In all those Irons, most golfers would prefer to use only few of them, others may only been used particularly under such circumstances. Personally, the five wood has always been one of my favorites. It gives you some loft and I just feel more comfortable with it.
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For most golfers the high trajectory irons - the eight, nine and the wedge are the hardest to master.
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For some reason they get the idea that because they are used for short distances, they should take a different swing with those new cheap golf clubs. Every club in your bag should be hit the same way. The reason is that you have fourteen clubs and they are each made for a different purpose.
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The problem seems to be that golfers try to swing the way a club looks. With a lofted club that is cupped, they seem to feel that they should swing upward and scoop the ball or they take a chop at it as if the were chopping down a small sapling. This ruins the intent of your Callaway Big Bertha Irons. Every stroke should be the same, regardless of the shape of the club face.
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With a nine iron or your Callaway Black X-Tour Wedge, keep your head down and hit just behind the ball. Don't chop down. Follow through just as you would with any other club. By hitting slightly behind the ball you take a divot and cause the ball to have back spin that in turn will cause the ball to bite or stop once it hits the green.
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