It helps you present the face of the club nicely and should give you better ball-striking. There are degrees of offsetting and sometimes this can be quite subtle. As you look down on the club at address, you may not really notice this, you have to purposefully look to see it. The shaft will just be sitting ahead of the leading edge of the club face. When you make the switch to using non-offset golf clubs you need to start getting your hands into a more aggressive position at impact.
This is a particular benefit when it comes to an offset driver, it can really help you reduce a slice. This is the shot that most golfers struggle to control with the driver and this may be the way to get a handle on it. The offset design really helps you deliver a squarer clubface at impact. Due to your hands getting past the ball before the club reaches it, you have more time to get into an optimal position.
Modern golf clubs and golf balls are designed for flight, they increase the chances and make it easier to hit towering shots that land softly. This is very much dependent on the spinrate that you can get on the ball which helps lift it into the air with the magic of aerodynamics.
This phenomenon is at the core of offsetting. That slight tweak to the shaft position in relation to the club face helps you improve the launch conditions of your shots. This should give you a higher launch angle and a stronger ball flight. Whilst it is great to quickly fix a slice and start hitting it straighter, an offset can mask the real issue. By just changing to this kind of club set-up, you will have no need to fix the swing issue that is actually causing the slice in the first place.
One way of getting round this is to take lessons, use the offset to help you regain confidence whilst also working on fixing your swing issue.
The offset can actually lead to you overdoing the shot that you are trying to cure. You can cure both a hook or a slice with this set-up as it gives you slightly more time and margin for error in squaring the face at impact.
As you get better at fixing your ailment, you can eventually overdo it and reverse your fault. The offset driver tends to be helpful for people who have slower swing speeds and are struggling to get the clubface square at impact with a driver. You may hook it, you may slice it, both shapes could benefit from an offset.
Does this sound like you? It is important that you also seek professional advice to understand what is causing the issue though. Take time and get lessons to learn why you get that shape, it will help you smooth it out over time. You need to grip an offset driver as you would any other club or a non-offset driver. That way, the club can do what it is designed to do, help you hit the fairway. Just grip it and rip it, as John Daly said. As above, you should hit your offset driver the way you hit any driver.
Set-up with the ball in line with your left heel for right handers , tilt your shoulders so your right shoulder is slightly below your left shoulder, like you are launching the ball in the air. Then swing it. Enjoy the increased consistency that this club should give you. Gain confidence in aiming at a target and hitting it. Remember that some lessons will help your further though so consider taking some. This is important to think about, as if you want to truly improve then tuition and hard work are the only way to get there.
However, I miss there a question, or test, if higher offset leads to tighter dispersion of shots. As the Myth or selling line…. From your testing, are you able to make any conclusion on this question?
Our data does not show a correlation between offset and dispersion. Really interesting. I might be being stupid but are the figures implying that thrre is little correlation between forgiveness and offset, and following that bad shots are not less bad with more offset. Great question. Go for the Srixons! I am far from a scratch golfer and I love them.
I got the 5i and 6i in the z, then 7i-PW in the z I have always struck my irons well with a baby draw. Since I golf once a week I always looked for new irons with maximum forgiveness sweet spot size of quarter vs a dime with minimum offset. Irons like that are just hard to find. Most of the time big sweet spots come with maximum offset. The Ping I was my latest upgrade from old Taylor made R7 tour irons.
I have only used the I for 1 season. With the I I find the green more consistently and have gained yardage do to stronger lofts. But I still miss the pinpoint accuracy I had with my R7. With my R7 Tour I could hit an 8 iron or 9 Iron or PW and turn around and tell my foursome I m all over it just by the feel I would end up within 5 feet every time. But with the R7 I lacked consistency and that feel shot happened twice a round. Other shots were off the green left. Do I just need more time with my I ?
Or should I look at another iron set? Matt, I hit the Taylormade P and I agree with your recmendation!
You just made up my mind on my next new irons! Will a stiffer shaft affect how much further left an offset iron will go? Will it help in straightening a shot and will a too flexible shaft go left more? Your email address will not be published. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Please check the checkbox to indicate your consent. Create a personalised ads profile. Select personalised ads. Apply market research to generate audience insights.
Measure content performance. Develop and improve products. List of Partners vendors. By Brent Kelley Brent Kelley. Brent Kelley is an award-winning sports journalist and golf expert with over 30 years in print and online journalism. TripSavvy's editorial guidelines. Share Pin Email. Was this page helpful? Thanks for letting us know! Tell us why! Your Privacy Rights. To change or withdraw your consent choices for TripSavvy. At any time, you can update your settings through the "EU Privacy" link at the bottom of any page.
These choices will be signaled globally to our partners and will not affect browsing data.
0コメント