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#2 |
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#3 |
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You guys didn't hear what I said. If you shoot over 100 I agree, get any ball you can find because chances are it won't be around long enough for you to establish a relationship with. But as I said any player who can score in the 90's can hit, at times, a decent PW. Obviously if you skull it it won't hold if it's a Pro V or a Top Flight. But when a decent iron, especially a shorter iron, is hit well with a good ball it won't hit and run off the back like a Top Rock or Pinnacle will. And no doubt a player shooting 95 will hit a lot of slices/hooks. That is why I suggested a ball in between a Top Flight and a Pro Vi like an NXT or a Noodle for that level player |
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#4 |
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#5 |
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#6 |
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There is no question that a particular brand of golf ball will not have any effect on a poorly struck golf ball. But there is also no question that a particular brand of golf ball WILL have an effect on a well struck golf ball. If you generate a decent amount of clubhead speed you really should use a ball with a little spin to stop it on the green if scoring matters to you. You don't need a Pro v-1 to generate the kind of spin you want or need. In fact, that ball probably hurts off the tee because of the added side (hooks and slices) or backspin (balloon balls) you'll probably get. The NXT Tour is a nice ball for the average amateurs' clubhead speed.
Anybody who plays golf and wants to score is wasting their time with balls like Top-Flites and Warbirds. But if you are just knocking the ball around and don't care about your score, use whatever you want. |
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#8 |
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Or does it matter?
I've been working through 3 dozen Callaway Warbirds and I'm starting to tire of them. They're pretty damn hard. I have some ProV1's that were given to me, but I'm saving them for a rainy day. Heh. It's hard for me to imagine laying out $45 or whatever for a dozen of them. So, do you just pull whatever out of the bag, or do you buy for type/model? |
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#9 |
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#11 |
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#12 |
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Unless you are a very low handicap golfer, topflights are the way to go. usually ~$20 for an 18 pack A friend in my group uses the 'extra roll' balls, and he can never figure out why he can't stick to a green. Yes, there's the added distance advantage. There's going to be a drawback. A golf coach once told me to not bother with using specific type balls until you're like a 5 handicap. |
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#13 |
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#15 |
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That's what I use. |
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#16 |
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#17 |
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If you struggle with distance off the tee, like I usually do, the hard ones made for extra distance are the way to go. Nothing like getting that monster roll through the fairway to make it look like I had a better shot than my golf buddies. He can't lob the ball to begin with, so he's using a 'hard' ball, coming into the green at a low trajectory, and complaining that he never sticks. It's irritating listening to him bitch about it week after week, and we all tell him "get more lob on your shot, quit using the extra roll balls" and he won't do it, and he keeps fucking wondering why he can't adjust. |
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#18 |
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Right, but by the same token, that same ball isn't going to help you on the back end, it's going to be a hindrance. It's FINE if you understand that, but the one guy in my regular group will actually complain that he can't ever get his ball to stick. ![]() |
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#19 |
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