How Much Distance Are You Losing With Your Driver
Golf tipsHow far you could be hitting your drives if all the technical factors were optimal? Now lets flip the idea a little and ask: How much distance am I losing to an optimal performance?
How far you could be hitting your drives if all the technical factors were optimal? Now lets flip the idea a little and ask: How much distance am I losing to an optimal performance?
We know that
- Smash factor
- Spin rate
- Launch angle
Are the three main ingredients behind creating a maxed-out drive. We also know the optimal numbers.
I measure golfers all the time using high-tech equipment, such as Trackman. I recently tested a bunch of golfers and came up with the above averages based on what they were doing.
Diagonal Strike
With the golf ball being teed up so high with a driver, the most common strike pattern is a heel hit – due in part to something called diagonal strike effect (which I explain in The Strike Plan).
This above strike location (low and on the heel) is very common, and will produce the distance-killing low-launch and high-spin combination
A heel hit is a killer for distance, as it dramatically lowers smash factor and increases spin rate through the roof.
When you combine this with an average golfer’s tendency to hit down on the ball by getting their low point too far forward, this can correlate strongly with reduced loft at impact and a low launch – in spite of the jacked up lofts we see with drivers these days.
So How Much Distance Am I Losing
This is the part you came here for, right?
The table shows what happens when your launch, spin and smash factor are “average golfer” (think typical 18 handicap) versus “optimal”.
Throughout the table it is a consistent result – average smash, launch and spin rates produce around a 50 yard loss compared to optimal.
Not Everyone
Needless to say, not everyone falls into the average category. Some of you produce better launch, spins and smashes than the averages from my test.
However, many of you may be performing worse than the average numbers – just something to think about.
And no-one likes to be the ‘short hitter‘ in the group; it really sucks.
But many of you are creating technical power-leaks that could be really easy to rectify – low hanging fruit, so to speak. My suggestion would be to get your launch conditions measured by a competent coach with a launch monitor. From there, you can start to set a plan of improvement.
My video series, The Strike Plan goes through the key elements of creating optimal smash, launch and spin rates. This will not only get you much closer to the optimal driving distances, but also improve strike quality with irons and fairway woods – resulting in better distance control, more greens hit and lower scores.
Check it out by CLICKING HERE.