| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 1811.1 | Mine was very helpful | ATPS::MILLER |  | Mon Dec 06 1993 13:40 | 6 | 
|  |     
    	I picked one up late in the summer.  Found it to be extremely
    	helpful.  It will take a bit of patience and in my experience should
    	be treated as a training aid. Definitely worth the investment.
    
    	Walt    
 | 
| 1811.2 | is there a penalty? | TPTEST::MOOK | Where are you between two thoughts? | Mon Dec 06 1993 13:58 | 11 | 
|  | RE .0
I wonder what the rules say about your friend putting that club in his bag?
If its the 15th club, is there a penalty?
If its the 14th club, is there a penalty for a nonconforming club?
Rule meisters, come forth!
Bob
 | 
| 1811.3 | define non-conformity | CSLALL::WEWING |  | Mon Dec 06 1993 14:00 | 7 | 
|  |     i remember a player being penalized for having an extra
    club (his son's plastic toy) in his bag.  No mention
    of nonconformity was made.  Maybe there was no need
    to as it put him over the 14 club limit
    what makes a club non-conforming?
    
    black nicklaus
 | 
| 1811.4 | Why it's non-conforming. | ANDREW::OSTROM | ETP Engineering | Mon Dec 06 1993 15:14 | 9 | 
|  | 
    I think it would be non-conforming because it's not got a "straight"
    shaft, and has a "non-fixed" head.  That should only be a problem if
    he actually uses it during a stipulated round, as long as he only has
    14 clubs in the bag.  Of course, if he did use it he would also be
    breaking the rule about practicing on the course, right?  (And we
    wonder why so many laywers play golf!)
                                Andy Ostrom
 | 
| 1811.5 | MEDICUS-what I'd like to do? | CSOA1::RANKIN |  | Mon Dec 06 1993 22:00 | 17 | 
|  |     So, what I plan on dong is carry the training tool (MEDICUS) in my bag
    along with 14 real clubs. (the story about the pro that got DQ'd for
    having his sons club was..the sons club was a real club cut short. 
    Technically, it could be used in a pinch)
    
    Now, as far as practicing on the course, I have seen pro's take
    practice swings..so, couldn't I take a practice swing with my
    "training tool" while waiting to take my turn?  
    
    I don't think I have to give up one of my 14 clubs to be able to carry
    this club.  I also think that I should be able to take a few practice
    swings with it as long as I don't hit a ball and of course don't slow
    down the pace of play.
    
    Are there any real rules about this?
    
    -john
 | 
| 1811.6 | when is a club not a club? | NOVA::FINNERTY | Sell high, buy low | Tue Dec 07 1993 08:42 | 7 | 
|  |     
    if it isn't a 'club', then it shouldn't count towards the club limit...
    after all, nobody gets penalized for carrying an umbrella.  If you
    can't hit the ball legally with it, it's not a club.
    
    /jim
    
 | 
| 1811.7 |  | KOALA::DEFELICE |  | Tue Dec 07 1993 10:51 | 15 | 
|  |     Give the USGA a call and ask.  My 'guess' is that it would be illegal
    to carry it as a 15th club and/or to use it in actual play.  If it were
    one of 14 and used in a practice swing only I can't see how that would
    be a penalty.
    
    If you do find out that it would be in violation, for some reason,
    don't ask your playing partners to if it's ok regardless.  Agreeing to
    ignore a rule is a penalty for all.
    
    I can remember playing with a guy who proudly showed me a two-sided
    chipper that he used all the time.  Frankly, I couldn't have cared less
    but informed him that he should not use it in a tournament because it
    was an illegal club.  Well, he got really ticked at me for that one
    even though I was trying to save him from a possible bad situation. 
    
 | 
| 1811.8 | Ok to carry, not to use, during round | LJSRV2::WORTH1::robbins | Worth Robbins 226-2396 | Tue Dec 07 1993 11:11 | 5 | 
|  | I believe the rule is, it is not a club so it doesn't count against the 
14-club limit, i.e. it's ok to have in the bag. You can use it freely up to 
the point of playing the first stroke, i.e. teeing off on #1. After that, 
the rules against practicing apply, i.e. it stays in the bag during the 
round.
 | 
| 1811.9 | two sided putter - si o  no? | CSLALL::WEWING |  | Tue Dec 07 1993 12:38 | 9 | 
|  |     a two-sided chipper is illegal?
    
    i used to have a putter that could be used right
    or left handed.  is that also illegal?  if not,
    why not?  it would seem to be the same as the
    chipper?
    
