ericinmich
Bronze Member
I started golfing about 7 yrs ago... now OK but not great. 16hdcp.
I'd suggest buying a set in groups (Woods, Irons, Wedges, and putter)
I wouldn't just by a set from Dicks. Go to a golf shop and let them educate you about the types of irons. There is a huge range of clubs (irons) from large cavity backed ones (and hybrid irons) that help the high handicapper to the blades that the pros use. Don't by the blades... Often the sets she at the stores like Dicks are a set that look like what the pros use.
Go to the web sites of manufactures and learn the types/ranges of clubs that are out there.
Woods. You don't need to spend the long dollar, but it's worth getting a newer style large driver.
One sand wedge (56degree) and a putter that works (most I've tried don't work well, or for very often...).
Lessons are a great thing to get you going. Then it's about hitting as many balls as you can... I joined a cheap 'country club' (if you can call it that) with a driving range where you can hit for as long as you want. This is about the only way to improve (in my opinion). Most ranges sell a bucket of balls that lasts 30 minues... You want to swing for an hour or more to get a repeatable swing. I have seen some ranges that sell huge buckets and that might work.
Read a few books. Golf for dummies is a good starter (and funny). Subscribe to a magazine for a year or two... after that, you'll have gotten enough advice to make your head spin, plus they seem to rerun the 'pro tips', etc.
Good luck...
I'd suggest buying a set in groups (Woods, Irons, Wedges, and putter)
I wouldn't just by a set from Dicks. Go to a golf shop and let them educate you about the types of irons. There is a huge range of clubs (irons) from large cavity backed ones (and hybrid irons) that help the high handicapper to the blades that the pros use. Don't by the blades... Often the sets she at the stores like Dicks are a set that look like what the pros use.
Go to the web sites of manufactures and learn the types/ranges of clubs that are out there.
Woods. You don't need to spend the long dollar, but it's worth getting a newer style large driver.
One sand wedge (56degree) and a putter that works (most I've tried don't work well, or for very often...).
Lessons are a great thing to get you going. Then it's about hitting as many balls as you can... I joined a cheap 'country club' (if you can call it that) with a driving range where you can hit for as long as you want. This is about the only way to improve (in my opinion). Most ranges sell a bucket of balls that lasts 30 minues... You want to swing for an hour or more to get a repeatable swing. I have seen some ranges that sell huge buckets and that might work.
Read a few books. Golf for dummies is a good starter (and funny). Subscribe to a magazine for a year or two... after that, you'll have gotten enough advice to make your head spin, plus they seem to rerun the 'pro tips', etc.
Good luck...