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GOLF
TEACHING PRO®

From wooden golf balls to modern urethanecovered
rockets, from tree branches to graphite-
shafted aerodynamic titanium clubheads, the
golf swing has evolved along with changes in the
equipment used throughout the years. Here is a
primer of how the golf swing has changed in response
to the equipment being used at the time.
Feathery golf balls
The feathery was made by stuffing wet goose
feathers into a leather pouch, sewing the pouch
up, and the drying feathers expanded to make a
fairly hard, useable golf ball. Since the feathery
didn’t have the aerodynamics we are familiar
with today, it was best to keep the ball low to the
ground. To achieve this, the top players would
swing in a relatively flat, roundhouse manner
known as the “St. Andrews swing.” This swing
produced a draw.
Hickory-shafted golf clubs
For centuries, golf clubs were made with
wooden shafts, often hickory. The shafts had a
lot of torque, or twist, in them. This necessitated
strong hand action and rotation in order to square
the clubface at impact. To achieve this strong
rotation, players would rotate through the ball
with minimal lateral action, hitting against a firm
left side.
Gutta-percha balls
The gutta-percha ball replaced the feathery in
1848. Dr. Robert Adams Paterson invented it at the
time, being too poor to afford featheries (according
to his New York Times obituary in 1904). Being
far superior to the feathery, it soon became the
ball of choice. Golfers then
noticed that the ‘gutty’ flew
farther when it got nicked
up, and soon golfers began
to put their own carvings
into their new golf balls.
Manufacturers then started
making their molds, first
with outward-facing pips,
and then with lines and the
dimples we have come to
know today.
In Jersey, England, the
players found that if they
swung more upright, they
could get the gutty up in
the air, which worked because of the aerodynamic
properties of the gutty. Harry Vardon became the
first notable golfer to swing in this manner.
Steel-shafted clubs
With the coming of steel shafts in the 1920s,
the game was about to undergo a major change
in swing motion. Since steel shafts had far less
torque than hickory shafts, the old swing of
aggressive rotation with the hands produced a
hook with the steel shafts. To offset this, players
soon found that they had to use their lower bodies
much more actively than with hickory shafts, in
order to prevent the clubface from being shut at
impact. Byron Nelson is known as the father of the
modern golf swing for being the first prominent
golfer to use this new action.
Titanium drivers and solid-core balls
Not much changed for decades when it came
to the swing since Nelson’s day, because the
equipment remained virtually the same from the
1930s to the late 1980s – wound balls and persimmon
drivers. There were differences in swing
styles which were player-influenced,
but equipment
per se did not influence
the differences.
But, with the advent of
metal drivers and solid-core
balls, the swing changed
again, although in more
subtle ways. While some
golfers, such as Arnold
Palmer and Jack Nicklaus,
were always encouraged
to hit the ball as far as they
could and worry about accuracy
later, most were
taught to have a controlled
swing. Since the metal drivers offered more forgiveness
than persimmon drivers, young golfers
were encouraged to seek distance first, accuracy
second. Solid-core premium balls, which became
popular around 2000, spun less than the old
wound balls, which meant that sidespin was also
decreased, further limiting crooked tee shots. The
result is a generation of free-swingers never before
seen, perhaps most notably Bubba Watson.
The future
With so many recent constraints put on the
driver from the R&A and the USGA, along with the
premium golf ball nearing the maximum distance
standard, it seems difficult to believe that swing
changes in response to equipment changes will
be forthcoming. However, the game has always
evolved to some degree. So perhaps anything’s
possible.
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