He's incredibly efficient, it's amazing to watch. Hes only been actively trying to gain speed using ground force etc and different techniques for a few years. Seen another video with Dr Kwon where he said he went from a pb 125mph swing to a 148mph in only around a year through his technique. So there's hope of some gains for us mortals 😂
Like a major league pitcher. All the fundamentals and little advantages at every step of the swing plus the genetic jackpot equals a guy who makes PGA tour bombers look cute and cuddly.
this video should be shared anytime someone says “well Bryson hits his 6iron so far because the lofts are so low” he HAS to have those low lofts to control the spin and people don’t comprehend why
This is the content I need more of. Everyone relates “high swing speed” as 110-115 is. But those of us that are 135+ are kind of left guessing. I love it
Please do a video with his this week on what he does to generate that kind of speed so efficiently. It’s too smooth of a swing to generate that kind of power and I would love to know what he is thinking about to do that.
@@mikerodrick2430 I've never had my swing speed tested, all I know is I prefer the feel of a soft ball. If i had to guess I'd say my swing speed is probably higher than average for my handicap, but definitely slower than the guys bombing their drives 300+. I average about 165 with a 7i and 260+ with a well struck drive.
@@imCurveee If you're hitting it 260, you definitely don't have a slower swing speed. What ball are you using? I'm talking about swing speeds below 100 or even 90. Those speeds can't compress a higher compression ball. They now have balls as soft as 35, while high speeds normally use 100 compression. Seniors definitely need no more than a 50.
@@mikerodrick2430 The ball I tend to play is the RocketBallz Soft from TaylorMade, 60 compression. It's not the most premium ball, but the price works for me ($30 CAD/box) and it feels good enough to me.
It explains alot for me. I play the AVX and love it..definitely a more penetrating ball flight. Used to love the RXS too..although I get along well with a prov1 I just always liked the avx and bridgestone rxs better.
I swing driver around 110-115 and have always played soft compression to help my wedges and irons. I prefer having better performance with my approach shots than off the tee. Very interesting to learn how different people approach the golf course
Mind blown 🤯 … >180 ball speed is phenomenal for the amount of effort it looks. Chippy golf all day long 😂. wish I had that problem 😂. Some golden nuggets on the heights and swing speed Ian. You’re the real deal goat 🐐 😉
I game the RXS. My driver speed is on the highest end just below 100. I’ll cruise it typically upper 80s low 90s. It’s so far been my favorite ball. Also the ball does seem to really like being hit off irons.
@@BiologistRyan Swing a fraction quicker around 100-105 on course...I've played both but have found the X to be super spinny into greens. Chrome Soft X Triple Track has been similar. No notable difference off the tee for me.
@@MitchGrinter neighbor who’s also same swing speed as me prefers those chrome softs too. Good balls. He’s also liked the ERC I think a bit more. He didn’t like the RXS but it’s by far the one I’ve had the most success with.
The only way to properly test equipment is with AI like old school Iron Byron. Humans have too much variation in swing speed & quality of strike even with better players. Toe, heel, high & low on the face. Especially necessary for weekend player swing speeds. This goes for balls & clubs.
Super interesting to see conversations about speed when they revolve around someone like Drew. Drew and Bryson as very different because Bryson is going all out to create as much speed as possible, and Drew is just 6'4''. Guys like him and Wilco have no choice but to play with their speeds because its driven by their long levers, whereas Bryson is trying to manufacture his speed.
Stark differences, but is this mainly a question of compression? About to switch from the 2020 Tour B X to the vice pro plus (they released a cool color option). The vice is a few compression points lower. Do you think I'm gonna see issues with speed and spin, or should they be in a similar category? I'm about 5mph slower than Drew based on the video.
Drew - go for the PGA or LIV ! ! Really Impressive ! One thing- with his power, did the balls get scruffed with the wedge ? Did the softer ball fare worse or better with wedge durability ? Nice Video.
