Clone Golf Club Reviews
Clone Golf Club Reviews. Check our Clone Golf Club Reviews and see what we think of
Clone Golf Clubs on Test. Eagle, Birdie, Par or Bogey.
As you can imagine we get to test quite a few clubs in various configurations. Between us we
like to tinker with our clubs so there are usually spare shafts hanging around. If we're not playing golf we're
probably swapping out a shaft or three.
For what we're currently testing, check our Clone Golf Club Reviews.
Clubs go in and out of our bags faster then a Bishop from a brothel raid. Apart from playing a
round, our perfect afternoon is best spent on the range with a bucket of balls and a shiny new club to try
out. Bliss...
We're both firm believer in the old adage "practice makes perfect". Well maybe not
actually perfect. More "familiar" at our level. Working out things on the practice range makes your
results more "familiar". How does your stance affect the flight of the ball for example or how does ball position
affect the amount of fade or draw you can get.
Dialing in distances is an important part of a consistent golf game. Knowing how far you hit the
ball on average is the key to hitting more greens and lower scores.
Living within walking distance of the practice range and course means there really isn't any
excuse for not hitting the odd bucket of balls. After all, having the driving range 5 minutes from your front door
and not using it would be a total waste. Plus, the cold beer is never far away so if things start to go wrong with
the clubs, there's always a cold one to fall back on.
A trip to the range for us is more like an expedition to the top of Everest. Clubs, balls, tees,
video cameras, speed guns, range finders. You could say we go well equipped. Probably takes more time to cart
everything out and set it up than it does to actually hit the clubs. Factor in Andrew's warm-up routine and it
usually translates into a pretty drawn-out affair.
Would we have it any differently? Probably not. Might not suit everybody but that's how we like
to go about things.
A session on the range for us works through all the bag, then a session of chipping, bunker play
then onto the practice green. Usually for side-bets as competition in anything is the best way to concentrate and
put the maximum effort into things.
I tend to be more casual in my practice. Andrew goes through the same routine as he does for
shots during a round, even marking and lining up putts on the practice green. He says it makes for more
consistency, arguing that humans are creatures of habit and good habits are easy to fall into. I can't really argue
with that. I'd like to but I can't really.
Will this happy state of affairs ever end? Well hopefully not. At least not as long golf
club manufacturers keep tempting us with new models and new technologies. Long may it continue.
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