    black nicklaus
    
 | 
| 1811.10 | illegal is my vote | TPTEST::MOOK | Where are you between two thoughts? | Tue Dec 07 1993 12:48 | 14 | 
|  | If this is the same 'club' I've tried out at Nevada Bob's, it CAN be used to
hit balls.  So I'll bet its classified as a non-conforming and/or a swing aid,
both of which would be illegal just have in your bag.  And if you can't use
it on the course, it doesn't make any sense to carry it around as extra weight.
Anyway, (on the pracice tee) it seems like you have to have a certain type of
swing to keep it from breaking down.  I seems to me that you have to mold
your swing to suit it rather than it making the swing you have better.  There
are alot of 'weird' swings out there that work pretty well that could sustain
damage from trying to use it - pros included.
fwiw,
Bob
 | 
| 1811.11 | Putters only... | KOALA::DEFELICE |  | Tue Dec 07 1993 13:19 | 10 | 
|  |     Don't have the rule book with me, but I'm positive that a putter is the
    only club that can have two surfaces to strike a ball with.  Any other
    club, including those chippers, with two sides to strike the ball with
    are definitely illegal.
    
    That doesn't mean that you can't turn an iron around and hit it with
    the back side or spoon if you're up against a tree.  I've actually
    managed to pull off a pretty good shot (thanks to Jack Nick.) with this
    method.
    
 | 
| 1811.12 | to be or 4-1b? | TPTEST::MOOK | Where are you between two thoughts? | Tue Dec 07 1993 14:51 | 7 | 
|  | According to decision 4-4a/14 a weighted training club may be selected as one of
the 14 clubs carried by a player, provided it conforms to rule 4-1.
Rule 4-1b it says the shaft must be stright with the same bending and twisting
properties in any direction.
Therfore the mecus dosn't conform to rule 4-1b.
 | 
| 1811.13 |  | TOLKIN::HOGAN |  | Tue Dec 07 1993 15:17 | 6 | 
|  |     
    Oh that's to bad. I just bought a whole set of mecus iron and woods.
    1 iron thru sw and 3 woods. Does that make them legal now? They
    all have the same properties. 
    
    Pete ( the guy with the five iron wrapped around his neck)
 | 
| 1811.14 | sp | CSOA1::RANKIN |  | Tue Dec 07 1993 16:04 | 1 | 
|  |     M E D I C U S not mecus.  This is a 5 iron with a hinge in the shaft.
 | 
| 1811.15 |  | TOLKIN::HOGAN |  | Tue Dec 07 1993 17:15 | 3 | 
|  |     Ya that's the one, Medicus. Love that hinge thing. So are my Medicus
    clubs legal now that I have a whole set of matching hinges clubs?
    
 | 
| 1811.16 | A whole set of illegal clubs. | ANDREW::OSTROM | ETP Engineering | Wed Dec 08 1993 09:45 | 7 | 
|  | 
    No.  The rule says that any club must have the same bending/twisting
    characteristics in any direction, not that all your clubs have to be
    the same.  This is to prohibit aerodynamic shafts, etc.  You now own
    a WHOLE SET of illegal clubs!  ;-)
                                   Andy
 | 
| 1811.17 | confused | NOVA::FINNERTY | Sell high, buy low | Wed Dec 08 1993 15:27 | 8 | 
|  |     
    why on Earth would anyone want a set of these?  You're not hitting the
    ball anyway, right?
    
    (I have a hinging bag you might be interested in, too)
    
    ;)                 
    
 | 
| 1811.18 | gibberish | KALI::LENEHAN |  | Wed Dec 08 1993 17:12 | 27 | 
|  |     
    Hi Pete,
    
    	A whole set of medicus irons ... hmmmmmmmm    NOT !
    
    	C'mon Pete, be nice... not all these nice people know 
    your sarcastic nature!
    
    	I like the medicus club.. everytime I swing hard/quick it breaks
    and I have to stop in the middle of my swing, or try to hit the ball
    on the hinge. If I took a set of them out on the course It'd take me 
    about 8 hours to play nine holes :) . I'd need about 5 pratice
    swings per shot before I could get the hinge to stay connected!
    
    	One thing about Tempo you should think about... look at how quick
    Nick Price is... and then imagine him trying to use the medicus? Then
    check out his 1993 earnings $1.5 million give or take a couple
    hundred thousand? Some people just don't run that slow by default.
    Their natural tempo is rock and roll, not Art Linkletter speed.
    
    	geesh what a motormouth I am, just popped in to bust Pete , and
    now my fingers hurt!
    
    	lata,
    
    	Walta
    	
 | 
| 1811.19 | but then I'm a hacker, so what do I know? | NOVA::FINNERTY | Sell high, buy low | Mon Dec 13 1993 12:41 | 20 | 
|  |     
    re: -.1 
    
    	I don't believe that speed per se has much to do with making a
    	swing good or bad, and I don't believe that the medicus or similar
    	clubs have much merit.  
    
