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#1 |
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I've been thinking - there seems to be a club for every specific shot now - chippers and wedges of every degree imaginable. Part of me thinks that I should learn to make different shots with the clubs I have before I expand what's in my bag. My father gave me a chipper he doesn't use, but I'm getting good at chipping with my wedges. Isn't it better to expand the range of shots I can make with a few clubs and then think about adding the "specialty" clubs?
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#2 |
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That has always been my thought. I use my 56 or 60 from 80 yards and in 90% of the time. I can use a 7 to bump and run, but that is almost always a specialty shot for me caused by some other factor like overhanging branches, etc. Otherwise, I use one of the two wedges and adjust the trajectory to match the need.
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#3 |
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I've never understood why anyone would use a space in his bag for a chipper when the same shot can be achieved with several other clubs already in the bag. In the typical 3 wedge setup that so many players need these days, there just isn't room in one's bag for a redundant club like a chipper.
My putter is the only club in my bag that has just a single function. Several of the shots that some would use a chipper for I will often putt instead. With a little practice, 3 or 4 feet of fringe isn't that difficult to putt through unless your course has fairly poor maintenance on the green complexes. |
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#4 |
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#6 |
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I've never understood why anyone would use a space in his bag for a chipper when the same shot can be achieved with several other clubs already in the bag. In the typical 3 wedge setup that so many players need these days, there just isn't room in one's bag for a redundant club like a chipper. As to Diane's original question, if it's truly an old-school chipper, then you probably are better off practicing with your wedges. |
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#7 |
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i think the niblick or another similar club is the only exception. What has been said previously rings true for me. A chipper (similar to the odyssey marxsman) is a wasted space in the bag.
I have found learning to use different wedges for all the diferent yardages from 100 yards in to be the single mostuseful thing i have done yet. I want to continue this into the irons learning to hit low shots etc.... so i reckon you should learn to use all your clubs better. HOWEVER, if a chipper is wha works for you and gets your scores down...then do it. |
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#8 |
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I came across an old Wilson chipper on ebay that looked so beautiful to me that I had to have it. It has the loft of a 7-iron or thereabout, it is a muscle-back blade in form, but the muscle is really fat, and the club is much heavier than a 7-iron, and has a much wider sole than a regular blade.
I haven't brought it to the course, because of the lack of versatility already mentioned in this thread, but I will say this: This club chips muuuch better and easier than a 7-iron would: It is perfectly designed for its task. At the course I play I don't have much use for the low running chip that this club wants to hit though, so it will probably stay out of the bag. However, I am not ruling out that on a different course it might go in! |
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