Joey's Golf Bag

December 9, 2006

Madness, sheer madness

Filed under: Play,Practice — Joey @ 8:29 pm

This afternoon, I went to the Hank Haney Golf Ranch in Lewisville to practice and play nine. The weather was quite chilly but sunny, with only a slight breeze.

I warmed up hitting sand wedge shots, then worked my way through the bag, hitting a couple of balls with each club. When I got to the 6-iron, my swing started getting out of whack, so I got out the iPod and hit a few shots with Tour Tempo with the 8-iron. That got my swing back, mostly, but still couldn’t hit the longer clubs well. I finished up hitting pitching wedges, in anticipation of the first hole.

On the first hole, I hit the pitching wedge a bit thin and right; the ball ended up in the back fringe. I chipped short and two putt for bogey. On the second, I hit a 5-iron monster hook into (and nearly over) the range pond. I took a drop, pushed a 9-iron into the woods to the right of the hole. I punched out short of the hole, chipped over the green, chipped long, and nailed a 21 foot putt for triple.

On the third, hit a lob wedge to 21 ft and two putt for par. On the fourth, took another triple after hooking the ball into one of those ball-eating grass bushes, took an unplayable, hit a 6-iron nearly into the right hazard, then hit the ball thin over the green, chipped poorly and 2-putted. On the fifth, hit a sand wedge to 18 ft and two-putt for par.

On the sixth, hit a 7-iron to the right edge of the fairway, then hit a perfect layup sand wedge, but chunked a lob wedge just short of the green, chipped into the bunker, played out away from the hole and 3-putt for a lovely snowman. On the seventh, over-clubbed and hit a 6-iron well over the green. After numerous poor shots, carded triple. On the eighth, got out the driver and attempted to drive the green. Hit a very long drive, but pushed right and ran into the hazard beyond the bridge. Took a drop, went over the green with a sand wedge, hit a nice lob wedge to 10 ft and mis-read the putt and tapped in for bogey. On the ninth, over-clubbed again and hit an 8-iron over the green and down a steep bank. Hit a pretty good lob wedge to 12 ft and left the par putt just short and tapped in for bogey.

It’s madness that I play this game at all.

December 6, 2006

Long good, short bad

Filed under: Practice — Joey @ 8:13 pm

This morning, at the crack of dawn, I hit a few balls at The Practice Tee in Plano. The weather was cold, but sunny, with a slight breeze from the south. I started off hitting short pitching wedges to warm up. At first, I hit the balls fat, but soon got that worked out and moved on to hitting alternating pitching wedges, 8- and 6-irons. Again, I had a bad case of the fats, so I got out the iPod and switched on Tour Tempo at 27/9. This time it didn’t help; I was badly rushing my downswing, causing me to hit fat.

I put away the iPod and got out the 7-wood. My first shot was a fade, not particularly well-struck, but it caused me to realize my old nemesis fault, too much lateral movement on the backswing, returning to traumatize me again. When I managed to eliminate these two faults, rushing the downswing, and keeping lateral movement to a minimum, I struck the ball well. Encouraged, I got out the driver. My first shot was a snap hook; rushing the downswing AGAIN. I then hit a couple of good, straight drives, then a monster slice. My next swing was rushed, hitting a crappy drop-kick. I then switched back to the 7-wood and hit a good shot. I also hit one or two with the 3i hybrid, but it wasn’t well struck, same faults.

Finally, running out of time, I hit a few 8-iron shots, about half of which were well-struck, the rest with the same ol’ faults. Last few balls I used to hit some sand wedge shots, which were mostly well-struck but with an annoying fat shot thrown in.

Not my best day of practice, but at least I figured out my faults and didn’t get frustrated.

December 2, 2006

Long club practice

Filed under: Practice — Joey @ 2:59 pm

This morning, I went to the Golden Bear Golf Center to practice. The weather was cool but sunny, with barely any breeze.

Unfortunately, I forgot to bring my iPod for tempo training, and I certainly missed having it. I’d planned to do more tempo training today, and much long club work.

I started off hitting the 4-, 6- and 8-irons, along with the pitching wedge, and it was apparent from the beginning that I needed to continue my tempo training. I was pretty inconsistent today, hitting some very nice shots, but also a lot of stinkers. My path was pretty good all day, but I hit some hooks and slices, which had been absent while I was working on my tempo. After running this drill for a while, my swing deserted me, so I got out the wedges and practiced hitting each at the purple flag located a mere 65 yds in front of me. This practice was considerably better and I began to get some feel back in my swing. I still managed to hit a couple of fat shots, especially with the 64° wedge, but my wedge practice was quite good and I was pretty pleased.

