Most amateurs don't think enough about their club setup, but one top teacher says many golfers should get rid of one club altogether.
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Roaming the practice range at GOLF’s Top 100 Teachers Summit earlier this week, I picked up dozens of tips and useful nuggets from some of the best teachers in America. Some are better for scratch players, others for high-handicappers and a couple — like this one on lag putting — I have already put into use myself.
But one of my most intriguing findings came when I asked Todd Sones if there’s a club too many amateurs are carrying that they shouldn’t. I could hardly finish my sentence before he answered.
“If you aren’t a single-digit player, most people don’t need 3-woods,” he said.
He explained:
“If you take a TrackMan out and actually test people with a 5-wood and a 3-wood, they hit the 5-wood farther, because they’re not hitting with enough speed to get the 3-wood in the air long enough to carry it,” Sones said. “Unless the ground is really hard, it’s not going to race out far enough to carry the 5-wood. And plus, you gotta have a great lie, a little bit of an uphill lie. So a lot of people pull out a 3-wood when they should never pull out a 3-wood — it’s a tight lie, it’s a little downhill, de-lofted, they hit a bad shot, it costs them shots versus gaining shots.”
This was news to me and I was glad I asked the question, mainly because I consider my 3-wood one of the best clubs in my golf bag. I’ve had the same one for years and with it a consistent low, piercing ball-flight. But I have never had any other wood in my bag in my life besides a 3-wood (or hybrid). Now it’s something I plan to look into this offseason to see if a switch would benefit my game. Sones offered an alternative for the 3-wood.
“Typically, I’ll tell most amateurs, unless they are really good players, to use 4- and 7-woods instead of 3- and 5-woods,” he said. “I really try to keep low-lofted clubs out of peoples’ bags.”
Sones said there is one exception to his no 3-wood rule for double-digit handicappers. He’s OK with players using it if they hit their driver poorly and use a 3-wood off the tee as an alternative. But when the 3-wood is used primarily off the fairway, he isn’t a fan.
Additionally, taking out one of those low-lofted clubs also affords you room for more wedges, Sones says.
“You score with your wedges,” he said. “You don’t score with your 3-woods.”
Want to overhaul your bag for 2022? Find a fitting location near you at GOLF’s affiliate company True Spec Golf.
As GOLF.com’s managing editor, Berhow handles the day-to-day and long-term planning of one of the sport’s most-read news and service websites. He spends most of his days writing, editing, planning and wondering if he’ll ever break 80. Before joining GOLF.com in 2015, he worked at newspapers in Minnesota and Iowa. A graduate of Minnesota State University in Mankato, Minn., he resides in the Twin Cities with his wife and two kids. You can reach him at joshua_berhow@golf.com.