I tried the long drive training stuff as well. My spin loft is low, got to 128MPH. Super fun. My Titleist MB goes 160 on a full swing because I have low spin loft. I had to learn a 3/4 swing on the sim over the winter and now I am trying to make that pay off on course.
So my question would be - for someone who swings closer to 100 mph with a driver - are you going to see the response based on the irons (since it is closer to normal driver's swing speed) or should they use the firmer ball? Mygolfspy says the firmer one is always longer unless you are a slow swinger.
I don’t know about the whole apex should match your driver swing speed thing, but the lower flying higher spinning ball seems to be the most controlled for Drew. Height seems to be his enemy more than spin.
Could the new tiger ball be just right for Drew? Harder off the tee but softer with irons, even though it's supposed to be higher spin? This stuff is confusing... Great content!
At a much slower driver club speed, that of an 80 year old super-senior player with club speed 86.3 and ball speed 127.9, would you still get faster ball speed from the firmer compression ball vs the softer compression ball? To use your basketball analogy, would the harder basketball still bounce faster and higher than the softer basketball if they were bounced against the floor by a non-basketball player vs a pro?
John - Yes, at your speed (which is still pretty good for 80, by the way!), you would still see more ball speed with driver with a firmer ball, but the difference in speed and distance would be pretty minimal. However, with irons and pretty much every other club in the bag, a firm ball will be shorter than the low-compression ball.
@@danielcohen3159 Thanks. I will be 81 on June 17. By the way, is the shorter distance with a firm ball the result of a swing speed not fast enough to compress the ball, or is it the result of a higher spin rate on the firm ball owing to the cover? I have come to think that it may be just as important, once you have a driver with a shaft you like, and irons with shafts you like, to do a ball fitting to see which ball among many gives you the best results. The other thing that affects me is that I play very traditional forged blade irons with weak lofts, so at my age and swing speed there are a lot of compromises. My 7 iron with a 36 degree loft was my 150 yard club 20 years ago, then it got increasingly shorter to where these days it's basically a 135 club with range balls. Once in a while I might hit a perfect shot that flies 140 or a bit more, but can't depend on that. So losing another 5 yards depending on the ball could be a bummer. Unless the trade off is stopping better on the green and not running over.
@@johnk.atchley5079 John - To tell the truth, I'm not 100% sure why the distance with irons drops off at slower speeds with the firmer ball. I'm guessing that it is both the factors you mentioned, compressing the ball less and higher spin. But one of the things that I took away from the last My Golf Spy ball test was that for most golfers, their "best fitting" ball is going to be in the middle of the pack with regards to launch, spin, and everything else. So the only balls that will be truly detrimental for a slower swinger with regards to iron distance are the extremely firm ones (ProV1X Left Dash, Chrome Soft X LS, Mizuno RB Tour X, etc) and/or high spinning (Kirkland, Mizuno Tour RB-X again, etc). But then again, there will be plenty of slower swingers whose game fits those balls perfectly for one reason or many! I don't know what your gamer ball is, but I would give the Bridgestone BR-X a try. You're giving up nothing with that ball except maybe a little spin. It's a gem.
