As golfers continue to seek distance off the tee, many companies have responded by producing drivers with a stock shaft length of 45½ inches or, in some cases, longer. But is that always better?
Welcome to another edition of Yo, Gear Guy!, an interactive GOLF.com series in which our resident dimplehead (a.k.a., GOLF’s deputy editor of equipment, Mike Chwasky) fields your hard-hitting ...
Equipment expert Joe Ferguson has been testing out the TPT Nitro driver shaft, with some surprising results in terms of the ...
Will Zalatoris wasn’t exactly a short hitter before. With a lanky 6-foot-2 frame, combined with a big arm swing on the backswing and wickedly fast hip rotation on the downswing, he averaged more than ...
Golf’s governing bodies announced a new model local rule Tuesday that will reduce the maximum length of driver shafts from 48 to 46 inches. The rule, which goes into effect Jan. 1, will allow the ...
Answer: We think you are perfectly fine to put your current driver shaft in your new driver, provided you start with a high-quality part and finish with a club fitting from a high-quality fitter. In ...
Phil Mickelson won his third PGA Tour Champions title in four starts on Sunday in the Constellation Furyk & Friends at the Timuquana Country Club. Two days later, he found out he will have to change ...
Image: Bryson DeChambeau has been testing a 48-inch driver since winning the US Open Bryson DeChambeau's plans to use a 48-inch driver could be scuppered by new proposals to combat the increase in ...
There are two general schools of thought in the world of golf equipment; play the clubs you know and trust, or test new equipment and play the clubs that test the best. Tiger Woods, for example, is ...
Immediately following the 2020 U.S. Open at Winged Foot Golf Club, that year’s champion, Bryson DeChambeau, declared he’d be testing 48-inch drivers to continue his quest for more distance. At the ...