including his muddler................Ping K15 Driver
Ping K15 3
Ping Ping Eye 2 Green dot 1, 3-9, S, L, W Irons
Ping Zing 2 iron
Ping Zing putter.
Next up will be a Ping K15 hybrid
For what its worth, my irons are about 20 years old and still are the shit. Just had everything re-gripped.
lol.. Yeah and its got a new name.. The Bob 10000!including his muddler................![]()
Damn, I think BagFullOfPings needs to relinquish his name. :wink:Ping K15 Driver
Ping K15 3
Ping Ping Eye 2 Green dot 1, 3-9, S, L, W Irons
Ping Zing 2 iron
Ping Zing putter.
Next up will be a Ping K15 hybrid
For what its worth, my irons are about 20 years old and still are the shit. Just had everything re-gripped.
Hey, I'm not goign to laugh. If they do the trick then why not? I still play my orginal King Cobra Norman Grinds because I can't find an iron that is better these days (for me at least). My driver is the original Cleveland Launcher, which I love to death. And my wedges are all Bob Vokey oil cans from over 10 years ago. I use a 80's Ping Zing putter with crap loads of lead tape on it to weigh it down. I am a believer that the new clubs out now aren't much better from years past. Its all about finding that perfect fit with a club that matches your skill level.Everyone prepare to laugh ... I'm rocking a set of Titleist Acushnets (SW through Driver) from the late 80's/early 90s? And have a Ping putter from the 80s.
The driver head is absolutely miniscule ... i typically tee off with my 2 or 3 iron (i know ... you're asking yourself "did he say 2 iron?")
LOL
I would disagree with the bolded part, having worked for a golf website for a couple years I think the consumer is benefiting greatly from all the customization and fittings being offered today. They can even properly fit you for a golf ball now, the technology is light years ahead of where it was 10+ years ago. Most golf shops here have fitting systems, launch monitors, ect in them, where 10 years ago you never saw that stuff. And don't tell me people aren't hitting the newer 460 CC drivers further and straighter than the old smaller steel drivers, that argument just doesn't fly. Whether the consumer takes advantage of that or not is up to them, but it is not hard to get custom fit nowadays by most golf companies.Hey, I'm not goign to laugh. If they do the trick then why not? I still play my orginal King Cobra Norman Grinds because I can't find an iron that is better these days (for me at least). My driver is the original Cleveland Launcher, which I love to death. And my wedges are all Bob Vokey oil cans from over 10 years ago. I use a 80's Ping Zing putter with crap loads of lead tape on it to weigh it down. I am a believer that the new clubs out now aren't much better from years past. Its all about finding that perfect fit with a club that matches your skill level.
I believe a lot of people hit clubs that are waayyy beyond their skill level. If you arent a single digit handicapper, then i believe you do not need to be hitting forged steel blades (I see a lot of this stuff). Even when I was a scratch golfer, I had a hard time hitting forged blades or even musclebacks. So a good cast set of irons with no offset is a perfect set of clubs for soemone 10-30 in handicap.
Oh and the 2 iron, yeah that may be one of my favorite clubs in the bag. Alot of amateurs use a driver waayyy too much. I probably use my driver 3-5 times per round. And use my 2 iron alot more. Accuracy beats the long lost ball anytime! So keep hitting that 2-iron!
True, true (sorry I was referring to the last ten years). I mean technology in the last ten years hasn't really been that dramatic to me. Yes of course the 460 Titanium drivers are light years ahead of persimmon and steel heads. But I hit my Titleist 976R as far as my Cleveland launcher, but the the size difference and forgiveness is much improved. The big drivers are usually a cover up for bad swings though. When I give lessons I give people an old Callaway Warbird to hit instead of a 460cc so that they have to concentrate on hitting the ball consistently in the sweetspot with good balance instead of relying on brute force and alot of forgiveness from huge club face surface.I would disagree with the bolded part, having worked for a golf website for a couple years I think the consumer is benefiting greatly from all the customization and fittings being offered today. They can even properly fit you for a golf ball now, the technology is light years ahead of where it was 10+ years ago. Most golf shops here have fitting systems, launch monitors, ect in them, where 10 years ago you never saw that stuff. And don't tell me people aren't hitting the newer 460 CC drivers further and straighter than the old smaller steel drivers, that argument just doesn't fly. Whether the consumer takes advantage of that or not is up to them, but it is not hard to get custom fit nowadays by most golf companies.
I do agree about the blades though, not sure why any casual golfer would want a club that is the least forgiving out there. But I think that is just an ego thing.