@@danielcohen3159 I have played quite a few different balls. Last year I started mostly playing the Callaway ERC Soft Triple Track, and also tried a sleeve of the Callaway Super Soft. Then I was given a sleeve of Taylor Made TP5x balls at a TM demo day. Later I bought a dozen Titleist ProV1x yellow balls in mid-summer. I was looking for the highest rate of spin with a wedge in order to get approach shots to stop on some hard, fast greens at one public county course I like, instead of seeing a wedge land on the green and then run off the back, and I had seen a test of about 25 balls that showed the Titleist was highest on that score. But they felt too hard and did not seem to go as far with my driver as what I had been using. So I bought a dozen Bridgestone Tour B RXS (green box) because I wanted a ball that felt good off the club face, that felt like a squashed it, but that also had a high spin rate on approach shots. I don't lose a lot of balls, so that box lasted until this year. I also gave away a couple to other players. Then this spring I gave the Tour B RX balls (red box) a try. They definitely feel harder than the RXS, and I could not really see an appreciable gain in distance. Then most recently I bought a dozen Mizuno Tour X balls, in part because I had a sleeve from last year and gave one to a fellow player who really liked it, felt it had impressive pop off the face and got his best drive of the day with it. To me they feel okay, a bit softer than the Pro V1x, maybe a bit softer than the Bridgestone B RX but with more pop. But all of that is hard to verify. And of course, I have a dozen Callaway ERC soft balls sitting on the shelf at home that a neighbor gave me for Christmas. These are supposed to be an improvement over the previous ERC ball, so guess I will have to put them in play and see. And just by the way, I found a Vice Pro Plus ball on the course. Hit it a couple of times. Felt like a rock. For sure would not go for them. I guess the only way to really tell which ball is best for oneself is to go to a club fitting studio and pay to do a ball fitting with a half dozen different balls and one's own clubs.
as for the spin reasoning... the softer ball will flatten more and have less grip in the groves as it flattens out. As for the stiffer ball-the groves bite at the hard cover and spin it. ON par 3s I use hard cover-on par 4 and 5 soft cover.
Man with those kind of complications- Playing golf must be such a challenge. It illustrates why pga pros focus so muCh on spin control. His tempo really hides that speed
Bryson is using a single plane swing so it looks more awkward. His idea is on the downswing, the club follows the exact same path as it did on the backswing, literally straight back, straight through. You have to be stiff to keep that path so power takes muscle. But if you can make that work, you're eliminating a variable and you can be much more consistent.
Hi guys, i always had a clubheadspeed of about 96 mph and a ballspeed of about 132 mph with my 6i. Could the shaft or ball be a reason why my balls flew relatively short for the stats (about 175-180 yards carry straight ballflight). Regards ✌️
@@Samson.Boedefeld It does look a couple of degrees higher launching for those spin numbers. I'd say you should be around 16deg (+/- 2 deg). Different type of shaft may help with that.
It’s a spin issue, you’re spinning a 6 iron at the old adage of 1000rpm x the iron number. First thing is I’d check your lofts, they might just be weaker lofts. 2nd, what club heads are you playing? I’ve found you will find more launch/spin changes in clubheads than in shaft changes; especially in mid/short irons.
Maybe play a ball that is halfway between these two extremes? On average spin would be more controlled and driver performance would be better but not maxed out which would be an acceptable tradeoff.
The peak height tip is very good, thank you. Like Drew, my “chill” iron swing is between 105 and 115 clubhead speed, and i do notice a massive difference in ball height, especially into the wind, based on which ball I pick. I tend to stay away from Bryson compression level balls as… it destroys my drivers, so i go more for a relax 180 ball-speed on a soft ball, for the sake of keeping my drivers in 1 piece longer. Based on this as i do hate the height on my balls, I may just switch to a harder ball for iron shots. Thanks guys, very informative.
This was more for fun and entertainment. I am sure you can scroll through their arsenal of videos and find one that better suits you about compression. This video is for people who want to see someone create insane speeds effortlessly and the issues he experienced with fittings and ball testing.
This was very interesting, especially as an average-speed swinger. I've always imagined what it would be like to have Drew's kind of speed (or Ian's!), but I never thought about the pitfalls of that speed. I recently played a lot of golf in Nebraska, where a 15-mph wind was considered a calm day. I didn't have to think much about the ball ballooning into the wind, because I don't hit it high enough to balloon! I just took two more clubs (or three...or four) and hit more or less a normal shot - maybe back in the stance a bit to keep it down. And downwind I knew it would carry a little further, but not a lot, because again I don't hit it that high to start with. Really, if the slower swinger hits the ball more or less straight, he or she simply doesn't have enough power for that ball to go too far offline. Sure, I'm not knocking it onto many par-5s in two and making eagle. But on a windy day I'm not often bringing double-bogey into play, either. This is not to say that speed and length aren't serious advantages, because they absolutely are. Especially when you're long AND hit it straight, like Drew!
