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| | | | How do you allow the golfer to hit an Iron with longer shafts and stronger lofts, with consistency, accuracy, and green-stopping trajectory? | You make them lighter, with lighter shafts, so that the golfer can generate faster speed but still maintain control. You make the soles slightly wider, so that the CoG can be even deeper, increasing the launch angle off the face. | | | | | | Callaway, the number 1 Iron brand in golf, have a full range of models to complement the Rogue family. Innovation committed to improving your experience on the course. So let’s match the right innovation, with the perfect fitting, to your golf swing. How much performance could we unlock? | | |
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| What if I told you that in many cases, fat or thin contact, or a swing-path-club-face-relationship creating a fade or slice, can be traced to poor posture with incorrect bend and tilt at address? | | Kellie Stenzel, in a Golf.com instruction video, aimed at golfers with an inclination to hit fat iron shots, goes straight to your posture and upper body bend at setup, as a major cause of this problem. Watch the video now with a good tip for an in-round checkup you can continually make. | | | Stenzel has a good tip in her video, but the question is, if you were asked to pull a Driver, and then a hybrid, and then a #7 iron out of your bag and set up correctly each time; would you have the knowledge of the key check points to a good setup? Not sure? | | |