T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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940.1 | One thought | SA1794::WELLSPEAK | Waiting for you to come along | Fri May 11 1990 09:53 | 14 |
| If you are able to move the ball right to left and left to right,
try holding your shot into the wind. What I mean by that is, if
you have a shot where the wind is blowing from right to left, instead
of starting the shot well off to the right and letting the wind
bring the ball to the left, start the ball either right at the pin
or even left of it, depending on how hard the wind is, and cut the
ball into the wind. Give yourself enough club though. The good
things about doing this, are you conrtol the flight of the ball
more than the wind does, and the ball will land softer with less
roll. When you let the wind take the shot, it will also take the
spin out if the ball and also be moving the ball faster when it
lands forcing the shot to roll quite a ways.
Beak
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940.2 | more wind = less competition | MAMIE::GORDON | | Fri May 11 1990 10:15 | 44 |
|
} Some things I figured out were:
} 1) try and keep the ball down.
To do this in the wind try using more club and a 3/4 swing. If
you have a 7 iron shot instead use a 5 iron, ball back in stance
a little and choke down on the club and use a 3/4 swing. You'll
get 7 iron distance but most importantly the ball will stay lower...
} 2) Hit the ball hard, it seems to buck the wind better.
WRONG.....in the wind you should only hit hard downwind and only
on the teeshot as you found out on 1st hole. Hitting hard into the
wind causes too much spin on the ball and causes it to be affected
more by the wind....
} 3) any draw/fade/slice/hook was magnified by the wind if you were going
into it.
true, that's why you don't try and hit these type of shot in a
strong wind...use a lot of punch shots as described in 1.
Actually playing in the wind as it was yesterday is good for you
as you learn many of the things you found out and will be better prepared
when you have to play in it again. There is an advantage to this....
Whenever I have to play and a strong wind is blowing I feel I
get an advantage because I take the attitude that half the field is
eliminated because they either can't play in windy conditions or they
let the wind get to them. Then I try and be extremely patient and make simple
shots...nothing fancy just use more club and be patient....
my $.02 worth
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940.3 | Winds in Ohio also... | MSEE::KELLEY | Custom fit clubs/club repairs | Fri May 11 1990 10:33 | 28 |
|
The big boys, playing in Ohio this week, had worse conditions...!
Rocco Mediate had a shot of 115 yards, he hit a six iron and come
up 30 feet short of the green...! Norman hit a tee shot of 380 and
another with a 3 wood that carried 340...! Nicklaus said that the
weather for yesterdays opening round was the worst weather he'd
ever encountered for a round of golf in his home state...
Info from the Boston Globe...
BTW, the leaders are...
Fred Couples 69
Corey Pavin 73
Don Pooley 73
L, Wadkins 73
Norman 73
Persons 73
Irwin 73
Delsing 73
Azinger 74
Stewart 74
Baker_Finch 74
Keep it low... Don't try to over-power it... Pray...!
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940.4 | IT WILL TAKE A WHILE | YUPPY::MCSKEANEP | | Fri May 11 1990 11:32 | 4 |
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USE A PUTTER!!!!!!
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940.5 | | ASABET::VARLEY | | Fri May 11 1990 11:34 | 5 |
| As long as you can hold on to it, you can play ! I played in Ireland
several years ago and we had 20 mph MINIMUM all week. Wind is fine with
me, but rain is another story...
-- Jack
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940.6 | Watchfor falling trees | BTOQA::SHANE | | Fri May 11 1990 11:34 | 14 |
|
My league started yeterday in that wind storm. While we were on the
2nd tee, two very large Hemlocks fell. One in the fairway, the other
just missed the green.
A tree next to the green was swaying so much that the ground was
heaving up around it.
We played anyway!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Choked down on everthing and punched the ball!!!!!!!
Shane
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940.7 | alittle more | CHRLIE::HUSTON | | Fri May 11 1990 11:39 | 22 |
|
Since I started this note and had to cut short due to a time commitment
I would like to add anther thought. When I played in college, at least
18 holes a day 4-5 days a week, I could play in wind with no problem,
my ball striking was more solid etc. Yesterday was the first time in
a while I have had to manage wind like that, it took most of the round
to regain the confidence swing to hit the shots and keep them under the
wind. As can seen by the score (+8 through 5, +1 for the last 4) I
did remember how to do it.
I still disagree with .2, who says not to hit the ball hard.
Especially straight into the wind, I like to really hit it hard off the
tee, I just tee the ball alittle lower and move it back in the stance.