Im a big guy and used to swing like that in highschool and with so much spin hitting into decent wind I started taking 2 extra clubs and hitting little punch shots to keep it down just in case. I dont bomb it anymore but I still play in the wind like that out of habit.
Wow, watching Drew is like looking in a mirror at me…. Apart from the power, speed and accuracy!
Roper used to mean a 3 legged mangy mark:) -Colorado
I love Drew, he is really starting to get comfortable with the social media stuff. And my god what a pretty and powerful swing.
Man, I’m a pretty big dude and I swing about 115, this guy looks like he’s barely trying and is waaaaaay faster. Holy shit it’s impressive
He has been doing this for 20 years, and those degrees in human anatomy must have helped a lot.
He's incredibly efficient, it's amazing to watch. Hes only been actively trying to gain speed using ground force etc and different techniques for a few years. Seen another video with Dr Kwon where he said he went from a pb 125mph swing to a 148mph in only around a year through his technique. So there's hope of some gains for us mortals 😂
Reminds me of Cameron Champ in that regard.
Like a major league pitcher. All the fundamentals and little advantages at every step of the swing plus the genetic jackpot equals a guy who makes PGA tour bombers look cute and cuddly.
He has the smoothest fast swing that I have ever seen
this video should be shared anytime someone says “well Bryson hits his 6iron so far because the lofts are so low”
he HAS to have those low lofts to control the spin and people don’t comprehend why
I swear every video you guys release is EXACTLY what I’m thinking about for my own golf game.
It's spooky isn't it...
This is the content I need more of. Everyone relates “high swing speed” as 110-115 is. But those of us that are 135+ are kind of left guessing. I love it
135+ is amazing
@@gcoffey223facts
Please do a video with his this week on what he does to generate that kind of speed so efficiently. It’s too smooth of a swing to generate that kind of power and I would love to know what he is thinking about to do that.
Thank you for bringing Drew on to the channel
I've always loved playing a soft ball. Feels great off the irons and the putter. Love that feeling of compression on a well struck shot.
A slower swing speed requires a softer ball.
@@mikerodrick2430 I've never had my swing speed tested, all I know is I prefer the feel of a soft ball. If i had to guess I'd say my swing speed is probably higher than average for my handicap, but definitely slower than the guys bombing their drives 300+. I average about 165 with a 7i and 260+ with a well struck drive.
@@imCurveee If you're hitting it 260, you definitely don't have a slower swing speed. What ball are you using? I'm talking about swing speeds below 100 or even 90. Those speeds can't compress a higher compression ball. They now have balls as soft as 35, while high speeds normally use 100 compression. Seniors definitely need no more than a 50.
@@mikerodrick2430 The ball I tend to play is the RocketBallz Soft from TaylorMade, 60 compression. It's not the most premium ball, but the price works for me ($30 CAD/box) and it feels good enough to me.
@@imCurveee I'm using Maxfli Softfli 35 comp. Wilson makes a 50
It explains alot for me. I play the AVX and love it..definitely a more penetrating ball flight. Used to love the RXS too..although I get along well with a prov1 I just always liked the avx and bridgestone rxs better.
I would’ve loved to see the B X vs the B RX. So we could see how much of a difference was the cover, and how much was compression
I swing driver around 110-115 and have always played soft compression to help my wedges and irons. I prefer having better performance with my approach shots than off the tee. Very interesting to learn how different people approach the golf course
Great nugget at 16:32 . Thanks!
Mind blown 🤯 … >180 ball speed is phenomenal for the amount of effort it looks. Chippy golf all day long 😂. wish I had that problem 😂. Some golden nuggets on the heights and swing speed Ian. You’re the real deal goat 🐐 😉
I really relate to Drew I play the X7 and I struggle so much with wedges in the wind
“Oh yeah, that’s high and toe” meanwhile it’s carried 360. Must be nice.
