thread it's that there is no such thing as "the best club." There is only "the best club for you." And by club I mean the clubhead and the shaft. In other words, when your buddy comes to you and say or some rando on a message posts something like, "You gotta go get this new Ping driver! It's the best!," please, please, please understand that such may not be the case FOR YOU.

I firmly stand by the above for a few reasons. First, golf tech has been basically maxed out and, when considering the new ball change rule, it seems unlikely that the rules will permit significant advancements any time soon. As such, the major manufacturers are all pretty good across the board and while they do release new versions of their top of the line clubs every year, we are likely talking about minimal differences and improvements between brands and models.

Second, the above totally discounts the most important tech in the club which is the shaft. The shaft is the part of the club that actually impacts swing speed, launch angle, and much of the spin rate. So, a golfer could have the best clubhead ever made, but if it's at the end of the subpar shaft, then it's still going to be a "bad" club overall.

Third, we are all different so, naturally, we all have different swings (as much as we'd all probably want to be Adam Scott, Vijay Singh, or Fred Couples with their beautiful natural swings - we aren't). And, it's the swing and all that goes with it that determines whether a club is good for that individual as the club needs to comport to the swing characteristics. So, while Tiger's irons are wonderful tech, they are designed for the rare golfer who always find the face and doesn't need any forgiveness in the club. Using myself as an example (because I am an oddity) my natural swing generates a massively high spin rate and I naturally hit a high ball flight. So, when I fit into my clubs, every part of the build was designed to lower spin and lower ball flight. This is in contrast to most golfers, such as my wife, who had need their clubs to assist in generating spin and raising ball flight. Accordingly, if not obvious, my wife's game would be a disaster if she hit my "good clubs" and mine would be a similar disaster (I'd likely be launching and spinning balls off the planet) if I used hers.

In short, when you think about what constitutes a good club think about bicycles and how Lance Armstrong, arguably the greatest cyclist ever, would inevitably lose a bike race to a four year old if both had to use tricycles. Because that same concept applies as much to golf clubs.
 
And a little more on the shaft and how counterintuitive it can be in picking one.

On a good swing, I max out at around 95mph head speed. So one might think I could benefit from a lighter shaft. That may add a couple yards...but the resultant affect on my tempo is not worth it. So I actually have a heavier than normal 70g shaft, which fits my tempo, and my friends are all jealous of how many fairways I hit. I may be shorter off the tree but being in the short stuff is critical to an average golfer like me.

Also, each shaft manufacturer plays around with their flexes so much terms like Stiff and Regular don't have equal meaning between them. A stiff in one may be a regular in another. So that's another way fittings help.
 
And a little more on the shaft and how counterintuitive it can be in picking one.

On a good swing, I max out at around 95mph head speed. So one might think I could benefit from a lighter shaft. That may add a couple yards...but the resultant affect on my tempo is not worth it. So I actually have a heavier than normal 70g shaft, which fits my tempo, and my friends are all jealous of how many fairways I hit. I may be shorter off the tree but being in the short stuff is critical to an average golfer like me.

Also, each shaft manufacturer plays around with their flexes so much terms like Stiff and Regular don't have equal meaning between them. A stiff in one may be a regular in another. So that's another way fittings help.
Yep my fitter won't even use the terms. He uses like half points on a point scale up to seven or something?
 
Any recommendations for new woods? I got a new set of irons last year (Callaway Smoke), so time for the next level. I've received a green light for a driver this spring and a strong maybe for a 3 wood by summer. Hybrids may be a year out, but we'll see how much we sink into our home improvement budget.

I got a club fitting with a highly regarded local pro for xmas, so we're good there, just hunting for some ideas before setting that appointment. Not in any rush, coaching responsibilities heavily limit my availability through mid-May, so it's possible I don't tee one up until Memorial Day weekend.
Whatever wood best fits your specs along with whatever shaft best fits your specs. 😊
This might sound like a dismissive answer but it's accurate. Whatever the fitting says to get, get it. The shaft is at least as important as the head brand. You may end up with a Titleist/70g shaft or a Srixon/40g. It's all in your swing and that's what fittings are for.
:yes: When I got fitted for my driver last year, the guy asked if I wanted to try fairway woods as well. I said sure, since I'm here, though I'm pretty happy with my 3w and 4-rescue, both old Taylor Made burners. After about 5 swings he said, "those are the right clubs for your swing. You're not going to gain anything with new woods, at least not that would justify the cost."
 
And a little more on the shaft and how counterintuitive it can be in picking one.

On a good swing, I max out at around 95mph head speed. So one might think I could benefit from a lighter shaft. That may add a couple yards...but the resultant affect on my tempo is not worth it. So I actually have a heavier than normal 70g shaft, which fits my tempo, and my friends are all jealous of how many fairways I hit. I may be shorter off the tree but being in the short stuff is critical to an average golfer like me.

