ruff-driver
Journeyman Pro
What study was this then? How to be an 18 handicapper for life?
Adey,can i borrow your copy when your done
What study was this then? How to be an 18 handicapper for life?
I disagree with you.What study was this then? How to be an 18 handicapper for life?
Not quite sure why you would have this as a hard and fast rule. If there are minimal hazards surely a driver would be preferable as it would leave a much shorter second shot...you might rip one and get close to the green giving a better birdie opportunity than, say, a mid iron from 150 (unless you are the OP hitting it close from 150 all the time)
What study was this then? How to be an 18 handicapper for life?
I disagree with you.
Unless on a VERY tight course I would use a driver most times to get as close to the green as possible. If I finish in semi rough or fairway with a wedge to the green I have a great chance of hitting the green. If I am in thick rough, then it's a hack out, wedge to the green & possible one putt par, bogey at worst. Leaving myself 150 yards out every time, I couldn't guarantee hitting the green often enough.
Learn to drive it straight enough to miss the thick stuff & practice the short game a lot. Works for me!
From the sound of it he was referring to Mark Brodie's book Every Shot Counts.
This is based many thousands of amateur and professional game stats, and concludes (broadly) that as long as you're not actually out of bounds, regardless of whether you're in the rough, tees or fairway you'll score better if your drive is closer to the pin. And that the drive is the most important shot of any hole.
His stats drive a truck through the conventional wisdom that it's the short game that counts, and suggest that even the best pros are only marginally better than average players at putting.
I'm not sure he was taking my power-fade slice into consideration though
bm
Not sure that hitting a ball within 50 yards of the green with a driver but having to hack it out of the trees is a better option than leaving it 100 yards back in the fairway......
I agree that your tee shot is very important to any handicap golfer. But putting it in play is more important than hitting it as far down the hole as possible.
Not sure that hitting a ball within 50 yards of the green with a driver but having to hack it out of the trees is a better option than leaving it 100 yards back in the fairway......![]()
A shot that ends 50 yards shorter than your driver isn't going to magically be on the fairway every time.
Think it is a bit of a fallacy using a drive in the trees vs a shot of the fairway.


Not sure why you are getting so worked up and using loaded examples to make your point.
No one is saying use your driver for every par 4 or par 5.
There is clear evidence that distance is more important than accuracy. Doesn't mean shooting the ball off the planet, just means dropping your FiR down a few percent so your average approach is less.
There is clear evidence that distance is more important than accuracy.
Not sure why you are getting so worked up and using loaded examples to make your point.
No one is saying use your driver for every par 4 or par 5.
There is clear evidence that distance is more important than accuracy. Doesn't mean shooting the ball off the planet, just means dropping your FiR down a few percent so your average approach is less.
I disagree with you.
Unless on a VERY tight course I would use a driver most times to get as close to the green as possible. If I finish in semi rough or fairway with a wedge to the green I have a great chance of hitting the green. If I am in thick rough, then it's a hack out, wedge to the green & possible one putt par, bogey at worst. Leaving myself 150 yards out every time, I couldn't guarantee hitting the green often enough.
Learn to drive it straight enough to miss the thick stuff & practice the short game a lot. Works for me!
I agree with this. Yeah most of the time semi rough or fairway doesn't make a lot of difference to my next shot if a short club is in my hand.
The only thing I am missing is to learn to drive it straight enough to miss the thick stuff/trees some of the time, DOH
I only carry a driver about 220 yards plus rollout in summer, so need every bit of distance tbh. I think some people on the thread who are talking about 270 yards on a drive are playing a different game and have a lot more choices as they are just hitting everything so much longer. So can see both sides.
Its highlighting what we all face...can you beat old man par? Millions of ways to do it,very useful to shift it right out there with the big dog however I still rue the SF of club champs 3 yrs ago when I threw it away trying blow my opponent off the course with a huge length (and age!!)advantage over him.What happened? He was absolutely deadly with his wedge and putter,all of a sudden im spraying it everywhere,putting for halves and we went down 18 where I promptly hit a huuuge drive....out of bounds to hand him the tie! Shocking course management on my part and complete opposite on his..lesson? Know your game,I could of beat him with a 5iron off that tee.....him? 3w,hydrid and wedge to 10 ft while I putted for a 5 with my second ball.......not clever
Totally agree. Absolutely hate getting drawn against any senior in a match or knockout. You know they won't hit it far, usually straight or no more than first cut and will usually be deadly from 100 yards and in. Add in the fact you're also usually given shots and it's a potent force to overcome. They know what they can and can't do, when to use their shots etc. In fact, I bet if you compared some of these older guys scores in medals and stablefords to a long hitting player who goes for it all the time, the strategist will have a far more consistent and better tally over a period of time