Can we get the same test with a 95-100 driver club head speed? Would results be reversed? Higher iron ball speed and slower driver ball speed?
I game the RXS. My driver speed is on the highest end just below 100. I’ll cruise it typically upper 80s low 90s.
It’s so far been my favorite ball.
Also the ball does seem to really like being hit off irons.
@@BiologistRyan Swing a fraction quicker around 100-105 on course...I've played both but have found the X to be super spinny into greens. Chrome Soft X Triple Track has been similar.
No notable difference off the tee for me.
@@MitchGrinter neighbor who’s also same swing speed as me prefers those chrome softs too. Good balls. He’s also liked the ERC I think a bit more. He didn’t like the RXS but it’s by far the one I’ve had the most success with.
great video. Drew is fun to watch and this kind of comparison video is Ian at his best.
Always my fave golfing channel- this lad is a beast!
Great ball comparison with DC. Love the channel, especially the vision and where the channel is heading with content.
God I can (and do) watch these all night. So fun.
A concept I didn't get and am SO glad they did this! Great video
Jaw dropping....I truly need to watch this about 3-4 time to "get it." Hitting replay. Replay hit 3 times....still trying to decode it all...arrrrrrr
Awesome you guys have Drew on your podcast. I have been following him on Be Better Golf.
Long time subscriber, and once again another insightful video from Ian and the rest of the team. Keep up the great work guys!
Wow this is pretty eye opening. I for one do prefer the chrome soft ls aswell. But it now going to be Werth the try of some softer golf balls
It’s very helpful when you use average speed swings to critique ball especially. Thanks folks
The only way to properly test equipment is with AI like old school Iron Byron. Humans have too much variation in swing speed & quality of strike even with better players. Toe, heel, high & low on the face. Especially necessary for weekend player swing speeds. This goes for balls & clubs.
Drew is awesome! Great info and video. 👍🏼
great insight gents, really enjoyed it.
Can you get a mid handicap player i(10 to 16) n to test different balls, as the vast majority of players would be in that range.
Ian, would Drew be able to talk from a sports science background on how to build speed and what swing tendencies loose speed?
Definitely, we have lots of content coming with Drew in the coming weeks.
Just trying to figure out what Hoodie Drew is wearing... need one
Dee's has them listed on their site
Great info!
Boys time for a review with the New miura km 700's
Seems a really lovely guy and very humble too 😃👍
Super interesting to see conversations about speed when they revolve around someone like Drew. Drew and Bryson as very different because Bryson is going all out to create as much speed as possible, and Drew is just 6'4''. Guys like him and Wilco have no choice but to play with their speeds because its driven by their long levers, whereas Bryson is trying to manufacture his speed.
As someone who is 6’3”, I can 100% relate to not being able to slow down my swing. Otherwise all of my synchronization gets out of whack
I threw up in my mouth when you said his PW speed was 101mph. That's a solid driver for me. What a nice swing to watch.
This guy hits it a ton and doesn't even look like he's trying!
I hate when I catch it high toe on the driver and it only carries 360 🤣
Yeah it really ruins my round 😅😜
Stark differences, but is this mainly a question of compression? About to switch from the 2020 Tour B X to the vice pro plus (they released a cool color option). The vice is a few compression points lower. Do you think I'm gonna see issues with speed and spin, or should they be in a similar category? I'm about 5mph slower than Drew based on the video.
Drew - go for the PGA or LIV ! ! Really Impressive ! One thing- with his power, did the balls get scruffed with the wedge ? Did the softer ball fare worse or better with wedge durability ? Nice Video.
Awesome stuff guys
I tried the long drive training stuff as well. My spin loft is low, got to 128MPH.
Super fun. My Titleist MB goes 160 on a full swing because I have low spin loft.
I had to learn a 3/4 swing on the sim over the winter and now I am trying to make that pay off on course.