Also, each shaft manufacturer plays around with their flexes so much terms like Stiff and Regular don't have equal meaning between them. A stiff in one may be a regular in another. So that's another way fittings help.
:lmao:
 
Somewhat of a rant forthcoming here, but if you guys can take away anything from me on this thread it's that there is no such thing as "the best club." There is only "the best club for you." And by club I mean the clubhead and the shaft. In other words, when your buddy comes to you and say or some rando on a message posts something like, "You gotta go get this new Ping driver! It's the best!," please, please, please understand that such may not be the case FOR YOU.

I firmly stand by the above for a few reasons. First, golf tech has been basically maxed out and, when considering the new ball change rule, it seems unlikely that the rules will permit significant advancements any time soon. As such, the major manufacturers are all pretty good across the board and while they do release new versions of their top of the line clubs every year, we are likely talking about minimal differences and improvements between brands and models.

Second, the above totally discounts the most important tech in the club which is the shaft. The shaft is the part of the club that actually impacts swing speed, launch angle, and much of the spin rate. So, a golfer could have the best clubhead ever made, but if it's at the end of the subpar shaft, then it's still going to be a "bad" club overall.

Third, we are all different so, naturally, we all have different swings (as much as we'd all probably want to be Adam Scott, Vijay Singh, or Fred Couples with their beautiful natural swings - we aren't). And, it's the swing and all that goes with it that determines whether a club is good for that individual as the club needs to comport to the swing characteristics. So, while Tiger's irons are wonderful tech, they are designed for the rare golfer who always find the face and doesn't need any forgiveness in the club. Using myself as an example (because I am an oddity) my natural swing generates a massively high spin rate and I naturally hit a high ball flight. So, when I fit into my clubs, every part of the build was designed to lower spin and lower ball flight. This is in contrast to most golfers, such as my wife, who had need their clubs to assist in generating spin and raising ball flight. Accordingly, if not obvious, my wife's game would be a disaster if she hit my "good clubs" and mine would be a similar disaster (I'd likely be launching and spinning balls off the planet) if I used hers.

In short, when you think about what constitutes a good club think about bicycles and how Lance Armstrong, arguably the greatest cyclist ever, would inevitably lose a bike race to a four year old if both had to use tricycles. Because that same concept applies as much to golf clubs.

LOOK AT ME!!! I HIT IT HIGH AND FAR AND IT LANDS AS SOFT AS A BUTTERFLY WITH SORE FEET!!!!!!
 
Somewhat of a rant forthcoming here, but if you guys can take away anything from me on this thread it's that there is no such thing as "the best club." There is only "the best club for you." And by club I mean the clubhead and the shaft. In other words, when your buddy comes to you and say or some rando on a message posts something like, "You gotta go get this new Ping driver! It's the best!," please, please, please understand that such may not be the case FOR YOU.

I firmly stand by the above for a few reasons. First, golf tech has been basically maxed out and, when considering the new ball change rule, it seems unlikely that the rules will permit significant advancements any time soon. As such, the major manufacturers are all pretty good across the board and while they do release new versions of their top of the line clubs every year, we are likely talking about minimal differences and improvements between brands and models.

Second, the above totally discounts the most important tech in the club which is the shaft. The shaft is the part of the club that actually impacts swing speed, launch angle, and much of the spin rate. So, a golfer could have the best clubhead ever made, but if it's at the end of the subpar shaft, then it's still going to be a "bad" club overall.

Third, we are all different so, naturally, we all have different swings (as much as we'd all probably want to be Adam Scott, Vijay Singh, or Fred Couples with their beautiful natural swings - we aren't). And, it's the swing and all that goes with it that determines whether a club is good for that individual as the club needs to comport to the swing characteristics. So, while Tiger's irons are wonderful tech, they are designed for the rare golfer who always find the face and doesn't need any forgiveness in the club. Using myself as an example (because I am an oddity) my natural swing generates a massively high spin rate and I naturally hit a high ball flight. So, when I fit into my clubs, every part of the build was designed to lower spin and lower ball flight. This is in contrast to most golfers, such as my wife, who had need their clubs to assist in generating spin and raising ball flight. Accordingly, if not obvious, my wife's game would be a disaster if she hit my "good clubs" and mine would be a similar disaster (I'd likely be launching and spinning balls off the planet) if I used hers.

In short, when you think about what constitutes a good club think about bicycles and how Lance Armstrong, arguably the greatest cyclist ever, would inevitably lose a bike race to a four year old if both had to use tricycles. Because that same concept applies as much to golf clubs.

LOOK AT ME!!! I HIT IT HIGH AND FAR AND IT LANDS AS SOFT AS A BUTTERFLY WITH SORE FEET!!!!!!
THAT'S NEITHER TRUE NOR WHAT I SAID!!!!!!!11111 It's more like a blind man tossing a grenade.
 