Next, I got out the long clubs to practice. Today, I left the 3-wood behind and got out the Ping G2 7-wood, which I haven’t hit in months. I added the driver and 3i HALO hybrid to the mix. At first, I struck the ball very poorly, but noticed, again, that I had too much lateral movement, both on the backswing, and also on the downswing. Once I corrected that, I started striking the long clubs pretty well, especially the 7-wood. The driver never really behaved today; I only remember one well-struck shot. The hybrid was mixed but not as good as the 7-wood.

My next drill was the pin-hunting drill, where I hit 8 of 20 shots with a score of 4 or better. Results were mixed. I had one outstanding lob wedge shot and one hit so fat that I didn’t get half-way to the green. I hit one good driver, but most of the other long clubs were poor, except for a very nice 7-wood. Irons were mixed, had some really good shots but also a nasty high hook and a slice. Not my best effort, certainly.

With the last balls, I hit some 3-iron, 3i HALO, and 7-wood shots off the deck. Pretty mixed results here, but I did manage at least one acceptable shot with each club. With my final two balls, I practiced long punch pitches with the pitching wedge and 8-iron, with pretty good results.

Not my best practice, but not my worst, either. I’ll make sure I bring the iPod tomorrow.

November 29, 2006

Brutal wind, but what the heck…

Filed under: Equipment,Practice — Joey @ 9:23 pm

This morning at the crack of dawn, I went to The Practice Tee in Plano to hit a few balls before work. The weather was cloudy and the wind was howling in from the south at about 30 mph, but the temperature was in the mid-70s. As I had limited time, I got only a small bucket of balls and started out hitting full swings with the 7-iron. I started out striking the ball pretty well — good, straight path down the target line — slight fades that the wind kindly brought back to target.

I then got out the 5-iron and hit a few pretty well, though low, and then my swing went south and I got a little frustrated. I finally figured out the problem: too much lateral movement on the backswing (an old familiar fault). I worked that out and even hit a very nice, penetrating drive that was unaffected by the strong wind. Still couldn’t hit that damn 3-wood or hybrid, though. For some reason, when I get the 3-wood or hybrid in my hands, my tempo gets too fast and I hit the ball thin or worse, top it. Maybe I need a sports pshrink.

Since I’ve put the Wishon Golf 770CFE irons in my bag, my shot dispersion has improved dramatically with the irons. I can’t credit the irons alone, as I’ve been using Tour Tempo on my iPod throughout my last few practices (and most of that practice was with the graphite-shafted practice 6-iron that is set up like my new iron set). Still… I’m very happy with these irons.

November 25, 2006

My Aching Back

Filed under: Equipment,Practice — Joey @ 8:48 pm

This morning, I practiced at the Golden Bear Golf Center in cloudy, cool weather. There was a breeze in my face that averaged about 1 club.

Today, I brought out the new Wishon Golf 770CFE irons I built this week. In general, I was quite pleased with their performance, although I wasn’t swinging particularly well today. When I did produce a good swing, the irons produced a high ball-flight that landed softly on the target greens. I was especially pleased with a 4-iron shot into the blue target green; the ball came in high and rolled no more than 10 ft after landing. The clubs are a 1/2″ shorter than my previous set and weigh about 28 grams less. It appears my clubhead speed has not suffered from the shorter length, and may even improve slightly once I get used to the lighter swingweight (D-2 vs. D-7). Before I hit the clubs, I was concerned that the sound of impact might be different due to the thin clubface, but I really like how the ball sounds at impact. The sound is more like a forged club than an investment cast club, due, I guess, to the variable thickness forged clubface. The clubheads are certainly more forgiving than my previous set as well. So far, so good…

I felt pretty sluggish today during practice and always felt like I was a little behind in my tempo. I warmed up with the 6-iron and hit several fat shots before I got going. I got out the pitching wedge and 8-iron and alternated shots with those clubs. At first, I got very high ball flight and not much distance, but I soon got the ball flying well. My swing path was good today, mostly straight. My release was not well-timed, so I had a mix of fades and draws, more of the former.

Next up, I got out the hybrid and 3-wood (back in my bag for practice purposes). I never got the tempo right with these clubs, always late and usually topping the ball, so I went back to hitting the wedges, which I did well today, despite a fat shot or two. By now, my back was aching, so I finished out the balls by hitting mid-irons off tees, with mixed results. I had one high, monster hook with the 5-iron, but the hook monster was otherwise absent today. My back didn’t feel up to any additional practice, so my plan to have a full practice with short game and putting was not to be.

