JackReacher said:
93Devil said:
Anything other than wood heads on the drivers should be cheating.
That's right, dammit! Bring back the leather helmets, too. And the peach backets.
Not to mention the feathery.
That much aside, as Hondo pointed out, these clubs were ruled OK for use in pro events this year. John Daly and Dean Wilson used them two weeks ago at the Sony, so this is much ado about nothing.
It's also -- according to several technical people I've read on this subject -- much ado about nothing regarding Phil's game... or anyone else who uses those clubs. Apparently, the grooves on Ping Eye-2s are as comparable to today's grooves as a slingshot is to a Stinger missile.
Disclosure... I have a set of Ping Eye-2s that I bought used and love.
Warning: TechSpeak from Bob Harig's notebook on ESPN.com last week.
"The Ping square groove from [the 1980s] was great then with the balata balls," said Keith Sbarbaro, the vice president of Global Sports Marketing for TaylorMade. "I don't have any data but I would guess it's not even close to any square groove from the last 15 years and it's probably not even better than the current 2010 groove.
"When this groove came out the original Burner was the greatest technology and Ping didn't even have the technology to make a metal wood. I highly doubt they had the engineers then to make a grove anywhere close to as good as this 2010 groove."
Benoit Vincent, chief technical officer for TaylorMade, did an analysis of a Ping Eye 2 wedge and said that the "grooves have been worn out which is certainly the case for the majority of wedges produced so long ago." Vincent also said the club had 18 grooves, compared with 14 on a contemporary TaylorMade version.
His conclusion: "The Ping Eye 2 groove is not optimum for three reasons: no fresh grooves; inconsistent geometry obtained by hand polishing of casting and random tumble finish process wearing the edge of the groove; and last, the high number of grooves on the face imposes the groove to be narrow then the overall volume to be small compared to a modern groove."