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Instruction - How Do You Spot If You Have A Golf Club Defect |
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You will need to have entered 30 golf shots with any one golf club onto StrokeAverage.com to be able to accurately determine whether it has a defect.
Starting on StrokeAverage.com, go to the Statistics Area. Proceed through the filter pages until you reach the Statistics and then navigate to the Approach Shots page. Look at the Statistics Table (pictured to the right). There are four columns, shots; accuracy; ave 1st putt length; up & down success.
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When analyzing the performance of your golf clubs, you’re looking for the accuracy of each club to improve slightly as you move up through the golf bag. As an example, 4 iron: 50%, 5 iron: 55%, 6 iron: 60%. Of course your results will never be this accurate so don’t worry if the numbers are a little distorted.
If a club defect is present, a dip will appear in the accuracy on one of the golf clubs (pictured to the right). Also, the ave 1st putt length may appear further away and up & down success not as high.
Click on the golf club to view its breakdown and use the direction diagram to identify where the misses are tending towards. You then have great feedback for you golf club manufacturer to help you.
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Did you know: Approx 70% of tour golf professionals have a club defect at a point during each golf season and these guys have experts building their clubs. The only way to spot defects is to record where the golf shots finish and look for patterns. |