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Here are five drivers that helped fight a slice in the 2025 testing. If you need a golf ball to the left instead of the right ...
More: Golf tip: How to lead with your hands, not your club head I always like to get my students to do this simple drill: Hold your driver. Take your hands and split them on the grip so you have ...
Most golfers can tolerate a little slice in their shots. But when it comes to your driver, it’s evident that the high slice is losing a lot of distance and getting you into all sorts of trouble.
That’s why you slice it. A driver with a slightly closed face isn’t going to be a problem, but if it’s bothering you, aim down the left third of the fairway, instead of down the left rough line.
So, with its new Big Bertha B-21 metalwoods, Callaway is using a low-spin recipe to cure a slice instead. To achieve that, the company is giving the B-21 driver a low-and-forward CG to reduce spin.
I took the train from Boston to New York in early February to test out Callaway’s new Diablo driver – a golf club based on the simple idea that a LOT of golfers tend to slice the ball off the ...
Depending on how you deliver the driver through impact, that amount of adjustability can move spin by up to 1,000 RPMs and move your launch window by several degrees. That is a huge change in how ...
Usually when a golfer of any level resorts to an anti-slice driver, it is darn near end-stage desperation. But Keegan Bradley’s switch to TaylorMade’s new SIM Max D driver, which is geared in ...
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