3 equipment trends in the PGA championship that drew my attention

Johnny Wunder
Tommy Fleetwood has a mini-pilot and 9 wood in play this week.
Getty images
Charlotte, NC – Let’s be clear about one thing: hollow quail plays longer than the figures on the map. The course has exceptionally well drained after five inches of rain at the start of the week, but it will not play quickly, at least not for the first two laps.
The par-72 design is just over 7,600 meters, but with little deployment, it looks more like 8,200 meters for a large part of the field. For bombers – Bryson, Rory, etc. – Bag changes are not necessary, but for players of the ball speed of less than 180 mph, more consideration is necessary.
The main questions to ask relate to the entry and options at the top of the bag. The height and the transport of peaks are also essential in softer conditions are essential. All the sites you do not get on the ground must be invented in the air.
This quarter of work inspired a reflection of caddies, players and representatives of the tour this week, and these are three of the adjustments that I found the most interesting.
1. Mini full flight drivers
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This week in Quail, there are 25 mini pilots in play among Titleist G280, Taylormade BRNR Mini, Taylormade R7 Quad, PXG’s Secret Weapon, Cobra King and Callaway’s Elyte and Ai-Wmoke Minis.
The mini-private man has more sense week after week on tour. When you can put a player like Min Woo lee a club from which he can get more than 175 mph ball speed and which turns like a wood (3,500 rpm), it is a huge active. Attacking Doglegs becomes much easier when you wear this kind of rotation, just like playing long / tight holes where the driver is a risk.
Callaway Elyte Mini Driver
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2. Lofted Fairway Woods even more popular
;)
How many woods 7 and 9 are at stake this week?
Sixty -one. Sixty -one!
For what? Simple: peak height, ball speed and rotation. When you can give a player a club that easily traverses the desired transport distance for this club slit, the ball sets off easily, turns more and lands like a pillow … The decision is easy. This is one of those situations in which far Designates the desire of a player for a favorite look. What is this sentence – a fashionable function?
Here is what Scottie Scheffler said this week:
“This week can be more a 5-bois [ed. note: it’s actually more of a 7-wood] The week just because, as you said, the golf course will play for a very long time, the rough is thick, and the ruptured areas after this type of rain will be really soft, and the Greens will always be really firm because they are new. You must be able to get the ball on green. You can’t really run around this golf course. This is an aspect you should think of. “”
To be clear, his club is not 5-hosted but he makes a distance of 5 wood. Here are the exact specifications of the club …
- Finished loft: 20 °
- LIE: 59.5 °
- TREE: Ventus Black 9x
- Tipping: 2 ”
- LENGTH: 41 3/8 ”Cup
- Swing weight: D4
- HANDLE: Velvet RIB 58 screw
- Envelope: 6 double -sided bands
Taylormade Qi35 Wood Fairway Custom Fairway
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3. narrow velocious vs
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It was something that I noticed by dragging with title champion Xander Schauffele and his shopping cart, Austin Kaiser.
Xander travels still with three lob corner options. For the most part, it is the Vokey T-Grind or K * which see most of the action (it also a really cool A + Grind). On Monday, after breaking the rain, they struck gunshots around Green training with the two options to see what did this instant Sound that all the super corners do when the rebound is used correctly.
For you, you might think that the t light and its narrow sole would be a difficult sled in soft conditions, but it doesn’t really work like that. There is no longer to consider. Sweet grass means firm bunkers, so having a low rebound area really helps. The speed out of the face is also important, especially because the greens are still working quickly. Xander said he always wanted a 1 to 1 ratio of the difficulty he hit the ball at the speed at which he hit his window. Often it comes back to bounce back.
Xander has always been cerebral about its 60 degrees. He considers it in some different kingdoms. Gazon interaction (easy); Swing speed ratio to speed up the face; bunker game; Exit on the Greens; And the types of plans that it will strike from longer land, that is to say pilot it and stop it or count on the exit. All of this takes into account his corner of choice, but it is always a sensation and a contingent on the way Xander feels during a given week. Sometimes it will surprise you. At the open, for example, one might think that the narrow G see would be the obvious choice for all the tight lies … but that does not always add up in this way. It all depends on how Xander feel in the moment.
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Johnny Wunder
Golf.com publisher
Johnny is currently Director of Golf.com equipment, contributing to platforms such as fully equipped golf. Before this role, he was director of content marketing at Callaway Golf, where he directed “Callaway Golf’s World of Wunder”, a platform dedicated to the in-depth content of golf equipment. Before joining Callaway, he was director of the original and host content of the Podcast “The Gear Dive” on golfwrx.com. Beyond his professional efforts, Johnny is a passionate golfer with a deep passion for the game, having played since his youth in Seattle, Washington.