    	I think that what matters is _balance_.  To the extent that most
    	of us can't swing too hard and still maintain proper balance, then
    	slower is better.  But remember that power == clubhead speed, so it
    	seems to me that the goal is to generate speed, but be in perfect
    	control and balance.  I don't think that this is what the medicus
    	club promotes.
    
    	A device that measured how well balanced you remain throughout
    	the swing as well as the clubhead speed and/or clubhead momentum
    	sounds more appropriate to me.  'course, it sounds like it would
    	be a lot more expensive than a fancy hinge, too.
    
    		;)
 | 
| 1811.20 |  | FREE::GOGUEN | Is it spring yet? | Mon Dec 13 1993 16:39 | 8 | 
|  |     While you can't bring the Medicus back too quickly, you can generate a
    lot of clubhead speed with it (without breaking the hinge) if you swing
    it properly.  You have a good point, though.  A slow backswing isn't
    mandatory for a great swing/clubhead speed, but it's probably easier
    for most amateurs to stay slow to maintain balance -- many do waste a
    lot of clubhead speed on the backswing...
    
    -- dg
 | 
| 1811.21 | Swing 100% on all full shots. | ANDREW::OSTROM | ETP Engineering | Tue Dec 14 1993 09:41 | 10 | 
|  | 
    One think I remember vividly from reading some of Jack Nicklaus'
    writings is that he says he is forever in debt to his early teacher
    (Jack Grout?) for making him learn to swing the club 100% all the
    time, BEFORE worrying about where the ball went.  He clearly
    maintains that you need to SWING the club through the ball, not try
    to control it into the ball.  Wouldn't the medicus tend to encourace
    you to try to steer the club with your hands?
    
                                Andy Ostrom
 | 
| 1811.22 | right on... | TRLIAN::GORDON |  | Tue Dec 14 1993 11:54 | 11 | 
|  |     re: .19
    
    exactly...and Sam Snead use to practice his swing "barefooted" because
    as he said if your balance is off you'll fall on your butt...!!!
    
    a side note:
    
    		ever push a child on a swing??? notice that if you
    try really pushing withohard the swing starts to sway...you need a
    controlled push each time to generate the speed, it's the same for a
    golf��A0� swing...
 | 
| 1811.23 |  | FREE::GOGUEN | Is it spring yet? | Tue Dec 14 1993 11:58 | 10 | 
|  |     The Medicus doesn't really make you learn to hit the ball with your
    hands.  I'm sure others with various swings have seen it break down at
    different points, but once I get it started with a slow-but-fluid take
    away, I can swing it pretty hard (and hit balls with it) without it
    unhinging.
    
    Davis Love III endorses it, but then again, they pay him to say nice
    things about it.
    
    -- dg
 | 
| 1811.24 | for sale | TOLKIN::HOGAN |  | Tue Dec 14 1993 12:44 | 8 | 
|  |     
    For Sale: Medicus irons: 1 thru SW
                      Woods: 1,3 and 5
                      
                             Includes: Recently purchased hinged bag
                                    
                      Price: $27.00                   
                     Walter: $1800.00 + two free putting lessons
 | 
| 1811.25 | R U Game? | KALI::LENEHAN |  | Tue Dec 14 1993 15:00 | 14 | 
|  |     
    
    reply Pete,
    
    Ouch.
    
    I detect a another early spring rematch at the Cape Cod CC???
    
    No strokes.
    
    	Walta
    
    
    PS. My turn to drive.
 | 
| 1811.26 | sounds good | TOLKIN::HOGAN |  | Tue Dec 14 1993 16:24 | 6 | 
|  |     
    Can hardly wait. Good time last year.
    
    Pete
    
    
 | 
| 1811.27 | Medicus - Swing it hard ! | CSOA1::RANKIN |  | Tue Dec 14 1993 22:20 | 9 | 
|  |     I fnid the Medicus does not hinder how hard I swing the club.  There
    can only be one fastest point in the swing.  It should be at the moment
    the club goes through the ball.
    
    Re Jack N.:  He and Jack Grout said that a player should start by
    hitting the ball hard and far.  After you can do that, they would then
    work on making it go straight.
    
    -John
 | 
| 1811.28 |  | MROA::VARLEY |  | Wed Dec 15 1993 10:23 | 4 | 
|  |     Arnold Palmer's dad taught him the same way. Two great drivers of the
    golf ball - hmmmmmmmm ....
    
    __Jack
 |