Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Equipment Q&A with Tiger Woods: His testing process, switching from Nike to TaylorMade and much more

Equipment Q&A with Tiger Woods: His testing process, switching from Nike to TaylorMade and much more

AUSTIN, Texas — On Monday during the 2019 WGC-Dell Match Play, TaylorMade unveiled it’s new, double-decker TOUR Truck that has taken about a year to design and build, according to the company. It has a retractable second floor that slides up during TOUR events, and down while driving. On the first level, it has most of the typical things you’d find on a Tour Truck, such as loft and lie machines, frequency meters, a grinding wheel, drawers for shafts and grips, and more. It also now has individual lockers for its staffers, a built-in coffee machine, a gathering area with couches, flat-screen TVS, and Tiger Woods’ favorite feature, a PlayStation 4 game system. When the second floor slides up, it reveals an upstairs lounge area – Jason Day’s favorite feature – for players to hang out, and for podcasting, meetings, and other exclusive gatherings. During the reveal of its new state-of-the art TOUR Truck, PGATOUR.COM sat down with Tiger Woods in the upstairs lounge for an exclusive gathering to talk about his golf equipment. During the conversation, PGATOUR.COM discussed with Woods his process for changing (or not changing) equipment, his transition to TaylorMade, why he changes wedges more often with TaylorMade, Mike Taylor and his role in helping with Woods’ new irons, and much more. Enjoy the full equipment Q&A with Tiger Woods below. What was you’re first reaction coming [into the new TaylorMade truck]? Tiger Woods: I didn’t know it was a double-decker. I didn’t know that. It’s pretty incredible. Honestly, I’m blown away. Can’t wait to see everybody getting clubs inside here and it fills in. How much time do you spend in a Tour Van? Almost never. I’m one of those guys that does a lot of my tinkering at home. When I come to a tournament, I don’t tinker anymore. I usually come in here to get … I’ve been practicing a lot, my grips need to be redone, or something like that. I’ll check lofts and lies since, I’ve been practicing a lot at home, my irons tend to get flat. So I’ll have Keith [Sbaboro] come in, but generally I just throw him my clubs and let him go do it. You don’t change equipment a lot … I don’t. No, I don’t. I’m one of the guys that don’t really change anything while I’m at a TOUR site. I do all my testing at home. Now, if you come to my house you’ll see that I’ve got clubs everywhere, and testing, and I got all different data. That’s different. I’ve talked to Rick Nichols a bit about your past with equipment. Who is Rick Nichols to you, and how would you describe that relationship? Well, I started with Rick when he was with True Temper, when I first came out on TOUR. He used to help me with shafts, and I remember he had an idea – back in 2002? – that I should try this new True Temper Lite shaft. It was 112-gram steel. At the time it was really light because I was North of 120 [grams]. I said, ‘Yeah, I’ll try it and see how it feels.’ And, ‘Oh my god, I picked up some distance and some speed, this is great.’ … I’ve always trusted Rick implicitly with my clubs over the years, and Keith has now transitioned into that role. I’ve known Keith ever since I came out here on TOUR; he’s been with TaylorMade ever since I got out here. So I’ve only worked with two guys out here. It’s either Rick or Keith and they both know me, and what I like, what I like to feel. And bounce ideas on and off each other, and try to get me into better equipment than I’m playing. But that doesn’t happen over night. As I said, we do a lot of the work at home. This is year two for you with TaylorMade, essentially using their equipment. Was the transition faster than you expected? You changed out a lot of gear last year. Were you surprised with how quickly you were able to acclimate to new equipment? Well the irons were pretty simple because they made them just like my old ones. We had an issue prior to that because they wanted me in a different metal, and I found that I was hitting the ball too far. You know, all this technology I kept hitting the ball too far. I don’t want to do that. I want to hit the ball at my numbers. So, we worked them, put my old grooves back into these irons, and then I started hitting my windows, my numbers, and everything was good to go so, I put them in the bag. But more than anything it’s been the woods; how much distance I’ve picked up since I’ve been with TaylorMade. Trying to understand … you have to understand, this is the first time that I’ve ever played a non-glued hosel. I’ve never played anything with Nike all those years. And then when I came back from all my injuries, it was tinkering around with the lofts, the weight distribution, and it just changed all my numbers and I was like ‘Wow.’ Usually I come to a testing and there’s like 50 drivers, up on a tee, I hit each single one about three times or so, and then we sort them out that way. Then we re-test them again. That takes two days and I’m so friggin’ tired. Now it’s like click, back in and hit again. ‘Let’s go this way, let’s go that way.’ And all the sudden I have a new driver in 20 minutes. So that was a bit of an adjustment for me, trying to understand that. That whole side of how the hosel works, and how all the weights can play a big difference in my spin rate and my launch conditions. So I had to learn a lot of that. I either talked to the players that we have – like DJ, Rory. They were instrumental in helping me understand that. And then, working with Keith, trying to understand the time that I had a glued hosel to what we have now, So that was a bit of an adjustment, but I was able to make it. You told me something in 2017 … you said that you were actually going to have to learn about the adjustable hosel. Did you really have to go and ask? I did. No, I did. As I said, asking DJ and asking Rory. J. Day, I called him up many of times trying to figure it out, because I didn’t know. It was a big adjustment for me. And then with the weight there, how they work, and trying to understand that. And then, for me, my feels, and trying to understand my body at the same time. Those were all things that were playing together at the same time. But it all came together last FedExCup Playoffs when I switched to my old shaft. I went back to my old Diamana shaft that I’ve had so much success with. I went back to that shaft, got me a little bit more spin on my driver and ended up hitting fairways. Ended up winning the TOUR Championship. What about the transition from the Phase 1 to the new irons you have now. What was that transition like for you, and that process working your way into those new irons? The Phase 1 was more of the challenge, because it was trying to go from Nike to TaylorMade. Once they got the metal, the grooves, my CGs (center of gravities) just right, between the Phase 1 and the P-7TWs, it wasn’t anything, except they were non-milled. Now they can make them again and again and again, and they’re all the same. But the transition from Nike to TaylorMade was a bigger change. Once we got it right, I was pretty consistent going into the greens this past year. I had a lot of confidence hitting the ball inside of 15 feet, and that helped. It’s one of the reasons why I had the success that I had the entire year. With the switch to TaylorMade wedges from Nike, it seems like you’re changing out wedges more often. I saw you with a new wedge at THE PLAYERS, and then you had one in bubble wrap today [at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play practice round]. It seems like you’re able to change wedges more often. Can you speak to that? Well they’re making them … obviously they’re milled, so they’re identical. So, once we figured out what the right bounce and the system that I like with my — I have two different wedges: one I used last year, and one I’ve been testing around a little this year a little bit because of the rough, and I’m trying to get a little more bounce out of the bunkers. I have two different 60 [degree wedges] that I can play with, that I have played with. When I was with Nike we would take 8 sets, or 8 different wedges, and literally hand-grind them all. I’d hit them, I’d test them, ‘I like this, I like that.’ Buff them off, try to get them just right, and then each one felt exactly the same. But after use, at home practicing, bunker work, the grooves started getting worn down so I would send one in, have that re-blasted. That [wedge] would move into the back of the order. Then I had the fresh ones, and I’d wear that one out. Then that would get re-blasted, and eventually they’d come around and I used all 8 sets twice. Then once those were done – so 16 go-arounds – now we have to start it all over again, because they can’t get anymore spin on them. It’s a lot easier now, going through what we had to go through; those long testing sessions, a lot of work with Mike Taylor, a lot of work in the grind room. But when I had them right, I didn’t have to think about it, all I had to do was go hit. But once I wore them out 16 times, we had to restart the process. You mentioned Mike [Taylor]. He was such a big part of building your golf clubs. Is he still involved at all with these new irons? Yeah, he worked on all these irons. He worked on all my wedges. I talk to him probably every few weeks, giving updates on how I feel, things that I think could be better. He’ll bounce a few ideas off me, what I think, what direction we need to go down the road, how can we make them any better than what they are. And this is the same process I went through all those years when I was working with him at Nike. But now working with him at TaylorMade, it’s a lot more seamless.