Any recommendations for new woods? I got a new set of irons last year (Callaway Smoke), so time for the next level. I've received a green light for a driver this spring and a strong maybe for a 3 wood by summer. Hybrids may be a year out, but we'll see how much we sink into our home improvement budget.

I got a club fitting with a highly regarded local pro for xmas, so we're good there, just hunting for some ideas before setting that appointment. Not in any rush, coaching responsibilities heavily limit my availability through mid-May, so it's possible I don't tee one up until Memorial Day weekend.
FWIW, idk how good you are or if others who know more will disagree, but I find the hybrid to be the most important, consistent, and most used club in my bag. If or when I ever update clubs and get re-fit, if I can't pay for the whole bag at once I'm definitely going hybrid first in purchase order.
Sand traps aside, I'm decent. Put me on a course with room for error and if I'm on I can shoot par, if I'm off mid-80's. On a challenging course? I'm always due for a couple blow-ups, usually when sand is involved, so best case is break 80 and can easily shoot well into the 90's. Guessing that probably comes out to a 15 handicap give or take.

But, at the point of contact, I'm fairly consistent. Directionally challenged, which is why I'm blow-up prone, but generally steady contact. I don't have an iron under 5, that's my 185 club. I make okay contact with my 3 wood, the problem is it's ancient, so much over 200 is usually reliant on dry ground. I seem to be 225+ out more often than ~200 (par 5's), which is why I'm leaning 3 wood before hybrid, but I can be convinced.
You can shoot par and are bad in bunkers? That’s unusual but great. Green side bunker shots are easy unless it’s a really bad lie. All technique. I was bad because I couldn’t consistently enter the sand where I intended. More often than not fell back, hit too far behind the ball and bounce skidded to the ball. Only in firm sand (our course is all firm sand). Once I got a lesson and got weight left for downward strike, squared stance, ball lined with front foot, and focused on hitting my exact spot I’m getting out every time with a putt to save par. My instructor drew a line in the sand and had me take a bunch of swings trying to enter at the line. No ball. I was so off at first. No wonder I struggled. Tight now.
 
First full round of the year in the books. 19 over, at a course I've never played. Got ABSOLUTELY SCREWED by conditions a couple times. I mean like, put on right in the middle of the fairway but because the grass is all dead and concrete it rolled out and down into a creek...a 280-yard 3h (which I typically hit 190).

Chipping super out of practice. By end of the round I had some really nice ones, just nestling up close to pins. Greens were remarkably well kept, but that meant adjusting to real pace and reading vs the munis where youre generally gonna do pretty well if you hit it at the pin.

8/14 fairways was nice. 37 putts was rough. Four 3-putts and one 4-putt rough.

FIVE pars, and a birdie. SIX doubles though.

Made me feel great though. Biting wind, temp in the high 40s but felt like high 30s. Overall really heartened that even out of practice I've clearly got the skills to keep improving. When we get to like March-September again this year, goal will be to get good enough to be a single digit handicap.

Last year's goal was to get down below 14, and I peaked at 13.6 (success!). So time to try again.
 
borrowed my brothers driver for a nine hole course with a few par fours today. Drove the green to 15 feet of the pin on a 285 yarder. Barely missed the eagle putt but dropped the birdie.🐤



My wife: you should get a driver.

We go to the next hole, and I slice it into Arizona.

Me: what was that? :lmao:
 
Played my second "competitive" round yesterday stone cold sober in cold but not terrible conditions. Cut was on point early and putter was much better than the last time out so I started out very well by making a birdie on the first hole and hitting every green through the first five holes. Probably should have had one more birdie. By hole six I started pushing the ball a bit but hung on to finish +1 on the front. I then three putted from 25 feet on hole 10 and my round sputtered the rest of the way in. I took three penalties on the backside include a killer water ball where I tugged my approach from a mere 120 yards on 18 with a decent score still in play.

Finished +6 on the day with two birdies which is fine but the penalties were inexcusable (though I'm about to excuse them) and I need to birdie at least one par 5 on that particular course because all but one are reachable in two shots. I've noticed my back muscles will usually to wear down on the back nine and when that happens I leave my hands way too open with the driver (my other two penalty balls came off bad tee shots, including a slice into a lake - though I was able to make "good" bogeys despite the penalties) and I start worrying about overcutting everything. I also seem to be losing interest by the middle of the back nine.

I have been taking Magic Mind shots and am enjoying those. Decent enjoy and focus without any jitters. Probably be better served by doing yoga and core work in the gym.

ETA: Just looked at the stats. Last weekend I shot an 80 with 38 putts and not a single one putt and no birdies. But, never flirted with a penalty area. Yesterday, I lost three balls, hung on for dear life the last few hours to combat a clear swing flaw, but had nine fewer putts producing a lower score.
 
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