So my question would be - for someone who swings closer to 100 mph with a driver - are you going to see the response based on the irons (since it is closer to normal driver's swing speed) or should they use the firmer ball? Mygolfspy says the firmer one is always longer unless you are a slow swinger.
Love that little bit about the 6 iron height. My driver club is around 110 and my 6iron peak height is around 111.
I don’t know about the whole apex should match your driver swing speed thing, but the lower flying higher spinning ball seems to be the most controlled for Drew. Height seems to be his enemy more than spin.
So for someone like me who swings at 105 mph max with driver what ball should I be looking at to get the max spin I can around the greens ?
Any idea what driver settings drew is playing? Loft, head, and shaft, settings?
Could the new tiger ball be just right for Drew? Harder off the tee but softer with irons, even though it's supposed to be higher spin? This stuff is confusing... Great content!
At a much slower driver club speed, that of an 80 year old super-senior player with club speed 86.3 and ball speed 127.9, would you still get faster ball speed from the firmer compression ball vs the softer compression ball? To use your basketball analogy, would the harder basketball still bounce faster and higher than the softer basketball if they were bounced against the floor by a non-basketball player vs a pro?
John - Yes, at your speed (which is still pretty good for 80, by the way!), you would still see more ball speed with driver with a firmer ball, but the difference in speed and distance would be pretty minimal. However, with irons and pretty much every other club in the bag, a firm ball will be shorter than the low-compression ball.
@@danielcohen3159 Thanks. I will be 81 on June 17. By the way, is the shorter distance with a firm ball the result of a swing speed not fast enough to compress the ball, or is it the result of a higher spin rate on the firm ball owing to the cover? I have come to think that it may be just as important, once you have a driver with a shaft you like, and irons with shafts you like, to do a ball fitting to see which ball among many gives you the best results. The other thing that affects me is that I play very traditional forged blade irons with weak lofts, so at my age and swing speed there are a lot of compromises. My 7 iron with a 36 degree loft was my 150 yard club 20 years ago, then it got increasingly shorter to where these days it's basically a 135 club with range balls. Once in a while I might hit a perfect shot that flies 140 or a bit more, but can't depend on that. So losing another 5 yards depending on the ball could be a bummer. Unless the trade off is stopping better on the green and not running over.
@@johnk.atchley5079 John - To tell the truth, I'm not 100% sure why the distance with irons drops off at slower speeds with the firmer ball. I'm guessing that it is both the factors you mentioned, compressing the ball less and higher spin. But one of the things that I took away from the last My Golf Spy ball test was that for most golfers, their "best fitting" ball is going to be in the middle of the pack with regards to launch, spin, and everything else. So the only balls that will be truly detrimental for a slower swinger with regards to iron distance are the extremely firm ones (ProV1X Left Dash, Chrome Soft X LS, Mizuno RB Tour X, etc) and/or high spinning (Kirkland, Mizuno Tour RB-X again, etc). But then again, there will be plenty of slower swingers whose game fits those balls perfectly for one reason or many! I don't know what your gamer ball is, but I would give the Bridgestone BR-X a try. You're giving up nothing with that ball except maybe a little spin. It's a gem.