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WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play: Day 4 match recapsWGC-Dell Technologies Match Play: Day 4 match recaps

AUSTIN, Texas — Time for the Single Elimination weekend at the World Golf Championships-Dell Technologies Match Play. We’ll post recaps as each of Saturday morning’s Round of 16 matches and afternoon Quarterfinals at Austin Country Club, so check back often throughout the day. MATCH PLAY: Scores | Group Standings | Bracket Quarterfinals FRANCESCO MOLINARI (7) def. KEVIN NA (57), 6 and 5 Na won the first hole with an 11-foot birdie putt. After that? All Molinari. The Italian won the next six holes with four birdies and two pars to remain undefeated through five matches this week. Molinari’s 17-foot birdie putt at the par-4 third gave him the lead for good, and he followed with birdie putts from 11-1/2 feet and 8 feet. Na, who had knocked off Justin Rose in the Round of 16, then double-bogeyed the par-5 sixth, and Molinari followed with a 16-foot birdie putt at the seventh. Molinari has yet to play the 18th hole this week and has only been past the 15th hole in one match. Holes won: Molinari 7, Na 1. Holes led: Molinari 11, Na 1. Expert Picks: Quarterfinals PGATOUR.COM staff writers Ben Everill and Mike McAllister are on-site in Austin and will predict the winner of every match each day. Here are their Quarterfinal picks: Round of 16 TIGER WOODS (13) def. RORY McILROY (4), 2 and 1 Woods, the three-time Match Play champ, was 3-up through 11 holes, thanks to some solid ball-striking and faulty McIlroy putting. But McIlroy won the next two holes with birdies to make it interesting. Tiger did well to halve the 15th after an errant tee shot, as he made a clutch 7-footer for par. Then at the par-5 16th, McIlroy had a 395-yard drive and was left with a wedge from the fairway, while Woods’ tee shot was half-plugged under the lip of the bunker, forcing him to just punch out to the fairway, followed by a third shot from 204 yards away that found the green. McIlroy failed to convert the advantage, as his second shot finished in the rough just above a greenside bunker. With an awkward stance, McIlroy’s next shot went over the green and landed next to the boundary ties. He took the unplayable stroke penalty and went back to his original spot; this time his shot found another bunker, and McIlroy inconceivably lost the hole without Woods having to use his putter. Woods nailed down the win with a 13-foot par-saving putt at the 17th. Holes won: Woods 4, McIlroy 2. Holes led: Woods 13, McIlroy 0. Said Woods: “It was a fun match for us. I know that we battled pretty hard against one another and we thoroughly enjoyed it. I was fortunate to come out on top.” SERGIO GARCIA (26) def. BRANDEN GRACE (40), 1 up Garcia trailed most of the front nine and was 1-down as late as the 14th hole after a Grace birdie. But Garcia won the next two holes with a par and a birdie, the latter via an up-and-down from the greenside bunker at the par-5 16th. That put Garcia 1-up and he maintained that for the last two holes. Grace had a chance to extend the match but missed a 6-foot birdie putt at the 18th. Holes won: Garcia 6, Grace 5. Holes led: Garcia 4, Grace 9. Said Garcia: “Very intense. Obviously Grace started really well. Then it got really tricky. When this kind of weather came in, it got very, very difficult. I managed to make three really good putts, so that obviously shows me a lot.” MATT KUCHAR (23) def. TYRRELL HATTON (35), 4 and 3 Kuchar, the 2013 Match Play champ, stayed out of trouble to eliminate Hatton and reach the Quarterfinals for the first time in the current format. Kuchar was 2-up at the turn after winning the sixth with a birdie and the eighth with a par. Another Kuchar birdie at the 12 put him 3-up, then Hatton bogeyed the 15th to end the match. Holes won: Kuchar 5, Hatton 