What kind of irons does phil mickelson use
He also thought each shot was predictable, too. When the Epic drivers became available we had a new low-spin, high-MOI and fast option to try. The big left miss a slice for a left hander is the shot Phil wants to avoid at all costs. All three Epic models Speed, Max and Max LS had things that worked well for him, but at least one thing with each was less than desirable at a longer length. And the Max was really efficient on direction, but not quite as fast or efficient enough on launch to secure a switch out of the Mavrik.
We had to put resources behind creating Phil Mickelson his own driver. Phil does a lot of testing and practising at home, he has a facility where he can perfect hitting his high, nasty bombs.
Unlike a lot of players, Phil lives locally to our Carlsbad HQ and Performance Centre so he pops in and out much more freely than most players.
He must have only played six practice rounds with the new model, which gave him enough confidence. The big difference is a screw weight just behind the face on the sole, which gave us the ability to lower the centre of gravity, which gave us some wriggle room to lower spin if needed.
The last thing Phil wants is what feels to him to be a draw swing, resulting in a fade or slice. We tried a 48in driver shaft, but there was less speed to be gained. Taking the shaft to the max allowable length led to the driver feeling less balanced. As shafts lengthen the swingweight changes and some players can be really sensitive to the head feeling too heavy.
Working with him on this driver is very similar to how we worked with our World Long Drive guys in the past, trying different weights, lofts, face angles and shafts. As he approached his upper 40s he was frustrated by not being able to get his ball speed above mph with the driver. He set out on this journey to add strength, flexibility and speed. By taking a holistic approach he now gets mph ball speed after being at less than mph just a few years ago. But he recognised at the outset that a lot of holes get wider at yards.
Phil may lose yards with a change to the shaft length rule. It looks likely the governing bodies will cut the maximum allowable shaft length from 48 to 46in.
He has tried the Chrome Soft X LS ball, and his decision between it and the Chrome Soft X came down to how he liked the flight and control he gets with the X in his mid-irons and short game. He uses Triple Track for setting up and aligning on tee shots as well as putting.
He also previously worked for World Soccer and Rugby World magazines. A jack of all trades across print and digital formats, Sam now spends most of his time testing and looking after golf gear and equipment content for the website. He also oversees all Tour player content as well. Unfortunately, Sam is not a member of any club at the moment but regularly gets out on the golf course to keep up the facade of having a handicap of five.
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