@@danielcohen3159 I have played quite a few different balls. Last year I started mostly playing the Callaway ERC Soft Triple Track, and also tried a sleeve of the Callaway Super Soft. Then I was given a sleeve of Taylor Made TP5x balls at a TM demo day. Later I bought a dozen Titleist ProV1x yellow balls in mid-summer. I was looking for the highest rate of spin with a wedge in order to get approach shots to stop on some hard, fast greens at one public county course I like, instead of seeing a wedge land on the green and then run off the back, and I had seen a test of about 25 balls that showed the Titleist was highest on that score. But they felt too hard and did not seem to go as far with my driver as what I had been using. So I bought a dozen Bridgestone Tour B RXS (green box) because I wanted a ball that felt good off the club face, that felt like a squashed it, but that also had a high spin rate on approach shots. I don't lose a lot of balls, so that box lasted until this year. I also gave away a couple to other players. Then this spring I gave the Tour B RX balls (red box) a try. They definitely feel harder than the RXS, and I could not really see an appreciable gain in distance. Then most recently I bought a dozen Mizuno Tour X balls, in part because I had a sleeve from last year and gave one to a fellow player who really liked it, felt it had impressive pop off the face and got his best drive of the day with it. To me they feel okay, a bit softer than the Pro V1x, maybe a bit softer than the Bridgestone B RX but with more pop. But all of that is hard to verify. And of course, I have a dozen Callaway ERC soft balls sitting on the shelf at home that a neighbor gave me for Christmas. These are supposed to be an improvement over the previous ERC ball, so guess I will have to put them in play and see. And just by the way, I found a Vice Pro Plus ball on the course. Hit it a couple of times. Felt like a rock. For sure would not go for them. I guess the only way to really tell which ball is best for oneself is to go to a club fitting studio and pay to do a ball fitting with a half dozen different balls and one's own clubs.
Like the show. Very informative, but can you have average players on there? PLEASE
I wish you would do these comparisons with mid to high handicap golfers.
There is a podcast? Whats it called?
I swing about 123 but this guy is effortless in 130’s. Amazing.
I’ll just say…this is fun!
its how effortless it looks is whats so impressive
as for the spin reasoning... the softer ball will flatten more and have less grip in the groves as it flattens out. As for the stiffer ball-the groves bite at the hard cover and spin it. ON par 3s I use hard cover-on par 4 and 5 soft cover.
What would the result be if the swing speed is around 90 mph?
Ian it would be nice to change the spectrum and have a slow swing speed trying both balls and see what differences there is
Well...I want to be like Drew, so time to go work out. Also, my daughters major is kinesiology, can't wait to see where that takes her.
Can you guys do putter reviews too? Could you do the new LAB MEZZ.1 putter?
drew is the nicest and coolest
I wonder what the B-XS would have done
@IanFraser - Which LAGP Shafts were in Drew's irons? L-Series? Or?
Yes L-Series
@@clubchampionmedia Thanks!
Sneaky re-release is sneky
There was an error in the title, we had tons of questions about which ball we were testing so we made the correction and rereleased.
What kind of shirt is Mac wearing? I want
Man with those kind of complications- Playing golf must be such a challenge. It illustrates why pga pros focus so muCh on spin control. His tempo really hides that speed
Autoflex and Drew!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
360 on the fly what can say that can be put out there 👍
Drew makes it look so effortless compared to what Bryson is doing.
Bryson is using a single plane swing so it looks more awkward. His idea is on the downswing, the club follows the exact same path as it did on the backswing, literally straight back, straight through. You have to be stiff to keep that path so power takes muscle. But if you can make that work, you're eliminating a variable and you can be much more consistent.
Trying to figure out what macs hat is
My own little brand man
@@MacBoucherGolf love the logo!
Hi guys, i always had a clubheadspeed of about 96 mph and a ballspeed of about 132 mph with my 6i. Could the shaft or ball be a reason why my balls flew relatively short for the stats (about 175-180 yards carry straight ballflight).
Regards ✌️
What's your spin and launch angle?
@@FBTRodz7 launch around 20-21 degree and spin ~ 5500-6200
@@Samson.Boedefeld It does look a couple of degrees higher launching for those spin numbers. I'd say you should be around 16deg (+/- 2 deg). Different type of shaft may help with that.
It’s a spin issue, you’re spinning a 6 iron at the old adage of 1000rpm x the iron number. First thing is I’d check your lofts, they might just be weaker lofts. 2nd, what club heads are you playing? I’ve found you will find more launch/spin changes in clubheads than in shaft changes; especially in mid/short irons.
@@jim60631 i play the Mizuno JPX921 Tour and DG 120 x100 Shafts.
