Bomb & Gouge Blog

Accelerating Adjustability

GOUGE: The idea that the USGA's rule changed allowing increased adjustability of clubs might somehow fundamentally change the way the industry develops and markets golf clubs is no idle pursuit. It's already big news, as evidenced by this report from Golf DIgest's Max Adler, associate editor for equipment. Let us know your thoughts on how much you're excited by club adjustability, and whether it will be the next big thing in golf.

    Adler writes:
There are Seven Heavenly Virtues and Seven Deadly Sins, so it was only fitting that the first ever Club Adjustability Symposium, an assembly gathered at this year’s PGA Show in Orlando to forecast the glory and/or doom of the USGA’s recent rule relaxing, would have seven panelists to lead the discussion. The seven industry experts with headset microphones were Dick Rugge, Technical Director to the USGA, John K. Solheim, Vice President of Engineering at Ping, Jeff Colton, Senior Vice President of Research & Development at Callaway, John Hoeflich, Senior Vice President of Nickent, Graeme Horwood, Vice President of Engineering and R&D at True Temper Sports, Ken Morton Sr., owner of the retailing giant Haggin Oaks Golf Complex in Sacramento, and Ed Mitchell, CEO of Mitchell Golf which makes club repair and measuring devices.
    Every seat was taken and people stood in rows six deep behind the crowd control ropes. The lights were dimmed and the word that seemed to be sneaking its way into roughly half of Golf Channel chief equipment correspondent and symposium moderator Adam Barr’s introductory sentences was "imagination." As in, within what stretches of imagination will designers make new clubs, only time will tell.
    Before the discussion got underway, Dick Rugge made it clear that better fitting equipment is good for all golfers and for golf, and that in no way is the USGA concerned that adjustable golf clubs pose a threat to the sanctity of the game. Just as on the professional tours, where players regularly enjoy equipment adjustments to meet changing conditions or optimize their swings, skill remains supreme. 
    John K. Solheim voiced the first skepticism. "It (club adjustability) could put greater doubt in the golfer’s mind." The average golfer’s mind is already clouded enough with technique insecurities, the clear message. Solheim went on to assert Ping was very confident with its fitting system, and so that leaving fitting decisions up to the consumer might not be in his or her best interest.
     Graeme Horwood grinned when asked by an audience member if he thought there was any possibility of a 'universal' shaft-head attachment system developing in the future, as this is of major concern to retailers who foresee an inventory nightmare. At the Show, several leading OEM’s like Callaway, TaylorMade, and Nickent all introduced systems that were exclusive. Horwood answered no, but that he hoped shaft-makers at least would stick to a consistent tip diameter for the sake of simplicity.
    One audience member reminded the crowd that fitting could potentially apply to never before considered aspects of the club. For example, perhaps a future technology would allow a player to handily switch his set to cord grips on a rainy day and then back to softer grips on a sunny day.
    The highlight of audience interaction no doubt came from Tom Wishon, whose front row seat evidenced that the component clubmaker arrived early, and whose lengthy, well-organized address sounded like it had been simmering in his chest for quite some time. Wishon expressed doubt regarding the legitimacy of adjustable clubs competently taking the place of traditional club-fitting methods. "If this is going to work," Wishon warned, "every aspect of the club needs to be adjustable at the same time. If you insert a shaft with a different gram weight, the weight of the head needs to be adjustable to preserve the overall swing weight."
    Jeff Colton was more enthusiastic about the possibilities. "I see this ruling as a tremendous benefit," he said. "It allows the golfer to optimize equipment every time he sets foot on the course. The driver is no longer a static piece of equipment."
    The symposium discourse shifted from present technical issues to futuristic, more fanciful possibilities, but in the end came full circle to a simple question: does a $1000 driver help grow the game? (TaylorMade’s r7 CGB Max Limited will be sold as a clubhead with three shafts for that price.) The audience member who proposed the question, noted golf equipment free-lance writer Ted Johnson, likened the industry to a "...a trawler that fishes the same luxury consumer waters over and over."
    Early adopters generally pay a premium, but if adjustable clubs gain in popularity the volume of their production will likely drop the price down to the middle of the market, according to Jeff Colton.
    Dick Rugge answered that expense and pace of play are the main problems hurting golf’s participation. "Adjustability won’t affect people getting into the game."

Comments

Archived Comments (4) Click to expand

Wishon's and Solheim's criticisms surprise me. They are two very prominent people in golf who are outspoken on the importance of fitting. Seems to me that making clubs more "modular" only helps broaden opportunities for proper fitting.

Solheim's point is silly. The average golfer isn't going to fret over his choice of shafts with adjustable clubs any more than he already does with pre-assembled club options. He will simply ask his pro, manufacturer's rep, or retailer what to buy.

The excerpted portion of Wishon's commentary is also silly, or at least is mired in minutiae. The effect on swingweight of swapping out one graphite shaft for another is rarely very much, and the benefits of the better-fit shaft would almost certainly outweigh any problem of a slightly altered swingweight.

How about practical matters--now, when we travel, we can take the driver apart and carry the head in our carry on bag...think how many fewer airline club mishaps we will have!!

Posted by 86general January 23, 2008 6:20 AM

I think the adjustability would be great for fitting off the course. We are fortunate to have the access to club fitting that we do today.

However, cost of golf equipment nor the excessive time to play, which are two of the biggest issues for the growth of the game, are not going to be advanced by a $1000 club with three shafts.

Many are simply waiting for last years models to go on closeout because it is more cost efficient and the year to year advances are not large enough for average players to discern.

I can already picture Mr. I-Mix holding up the tee box because he needs to change shafts now that he is downwind. Playing time needs to go down not up, closer to 3 hours not 6.

Posted by zmeister70 January 23, 2008 12:09 PM

86general, you couldn't be more wrong about Solheim's point.

I wholeheartedly agree with him that too much adjustability will introduce confusion into the game.

In my observation, the average golfer ALWAYS frets over his choice of shafts, clubs, etc. Most golfers, however, cannot afford to buy a new driver or new set of irons when they hit the ball the way they want.

Moreover, the average golfer does not have a repeatable swing. Thus, facilitating frequent changes in equipment configuration when you are not controlling for the other variables (i.e. the swing) can do more harm than good to a golfers ball-striking and enjoyment of the game.

I believe Solheim is saying that a golfer is better off engaging in a through fitting process based on sound principles of physics, etc., that maximizes the club's effectiveness while accounting for an inconsistent swing. Once a golfer is fitted with the best equipment for him, its probably better to control for the EQUIPMENT, so that he or she can work on the SWING. I agree with this philosophy.

Posted by wallytaco January 23, 2008 12:45 PM

Fellas,

Noticed that you're advocating that "anything" that speeds the pace of play be legalized. I guess that means you've changed your (absurd) position on belly and long putters then? Obviously, the guys who use them do so because they find them to be the most effective, meaning they believe that they'll putt the fewest number of times using one, which means shorter rounds, because of the fewer strokes.

Just want to make sure you're staying consistent.

Posted by samwilkinson January 29, 2008 9:32 PM

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