Robert Rock is the proud owner of some of the most centrally located wear marks in the business!

Then we’re into the real players bats. So these P7TWs. So you are what? Six to six to nine. Six to nine. I did have six to wedge, but the wedge wasn’t my favorite to be fair. And okay, so I changed the wedge to a Vokei. But six to So how did you end up in these? Why do you love them? These wear marks are really upsetting me how central these are. Rob, I used to have a long longer blade length Callaway X forged iron, which was my favorite iron, which I play the best golf with. I’ve got two sets, but I’ve ran out of six irons because that’s your practice club. I went Well, it was it was my practice club until I did some stats on my own, tracked a season worth of approach shots and realized I was getting twice as many seven irons into greens as I was sixes. So, you switched it. So, I switched to seven iron practice, which was a bit enlightening. Feels like a smart move. It was a smart move. I was wasting my time a little bit. Um, so I wore through six irons, but there was a longer blade length and I tried loads of different irons to replace and I would hit them out the toe and certainly blades as a rule are shorter. Yeah. So Tiger kindly made these ones. Good of him. It was good of him. Yeah. Um, and they’re slightly longer and they got the multi-groove which my Callaways had on so they fitted in perfect. That’s what I always noticed about these whenever I’ve tried these. And we talk about iron testing and we testing bays and dry and blah blah blah. If you get these out, like there’s there’s an old Nike VR blade that had the same groove pattern and the amount of grooves. So there’s there’s far more grooves on these than there is on say the the P7 CB made. I can’t remember the numbers. And I just noticed when it’s wet, when I’m in the rough, just don’t get flyers. Yeah. Out of these, which I think is really cool. These are great. Absolutely great clubs. And any spare sets? I have got two sets.

1 Comment

Write A Comment