Maybe play a ball that is halfway between these two extremes? On average spin would be more controlled and driver performance would be better but not maxed out which would be an acceptable tradeoff.
What we know now (2024) isn’t the difference in golf ball only matters when swinging the driver?
but does he retain 188 on mis hits with the softer ball? that may be a difference maker
2022 driver bracket, Does anybody know ?
Finally... someone someone with a swing speed and ball speed I can relate too... Hahahahaha
😂😂😂
The peak height tip is very good, thank you. Like Drew, my “chill” iron swing is between 105 and 115 clubhead speed, and i do notice a massive difference in ball height, especially into the wind, based on which ball I pick. I tend to stay away from Bryson compression level balls as… it destroys my drivers, so i go more for a relax 180 ball-speed on a soft ball, for the sake of keeping my drivers in 1 piece longer. Based on this as i do hate the height on my balls, I may just switch to a harder ball for iron shots. Thanks guys, very informative.
should be B x vs B rx or bxs vs brxs.if its just a compression test. now you put rxs which is for more spin vs x which is less spin than xs
"It's like déjà vu all over again."
It’s so good we released it twice.
With irons-i want more spin-more workability. You should be testing this with drivers.
Mac, where can I get a hat like that?
Will be selling them soon! Stay tuned on my insta 🤙🏼
Like to see a more relatable swing speed for the average golfer to see what the ball does, most of us don't swing anywhere near these speeds.
This was more for fun and entertainment. I am sure you can scroll through their arsenal of videos and find one that better suits you about compression. This video is for people who want to see someone create insane speeds effortlessly and the issues he experienced with fittings and ball testing.
Isn't there a company that makes a 1-piece super-high compression ball? Not even a cover on it, lol. Would be interesting to test.
😳
His club head speed is similar to my ball speed 🤣. I will just go screw myself 🤣😂🤣. We are not the same
i saw drew on be better golf first
softer is more aero dynamic which = less resistance when flying.
club head speed. without it testing don't matter. club head speed
club head speed
maybe test that ball with a player that ball is designed for?
this guy reminds me of brooks
This was very interesting, especially as an average-speed swinger. I've always imagined what it would be like to have Drew's kind of speed (or Ian's!), but I never thought about the pitfalls of that speed. I recently played a lot of golf in Nebraska, where a 15-mph wind was considered a calm day. I didn't have to think much about the ball ballooning into the wind, because I don't hit it high enough to balloon! I just took two more clubs (or three...or four) and hit more or less a normal shot - maybe back in the stance a bit to keep it down. And downwind I knew it would carry a little further, but not a lot, because again I don't hit it that high to start with. Really, if the slower swinger hits the ball more or less straight, he or she simply doesn't have enough power for that ball to go too far offline. Sure, I'm not knocking it onto many par-5s in two and making eagle. But on a windy day I'm not often bringing double-bogey into play, either. This is not to say that speed and length aren't serious advantages, because they absolutely are. Especially when you're long AND hit it straight, like Drew!
Im a big guy and used to swing like that in highschool and with so much spin hitting into decent wind I started taking 2 extra clubs and hitting little punch shots to keep it down just in case. I dont bomb it anymore but I still play in the wind like that out of habit.
I mesh both, too bad it's no distance and no consistency 🤷♂️🤷♂️
Holy mother of God… I actually felt bad for those balls.
"Hit that one off the toe"......goes 370 yards. What the actual heck. Haha
Where is my softer ball fam at?🖐️
If I’m carrying even 300 I’m losing all types of accuracy. Drew is cruising and carrying 340-350 and with accuracy and room in the tank to spare.
I wish I could say "ugh... high toe" and it fly 354 yds. 😂
Gorilla length arms and high flexibility combined with good athleticism and strength. Not many people have all of the above
I thought the RXS was for ball speed less than 105mph…it probably would be a better comparison to the XS..no the RXS…
If DJ and Koepka had a baby 😶