Not a very good practice today, but it is pretty clear I will benefit from my new irons. Additional reports to follow.

November 24, 2006

Y / L / 3/4 / Full

Filed under: Practice — Joey @ 3:27 pm

This morning, I went to the Hank Haney Golf Ranch in Lewisville to hit some balls. The day was sunny and warm, with a left to right breeze.

I started out hitting full 6-iron shots to warm up, without Tour Tempo, and hit the ball pretty respectably. I then turned on my iPod to 27/9 pre-shot voice and proceeded to run the “Y” drill. At first, my shots tended to be slightly pulled, but I soon improved my path and hit the ball more or less straight, though tending, much of the day, to have the club face a little open at impact. Next up, I hit about 20 balls using the “L” drill; again, similar results, tended to have a mostly straight path and slightly open club face. I then hit a few balls with a 3/4 swing.

Next, I went down through the clubs, starting with the pitching wedge. I hit the short irons pretty well, good path, with square or slightly open club face. Mid-irons had good path as well, but tended to have a slightly closed clubface. I hit only one nasty hook today, that was with the 4-iron. Most of my misses were right with a fade.

When I got to the hybrids, I didn’t strike them particularly well today, tending to rush the downswing and either hooking the ball or topping it. The driver I never hit well today at all. I seemed to be late setting the club and then firing to impact too quickly. I eventually decided to put on 33/11 tempo, just to get my backswing into shape, and hit a couple of decent drives, draws. I wasn’t thrilled with the distance, though, seemed shorter than usual.

I had a pretty good practice today, better than my last one. I’m seeing my ball-striking improving, so I’m pretty happy.

November 22, 2006

Y / L / Full

Filed under: Practice — Joey @ 8:06 pm

Yes, you guessed it, I spent some time on the range with Tour Tempo on the iPod. This afternoon, on a sunny, warm day, I went to the Hank Haney Golf Ranch in Lewisville to hit some balls. I started off running the “Y” drill with the 6-iron using the 27/9 pre-shot voice track. I hit about 20 balls, tending to pull them slightly, but in general making good contact with the ball. Next up, I ran the “L” drill, again with the 6-iron. I also hit the ball pretty well and had a mix of pulls and pushes mixed with the straight shots.

I then moved on to hitting full swings, but never really got the ball going straight, instead, tending to hit high, long hooks. I then followed up with some pitching and sand wedge shots, and hit mostly straight shots or slight pushes. Last up, I hit some drives, and never had any consistency at all.

Not my best day of practice, but at least the wedges were going straight, if nothing else was…

November 21, 2006

Tempo, tempo, and more tempo

Filed under: Practice — Joey @ 4:15 pm

This morning, on a cool, blustery day, I went to hit some balls at the Hank Haney Golf Ranch in Lewisville. I spent most of the morning working on tempo with Tour Tempo on my iPod, and it is helping a lot to overcome the problems I’ve had lately with my swing.

I warmed up with one of the test 6-irons I built a while back, the Toski Target T56 iron head with the UST PRoforce Rv2 75 graphite shaft. I first hit about 20 balls using the Tour Tempo “Y” drill and then followed that up hitting 20 balls with the “L” drill. Mostly, I hit pulls during both drills, so once I started hitting full shots, I concentrated on getting the clubhead path correct. The other change I made was to run the spoken version of the 27/9 pre-shot instead of the one that beeps. That seems to reduce the tension I feel when I use the beeps (I think that’s the primary reason that Tour Tempo didn’t really work well for me in the past).

After about 20 full shots with the 6-iron, I got out the wedges and hit a few full shots with each. Next up, I finished out the practice session by hitting a few balls with nearly every club, doing pretty well with all clubs except the Big Bertha 3-iron and the driver. The rest of the clubs I hit pretty respectively today, and I can see definite progress over the last three practice sessions, reversing the slide my performance had taken earlier last week.

November 19, 2006

I am the Salieri of Golf

Filed under: Play,Practice — Joey @ 3:38 pm

It’s been a painful two weeks since my last post. I’ve practiced a number of times, and my swing was getting progressively worse, not better, over three practices. Then, in desperation, yesterday, I got out my iPod with Tour Tempo on it, set it to 27/9 and hit balls. Slowly, my swing came back and I started hitting the ball decently again. So, this morning, I went to Hank Haney Golf Ranch in Lewisville and set out to continue training with Tour Tempo. Happily, my swing continued to improve. In fact, I felt good enough to go play nine. So, after having a good putting practice session, I paid for nine and played.