1. Holes led: Kuchar 11, Hatton 0. Said Kuchar: “I try to just play steady golf. And that was the formula today, just steady golf.” LUCAS BJERREGAARD (50) def. HENRIK STENSON, 3 and 2 Bjerregaard, making his Match Play debut this week, continued to impress by knocking off the previously unbeaten Stenson, the 2007 Match Play champ. The Dane took the lead for good with a two-putt birdie at the par-5 sixth, and followed with another birdie to win the sixth. After the turn, he won three holes with birdies to suppress any Stenson rally. Holes won: Bjerregaard 7, Stenson 4. Holes led: Bjerregaard 13, Stenson 0. Said Bjerregaard: “I made a couple of mistakes in the last couple of holes. But other than that, we didn’t really do much wrong. I putted really well today and that was the difference.” KEVIN NA (57) def. JUSTIN ROSE (2), 2 up Na produced some terrific shots down the stretch to hold off the world’s No. 2-ranked player and advance to the Quarterfinals for the first time. Na had four of his seven birdies on the back, including at 17 when he followed Rose’s tee shot to 3 feet with one that finished in tap-in range, then at 18 when Na’s approach finished 8 feet away. The match was tied through 13, but two Rose bogeys opened the door for Na. Holes won: Na 7, Rose 5. Holes led: Na 15, Rose 0. Said Na: “I played awesome today. The back nine I was clutch. I hit some great shots in difficult conditions, just like that last hole right there. Who would have thought I’d be hitting 6-iron in this hole? And what a shot I hit there.” LOUIS OOSTHUIZEN (19) def. MARC LEISHMAN (17), 2 and 1 Oosthuizen, a finalist in Austin in 2016, eliminated Leishman in a well-played round by both players. Oosthuizen was a bogey-free 7 under for his 17 holes while Leishman was 5 under, as the two combined for 13 birdies. Oosthuizen was 1 up after Leishman’s missed par putt from 6-1/2 feet at the seventh. The South African then extended the lead with birdies at hole Nos. 9 and 10. Oosthuizen closed it out by matching Leishman’s birdies at the 16th and 17th. Holes won: Oosthuizen Holes led: Oosthuizen 12, Leishman 1. Said Oosthuizen: “I’m putting good, so it sort of takes a little bit of pressure off the rest of the game. I’m not really forcing it to go to the pins.” FRANCESCO MOLINARI (7) def. PAUL CASEY (10), 5 and 4 Molinari continued his efficient play this week with a bogey-free 14 holes that included four birdies, as he knocked out Casey, a two-time finalist in this event. Through his first four rounds (60 holes total), Molinari has just four bogeys as he reached the weekend for the first time in the current format. Casey bogeyed the third and eighth holes to make the turn 2 down, and then found the water at the 12th for another bogey. Two Molinari birdies from inside 10 feet on the next two holes ended the match. Holes won: Molinari 6, Casey 1. Holes led: Molinari 12, Casey 1. Said Molinari: “I played well again, like the other days. Paul started well and then probably didn’t play some of his best golf. But I was very good in keeping my head down and just keep working, keep trying to make birdies.” KEVIN KISNER (48) def. HAOTONG LI (36), 6 and 5 Kisner, who reached the Championship final last year, made quick work of Li, who was his own worst enemy. Kisner was 3-up after an 8-foot birdie putt at the first and pars on the next two holes. Another Kisner birdie at the fifth from 9 feet extended the lead. Li, reaching the Round of 16 for the first time in his second Match Play start, bogeyed three of his last six holes and hit just 4 of 10 fairways while Kisner hit 9 of 10. Holes won: Kisner 7, Li 1. Holes led: Kisner 13, Li 0. Said Kisner: “He made a couple of bogeys early, and I was fortunate enough to make par and threw in a few birdies. Played solid all day, probably the most solid I’ve played all week.”

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