irons are usually for shoter distance therefore the club is shorter making it easy to swing.. a seven iron is the ideal club for a beginer 9 hole course if youve got a nice swing..
a wood goes longer distances and is much more difficult to you.
pitching wedge is for chipping and off course the putter for putting.
if you are just starting you dont need a full set of clubs and you dont need expensive clubs. –a starter set would be an in -expensive—3-5-7-9 iron and a 3 wood and mabe a driver—-practice–practice—practice—take a lesson or two so you won’t be practicing the wrong way.—talk to the pro a the pro shop at the course
I Just started last summer and no doubt that the short game is important! Irons is a must and the best way to learn them is at a range or at a 3 par golf course, if you have them in your area. Don’t give up-keep practicing- Goodluck!
Unquestionably, start with the putter. This is what Tiger Woods’ father did with Tiger. He started with the putter on the green and he was not allowed to try the other clubs until he mastered the putter. After that, started with the lofted Irons (wedges, 9 iron, 8 iron) and had nim learn to chip and pitch shots around the green. As he mastered those, Tiger’s dad gradually progressed to longer and longer clubs.
As far as the most effective club in a round of golf… again, unquestionably, the putter. Golf is designed to hit 2 putts on every hole to shoot even par. That’s 36 strokes with the putter. No other club would even come close. The maximum number of times you wll ever hit your driver is 14, and you will go entire rounds without hitting certain irons.
And for someone who had never touch a golf and want to try if the game is meant for him/her, then 7 Iron is the best club in the bag for the person to try. Also for learning the game as a first timer, 7 Iron is the best club for the guy to learn the golf swing.
hmm…
i tried 8 irons for few months feel nothing improvements.
so few days ago i tried driver.
it is very fun when u hit with the driver,cause u get the distance.
for me iron is the most hardest!
driver is easy!
To start with, you should start with the short iron PW and moving progressively to longer ones, not exceeding 6 iron. Leave the long irons alone for now. For a couple of weeks, once you develop relatively consistent, smooth and rythmic swing, you’re ready to swing the longer irons and the woods.
Most mistakes made by beginners trying to learn golf, is that they take out the driver, and try to swing for the cheap seats, this will have long term negative effects to your golf game. First it may give you injury, second, you will train your body to make bad compensations, like manipulating your wrists, take away, scooping, etc. It took me a lot of effort to get out o f my bad habits that I picked up simply by swinging without proper instructions.
And take lessons.
Second answer, is irons. Having a good iron play + short game around the greens most of the time allows you to save par. 20 yards difference of your tee shot does not matter as much as 20 yards difference around the green. Around the green 20 yards can mean you’re in the bunker, or water.
I would begin with the putter…more than half your strokes in the beginning will be on the putting green. But I would also start with a 6-7 iron, and get the fundamentals down pact, grip. stance, balance….you really only need to learn one basic swing for all your clubs, as you learn you can tend to change it slightly for different clubs and different shots.
March 29th, 2009 at 12:52 pm
Start with the short irons. Your golf game has got to start with the short game. Putter, wedge, then 7 through 9. No short game, no low score.
March 30th, 2009 at 1:31 am
irons are usually for shoter distance therefore the club is shorter making it easy to swing.. a seven iron is the ideal club for a beginer 9 hole course if youve got a nice swing..
a wood goes longer distances and is much more difficult to you.
pitching wedge is for chipping and off course the putter for putting.
March 31st, 2009 at 7:26 pm
if you are just starting you dont need a full set of clubs and you dont need expensive clubs. –a starter set would be an in -expensive—3-5-7-9 iron and a 3 wood and mabe a driver—-practice–practice—practice—take a lesson or two so you won’t be practicing the wrong way.—talk to the pro a the pro shop at the course
April 2nd, 2009 at 4:05 pm
irons are great to start with, your short game is what is the most important.
April 5th, 2009 at 12:19 pm
A 6 or 7 iron would be the best IMO, they will give you help getting the ball in the air, but will also show you when you don’t hit it right
April 6th, 2009 at 11:50 pm
I Just started last summer and no doubt that the short game is important! Irons is a must and the best way to learn them is at a range or at a 3 par golf course, if you have them in your area. Don’t give up-keep practicing- Goodluck!
April 7th, 2009 at 9:56 am
Unquestionably, start with the putter. This is what Tiger Woods’ father did with Tiger. He started with the putter on the green and he was not allowed to try the other clubs until he mastered the putter. After that, started with the lofted Irons (wedges, 9 iron, 8 iron) and had nim learn to chip and pitch shots around the green. As he mastered those, Tiger’s dad gradually progressed to longer and longer clubs.
As far as the most effective club in a round of golf… again, unquestionably, the putter. Golf is designed to hit 2 putts on every hole to shoot even par. That’s 36 strokes with the putter. No other club would even come close. The maximum number of times you wll ever hit your driver is 14, and you will go entire rounds without hitting certain irons.
April 9th, 2009 at 8:23 am
Irons!
And for someone who had never touch a golf and want to try if the game is meant for him/her, then 7 Iron is the best club in the bag for the person to try. Also for learning the game as a first timer, 7 Iron is the best club for the guy to learn the golf swing.
April 11th, 2009 at 5:48 am
you know what they say…or mabye you don’t because your new to golf, but drive for show and putt for dough.
start with chipping and putting. if you can put the ball on the fairway with your driver, with some distance, you’ll be fine.
April 12th, 2009 at 12:25 am
hmm…
i tried 8 irons for few months feel nothing improvements.
so few days ago i tried driver.
it is very fun when u hit with the driver,cause u get the distance.
for me iron is the most hardest!
driver is easy!
April 13th, 2009 at 12:19 am
To start with, you should start with the short iron PW and moving progressively to longer ones, not exceeding 6 iron. Leave the long irons alone for now. For a couple of weeks, once you develop relatively consistent, smooth and rythmic swing, you’re ready to swing the longer irons and the woods.
Most mistakes made by beginners trying to learn golf, is that they take out the driver, and try to swing for the cheap seats, this will have long term negative effects to your golf game. First it may give you injury, second, you will train your body to make bad compensations, like manipulating your wrists, take away, scooping, etc. It took me a lot of effort to get out o f my bad habits that I picked up simply by swinging without proper instructions.
And take lessons.
Second answer, is irons. Having a good iron play + short game around the greens most of the time allows you to save par. 20 yards difference of your tee shot does not matter as much as 20 yards difference around the green. Around the green 20 yards can mean you’re in the bunker, or water.
April 14th, 2009 at 7:42 am
I would begin with the putter…more than half your strokes in the beginning will be on the putting green. But I would also start with a 6-7 iron, and get the fundamentals down pact, grip. stance, balance….you really only need to learn one basic swing for all your clubs, as you learn you can tend to change it slightly for different clubs and different shots.