Disaster struck on the very first hole, hitting the ball thin directly into the water, skipping several times and nearly getting onto the grass. But, alas, no luck, ball stayed wet. Took a drop and hit a wedge just over the green, chipped close and tapped in for a cool double.

Next hole, par 4, I hit a 6-iron draw, just clearing the fairway bunker on the edge of the fairway. I hit a sand wedge a bit fat just short of the green, chipped poorly and two-putted for bogey.

Next hole, par 3, I pushed a high lob wedge shot well right. The ball hit a log just outside the hazard, bounced high into the rough over the green. I hit a poor chip (again) short and two-putt for bogey.

Fourth hole, par 4, was just plain ugly. I pushed my tee shot with the 3i hybrid into the hazard. I took a drop and then hit a lay-up 8-iron, hoping to get a clear shot at the green that is well-protected by an overhanging tree. I was left with a sand wedge to the flag, but that required clearing an overhanging tree. I am the acknowledged master of hitting the only branch that can be hit; and I didn’t disappoint: clipped that branch and landed in the rough just to the right of the green, narrowly missing the bunker. Naturally, I hit the ball thin right over the green, then hit a lob wedge pitch short and two putt for a nasty triple.

Fifth hole, par 3. I hit a pitching wedge hook right of the green, chipped short to 12 feet, and then proceeded to three-putt for double.

Sixth hole, par 4. I hit a 4-iron off the tee, hooking it into the left rough ton to a hump with a difficult uphill lie. I hit a good 8-iron short just short of the green, chipped short (again!!!) and just missed the par putt by an inch, and tapped in for bogey.

Seventh hole, par 3. I hit a 5-iron draw left of the green, chipped short (see a pattern yet?), hit a putt to 6 inches and tapped in for bogey.

Eighth hole, par 4. Normally, I get out the driver and try to drive the green, but that club has not been playing nice, so I decide to play safe and hit a 5-iron off the tee. There’s an overhanging branch over the fairway that I’ve hit numerous times with a 6-iron, so I figure a 5-iron won’t go high enough to hit it. Riiiiiiiiiight! Bonk!!! OK, mulligan time. Move the ball back in my stance a little. You know what’s gonna happen… Bonk!!! The only freakin’ branch that can be hit, and I’ve nailed it twice… Only this time, who knows where the ball went… Why is it I’m perfectly consistent when I don’t want to be????

I’ll save you the disasters that followed on the green at the eighth and ninth holes, as the point has been made.

I’m the Salieri of Golf.

November 7, 2006

Mosquito Madness

Filed under: Practice — Joey @ 10:20 pm

This afternoon after work, I practiced at the Hank Haney Golf Ranch in Lewisville on a warm, but cloudy, evening. Mosquitos swarmed around me for much of the practice, causing the occasional bad shot (that’s my story and I’m sticking to it).

I started off warming up with the 7-iron, hitting the ball pretty poorly at first, so I spent much of the practice working on the slot drill. That drill much improved my ball-striking over my last practice. My distances were shorter than usual, due in part to hitting the ball very high. I may need to move the ball back in my stance a bit to lower the ball flight, but for now, I’m focusing on other things. My other work was on improving my lag, and I can’t report much improvement in that area, other than a few shots here and there.

I worked on the slot drill for about 1/3 of the balls, alternating the sand wedge, 9-, 7- and 5-irons. While working on the slot drill, I hit the ball very straight, but shorter than usual, even 2 clubs shorter. Again, I’m hitting the ball extremely high, even the 5-iron.

After the slot drill, added the 3i HALO and the driver and added them to the mix. The hybrid I hit high and short as well. The driver was mixed; when I properly loaded the shaft and got good lag, I hit the ball straight and long, but I wasn’t able to do that consistently. I hit a couple of high fades or push fades, and a duck hook or two, so no consistency.

Next up, I traded out all the clubs and got out the pitching wedge, 8-, 6-, and 4-irons, the 2i hybrid and kept the driver. I tended to pull the pitching wedge, but hit it solidly. I tended to push the 8-iron, but distance was more normal than most of the clubs. The 6-iron I hit mostly straight, with reasonable distance. The 4-iron I didn’t hit very well, tending either to hit it a bit thin, or very high and short. Weird… At that point I was nearly out of balls, so I hit a few drives, pulling them left pretty badly.

A pretty good practice today. Unfortunately, I ran out of time and had to run to go vote before the polls closed (libertarian!).

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