Doing this I was not losing all that much distance on my drives, when I
hit a straight shot it went straight. When I mentioned the part about
fade/draw being magnified I forgot to mention that this was evident
when you did not mean to fade/draw, they turned into a slice/hook.
Then again I like .4's answer. :-)
--Bob
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940.8 | Punch it! | LABC::MCCLUSKY | | Fri May 11 1990 12:51 | 17 |
| re:.2
Right on. I always try to stand just slightly straighter(sit down
less) and play the ball back a little further, just as I would in
hitting under the trees.
re:.7
.2 is correct, unless you are overestimating the wind. At 40 mph he
is absolutely correct - maybe under 20 mph you could be correct, but
the possibility is that you will spoil the tempo of the swing, causing
those bad things that are intensified by the wind.
General comment - particularly important for contact lens wearers - get
some goggles, ala Kareem Abdul Jabbar to keep the dust particles out.
You'll be able to much better. If you need practice, come play our
California desert courses in the afternoon.
Big Mac
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940.9 | Surlyn! | PINGS::OGREN | | Fri May 11 1990 13:15 | 10 |
| My shots are even more random in bigtime wind! One thing not mentioned
is changing balls. I think a surlyn ball is more predictable in
breezes - especially a two piece if you can stand to play them.
I would guess that's due to a slower spin rate which keeps the ball
from flying out of control (and why you need to be careful about
swinging harder).
A pencil with eraser also helps ;-)
Eric
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940.10 | | OVRDRV::NISKALA | Break 90 in '90! | Fri May 11 1990 13:30 | 13 |
| Bob,
You were lucky you got to play the front side. The back at
PCC was pretty bad too. #10 was a gem to start on, 500+ yards into
the stiff breeze. I hit a driver, 2 iron, and 6 iron (all well spanked)
to reach the back of the green. The long par 4's, thankfully they don't
have the blue tees out yet, all had cross breezes so there were a lot
of folks playing out of the wrong fairway....... The only easy hole
was #18. A driver and sand wedge with the wind at our backs.
You have to keep the ball low in that wind. Hope it never blows
that bad again there. BTW, I had a 47 for my round. 4 pars, 1 bogey,
2 doubles, 1 triple, and a quadruple. (#10 - first 2 tee shots OB)
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940.11 | | PUTTER::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Fri May 11 1990 14:28 | 12 |
|
My two cents worth:
Hit your 2 iron into the wind, hit your 5 wood with the wind. Also
learn to play bump & run. Also learn to play bump & run. Hitting
a full wedge with/against the wind is too tough to control. It
always sails/drops. On the other hand a bump & run 7 iron will
cozy right up to the flag. Of course that means you need to
play course management, to avoid those 40 yd. shots over traps to
the green.
Larry
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940.12 | What to do when the wind rolls the ball? | CHRLIE::HUSTON | | Fri May 11 1990 16:35 | 21 |
|
re .11
I was trying to bump and run whenever I could, but the layout of the
holes at Pasaconoway looks wide open, but it pays to hit the
fairway. Just about all holes have open entrance to the green from
the fairway, if you are at all in the rough you usually have to
carry something, bunker, waste land, bush etc.
As you said, course management is definetly the key to playing well
in bad conditions.
One other thing I noticed is that confidence had alot to do with how
I was doing, more so that on a normal day.
--Bob
Keith, did you guys have any trouble with the ball being moved by the
wind while you were lining up putts etc? What do you do then?
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940.13 | | OVRDRV::NISKALA | Break 90 in '90! | Fri May 11 1990 17:07 | 8 |
| Bob,
None of the balls moved while lining up putts, but while standing
over them I could see them sort of "rocking in the wind". Rather
unnerving, I'd say.......
Keith
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940.14 | The cure is..... don't play in the wind !! | AYOV18::DREES | let Tommy Burns take it !!! | Fri May 11 1990 21:12 | 16 |
|
I find when playing in strong wind, especially approaches to greens,
that it's far better to cut or draw into the wind rather than play
with the wind.As has been said before you have greater control and
a much better chance of keeping the ball on the green. If you play
with the wind on an approach you have to be very accurate when
aiming as the ball will not hold when it hits the green. Therefore you
must allow for the run and obviously this is very hard in the wind.
I also change from a balata ball to a harder two piece ball in
the wind simply because I try to punch nearly every shot and in
doing so a soft ball would not stay in shape for too long.
If you can adapt your game playing in the wind shouldn't cause
you too many sleepless nights.
The Insomniac.
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