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Leading Edge

Welcome to the Leading Edge, where the GolfChannel.com team and Golf Channel talent will regularly file thoughts and opinions from the world of golf equipment.

Golf Channel

2Dynamic finish for Tiger Woods

profileIconDAVID ALLEN, Equipment and Instruction Editor, GolfChannel.com   Posted 08/04/2009, 9:24 AM EST

Tiger Woods claimed his 69th PGA Tour victory this past week at the Buick Open playing True Temper’s Dynamic Gold X100 steel shafts in his irons. Nine of the top 10 finishers at the Buick played True Temper shafts, as did Fred Funk, who shot a tournament-record 20-under par to win the U.S. Senior Open.

Funk, one of the most accurate drivers in PGA Tour history, hit 84 percent of his fairways at the U.S. Senior Open with his TaylorMade Burner 09 driver (9.5 degrees). Funk also played TaylorMade Rescue hybrids (16 and 19 degrees), Tour Preferred irons (4-PW) and rac TP wedges (54 and 58 degrees).

Some other notable what’s in the bag information from this weekend: Tiger’s win at the Buick Open was the fifth by a Nike Golf player on the PGA Tour since June 21, a streak which includes two major titles (Lucas Glover at the U.S. Open; Stewart Cink at the Open Championship); Catriona Mathew played the new 2009 ProV1x ball for the first time in competition in capturing the Ricoh Women’s British Open for her first major championship; and Greg Chalmers played a new set of yet-to-be released Titleist CB irons in tying for second (at 17 under) behind Woods in the Buick Open.

 

4
Aug
Adam Barr

0Ping unveils new G15 and i15 clubs

profileIconADAM BARR   Posted 07/30/2009, 11:41 AM EST

The golf world looks forward to new releases by Ping, largely because the company has made a 50-year habit of taking its time with new products. Both Karsten Solheim, the company’s late founder, and his son John, who heads it now, have been resolute in refusing to bring out new product until they’re certain its markedly better than what they already had.

So club aficionados will raise an eyebrow or two when checking out the new G15 and i15 lines, due in stores in mid-August. The G15 theme is high-tech game improvement and forgiveness, while the i15 family strives to merge a measure of forgiveness with the control and workability skilled players crave.

But club choice so far hasn’t necessarily gone in lockstep with player skill levels. Ping tour pro Mark Calcavecchia put the G15 driver into his bag at the RBC Canadian Open and made nine straight birdies at one point, a PGA Tour record.

The G15 family of irons employs a high-launch design and maximum forgiveness to bring more consistency to your iron play. There’s a new Custom Tuning Port in the back cavity to help resist twisting and move more weight to the perimeter. Also, weight from the thinned-out face has been put into the toe to regularize mis-hits.

The driver in the G15 family has a very thin crown, which leaves some grams to be put into external sole weights, dropping the center of gravity and sliding it back. Ping designed a proprietary shaft for this club that allows five more grams to be shifted into the head for greater forgiveness there.

The i15 irons, the control/shotmaker option, come in a progressive set that offers more forgiveness in the long clubs. The stainless steel heads get a little smaller as the clubs get shorter, and a tungsten toe insert maintains some forgiveness on mis-hits. That Custom Tuning Port is there, as well as a stabilizing bar, to engineer beneficial sound and feel qualities that are so often important to skilled players.

Like the G15, the i15 driver is also 460 cc. It features a pear-shaped head with a deep face and a bulge crown to enhance workability.

 

30
Jul
Adam Barr

0Trevino signs with Bridgestone

profileIconADAM BARR   Posted 07/24/2009, 11:53 AM EST

Lee Trevino has signed a new endorsement deal with Bridgestone Golf. He’ll play the company’s B330-RX golf ball, which has enjoyed great success at retail since it appeared late last year. The six-time major winner will star in an ad with fellow Bridgestone team member Fred Couples.

Trevino, who has won 29 times each on the PGA Tour and the Champions Tour, discovered the ball by accident during a round with friends. The ball, which is designed to deliver tour-like performance for amateur swing speeds, happened to be just right for Trevino’s game – so it’s in the bag. He’ll play it in all appearances this year.

 

24
Jul
Golf Channel

0Hybrids are elementary for Watson

profileIconDAVID ALLEN, Equipment and Instruction Editor, GolfChannel.com   Posted 07/22/2009, 2:33 PM EST

Before the Open Championship, Tom Watson removed his Adams Puglielli 52-degree wedge from his bag in favor of an extra hybrid – an Adams Idea Pro (20 degrees). It was one of two hybrids in Watson’s bag (the other an 18 degree) and 28 Adams hybrids in play at Turnberry, the most in the field. Among the other players to employ Adams hybrids in Scotland were John Daly (Idea Pro, 14 and 18 degrees), Vijay Singh, Chad Campbell and low amateur Matteo Manassero of Italy. Singh has been known to play as many as three Idea a3 hybrids at times, most recently at last month's U.S. Open.

