Day: March 4, 2022

Jon Rahm has new putter in bag at Arnold Palmer InvitationalJon Rahm has new putter in bag at Arnold Palmer Invitational

ORLANDO, Fla. – Question: If you’re a putter, how do you work your way into the bag of world No. 1 golfer Jon Rahm? You win your tryout, that’s how. We jest, of course. Rahm said Friday after a second-round, 2-under 70 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational (28 putts) that there is very little difference between the gamer he had been using (Odyssey White Hot OG Rossie S prototype) and the one that he is using now, which he switched to for the fourth round at The Genesis Invitational at Riviera two weeks ago. Rahm’s new putter – an Odyssey White Hot OG #7S – had a nice debut at Riviera, where Rahm made four birdies and an eagle in a final-round 65. At Bay Hill Club & Lodge, which he is playing for the first time, Rahm has made nine birdies over two rounds, but ranked outside the top 100 in Strokes Gained: Putting as of mid-day Friday. (A missed 10-inch putt Thursday didn’t help.) Over two rounds at Bay Hill, he had 60 putts and made 126 total feet of putts. His longest made putt on Friday was 11 feet, on the fourth hole. Rahm said the two putters are similar except for their appearance. The Rossie is a rounder mallet-type club, while the OG #7S has two protruding fangs. Choosing one came down to this: He stood 40 feet from the hole, devoted one putt to each putter, and said to himself, ‘Whichever one I make it with first, I’m going with.’” Hello, OG #7S. It has some work to do to make up ground, as the Rossie won him the 2021 U.S. Open. “When I chose to play the Rossie, which was the one I was playing up until this week, or the Sunday of L.A., I was right in between the two of them,” Rahm said. “I could have picked either/or when I did. Both of them felt great. So I knew (the OG #7S) was always a good backup.” Thus far in 2021-22, Rahm ranks first in Strokes Gained: Off-The-Tee and second in Strokes Gained: Tee-To-Green, but 88th in Strokes Gained: Putting. Part of that he chalks up to challenging greens on the West Coast. “It’s not necessarily that things are bad,” he said. “I’ve seen a lot of putts graze the hole and not go in. It’s golf sometimes, especially on the West Coast. I’m not too concerned about it.” Rahm has a putting green downstairs at home in Arizona, and sometimes he’ll hit putts using both of the putters that have been in his bag of late. Sometimes a new look can spark something. “It’s essentially just to trick the mind, right?” Rahm said as he heads into the weekend. “The (putter) swing should be exactly the same, it just looks a little different. … There’s no difference between them.”

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Rory McIlroy’s new 3-iron helps him hit it higherRory McIlroy’s new 3-iron helps him hit it higher

ORLANDO, Fla. — Rory McIlroy, who led after one round at the Arnold Palmer Invitational after a 7-under 65 on Thursday, recently put a new 3-iron in his bag at The Genesis Invitational at Riviera, and it’s in his bag at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. McIlroy said it gives him more “flight.” “It’s the (TaylorMade P790) head; I have the blades in everything else,” he said after his round. “It just gives me a bit more flight; I hit it up in the air. I can hit it up in the air, and it’s just easier to hit. “If I flush my blade with my 3-iron, it should go about 245-247 (yards), but if I miss it, it goes the same distance as my 4-iron. Whereas, if I miss this 3-iron it doesn’t go quite as short.” Long-iron play can be especially important at Bay Hill, which has seen more approach shots from 200-plus yards than any course on TOUR since 2016, according to Justin Ray of Twenty First Group. That’s due in large part to the course’s long par-3s and reachable par-5s. Last year’s Bay Hill champion, Bryson DeChambeau, led the PGA TOUR in average proximity from 200-plus yards last season. Like DeChambeau, McIlroy is known for his ability to hit the ball sky high. Entering this week, McIlroy had an average proximity of 43 feet, 6 inches on approaches greater than 200 yards. That would rank him ninth on TOUR if he’d played enough rounds to be included in this season’s statistical rankings. His average proximity from 225-250 yards (38’, 2”) would rank sixth. According to TaylorMade, the P790 has a forged hollow-body construction that uses newly-engineered SpeedFoam Air, which is 69% lighter than its predecessor, inside the head. That helped TaylorMade to create a thinner face for increased ball speeds and move the center of gravity lower for increased forgiveness and higher ball flights. Thirty-one grams of tungsten in the toe creates more stability and forgiveness. The irons are also more forgiving on strikes low on the face because of a Thru-Slot Speed Pocket. McIlroy at first tried a steel shaft in the new 3-iron, like he had in the previous one, but transitioned into a Fujikura Ventus Black shaft, which he also has in his woods. Did he have any challenges in matching it up? “Graphite nowadays is so much stronger than steel,” he said. “I tried a steel shaft before, and the thing just kept going left. It just wasn’t strong enough at the bottom. So then we tried this Ventus, and they’re very tip-stiff anyway. Yeah, it straightened the ball flight out.” Armed with a new club that only exacerbates one of McIlroy’s advantages, he finished T10 at The Genesis Invitational and now is in the lead at the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, which he won in 2018.

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