The true MVP of clubs in Watson’s near-historic march to the Claret Jug at age 59 was his Adams Speedline driver (9.5 degrees). Watson averaged 295 yards per drive for the week, nearly six yards longer than the combined average of the rest of the field. Also in Watson’s bag at Turnberry: Adams Insight hybrid-fairway wood (14.5 degrees), Adams Idea Pro irons (3-PW), Adams Tom Watson wedge (56 degrees), Odyssey White Hot XG No. 7 putter, and Titleist Pro V1 golf ball.

Stewart Cink, who defeated Watson in a four-hole playoff to win the Open Championship, played a Nike SQ Sumo2 Tour driver. That happens to be the same driver that Lucas Glover used to win the U.S. Open at Bethpage Black. Until the U.S. Open, square-headed drivers were 0 for the majors; now, they’ve won back-to-back major championships. This bit of news could bode well for Carl Pettersson at the PGA Championship next month, as he is the only other Nike staff player to use the Sumo2.

Click here to check out Stewart Cink's full bag.

 

22
Jul
Adam Barr

0Where the sun does shine

profileIconADAM BARR   Posted 07/20/2009, 3:45 PM EST

Green is all the rage these days, even where things are already green. So it’s no surprise that Sebonack Golf Club, a Jack Nicklaus-Tom Doak course in Southampton, N.Y., plans to power its golf cars with solar energy. Sebonack claims to be the first in the nation to fuel its entire fleet this way.

Roof-mounted solar panels made by Danish firm SolarDrive suck in the light on both sunny and cloudy days and convert it into electricity for the club’s existing fleet of 40 Club Car models. That means the club will need to charge the cars less often, reducing its grid electricity consumption by 50 to 75 percent and doubling battery life. That will result in cost savings for the club, and 6.5 fewer tons of carbon emissions for the environment in general.

 

20
Jul
Adam Barr

0Wii to help analyze your swing

profileIconADAM BARR   Posted 07/15/2009, 9:58 AM EST

Star teacher David Leadbetter, who tutors Michelle Wie, is now sharing lessons with Wii.

My Personal Golf Trainer, a game designed for the popular Wii platform, will incorporate Leadbetter's 7 Steps to a Better Golf Swing, says maker Data Design Interactive of Sarasota, Fla. It will also feature the Wii Balance Board, which can analyze the swing in three dimensions, giving feedback about weight transfer, swing path, and other crucial swing markers you can't see while you're busy swinging. Suggested retail will be about $50 for the game itself; the Wii equipment is sold separately. Look for it in October.

Now, if I can just get my kid to stop playing Call of Duty for a few minutes.

 

15
Jul
Adam Barr

1USGA gives to disabilities

profileIconADAM BARR   Posted 07/10/2009, 12:35 PM EST

The U.S. Golf Association spread more than $1.35 million in its traditional April distribution, the organization announced earlier this week. Eighty-six U.S. golf programs benefited, and one-fifth of those work to make golf available to players with disabilities.

Examples would include: the GAIN (Golf: Accessible and Inclusive Networks) initiative of the Ohio Junior Golf Association, the Not Far From Par program for autistic children in the Bergenfield (N.J.) Public School District, a golf-based rehabilitation effort for young men with substance abuse and mental health problems run by The Therapeutic Center at Fox Chase in Philadelphia, and a program for physically or visually impaired golfers organized by the Great Lakes Adaptive Sports Association in Lake Forest, Ill., near Chicago.

The USGA Grants Initiative has given more than $65 million to worthy golf causes since 1997.

 

10
Jul
Golf Channel

1Lofty expectations

profileIconDAVID ALLEN, Equipment and Instruction Editor, GolfChannel.com   Posted 07/07/2009, 9:58 AM EST

BETHLEHEM, Pa. – While Saucon Valley Country Club is playing fairly soft early this week, players are expecting the greens to firm up and play more according to U.S. Open speeds by the time play begins on Thursday. For this reason, Paula Creamer has put a TaylorMade r7 7-wood (22 degrees) in her bag for the championship and is also considering using a TaylorMade R9 5-wood (19 degrees).

“She’ll be able to hit the ball a little higher going into the greens with the 7-wood,” said Creamer’s caddie, Colin Cann, “and she’ll be able control her distance better. “That’s important because these greens are very undulating.”

Creamer, who’s battling an injured left thumb, normally plays with 19- and 22-degree TaylorMade Rescue Dual hybrids, but the added length of the woods should help elevate the ball even more, says TaylorMade LPGA Tour rep Brian Rhattigan. That will be a big plus on the par-3s at Saucon Valley (three measure more than 165 yards, including the devilish 210-yard 9th hole) and from out of the thick, lush rough. There’s a slight chance of a shower today and Wednesday, but the forecast for the rest of the week looks sunny and dry, a stark contrast to all of the rain the men received a few weeks ago at Bethpage Black.

“She’ll get a little higher launch with the woods, so the ball will sit down on the greens better,” said Rhattigan. 

 

7
Jul
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