Beginners Golfing Question!
Discussion
Morning all.
After a long, long break I've decided to take up golf again.
What I'd like to do is rather than charging in and spending loads on a full set of clubs ( most of which I will lack the skill to use anyway ) I'd like to put together a set of say 5-6 clubs, that will give me 99% of what a fairly crap beginner needs.
I was thinking
1 putter.
1 driver ( but what size ? )
2-3 irons ....again what are the most versatile? a 9, 7, and a 4? ( something to get me out of the rough, something for bunkers, and something for mid range shots as I doubt I'll ever drive the thing all the way down the fairway in one shot!!!)
Please be gentle chaps, really all I want to do at first is potter about on some of the local 9 hole courses on a sunny day.

After a long, long break I've decided to take up golf again.
What I'd like to do is rather than charging in and spending loads on a full set of clubs ( most of which I will lack the skill to use anyway ) I'd like to put together a set of say 5-6 clubs, that will give me 99% of what a fairly crap beginner needs.
I was thinking
1 putter.
1 driver ( but what size ? )
2-3 irons ....again what are the most versatile? a 9, 7, and a 4? ( something to get me out of the rough, something for bunkers, and something for mid range shots as I doubt I'll ever drive the thing all the way down the fairway in one shot!!!)
Please be gentle chaps, really all I want to do at first is potter about on some of the local 9 hole courses on a sunny day.

MoleVision said:
I personally use the following and find they cover all bases..
3 Wood
5, 7, 9 irons
Sand Iron
Putter
I struggle to use irons lower than 5... rarely find i need one though
Thanks mate! That's exactly what I wanted. 3 Wood
5, 7, 9 irons
Sand Iron
Putter
I struggle to use irons lower than 5... rarely find i need one though
I'm going to buy those 6 clubs. It's the sizes that I couldn't remember.
Nothing nicer than a round on a nice 9 hole course on a sunny evening ( assuming it ever stops raining! )
Cheers

If you are looking for a good site for stuff, try www.golfbidder.co.uk (no affiliation etc etc..)
Do you need a wood? I find long irons much easier to hit.
I'd recommend:
4 iron - can use it to drive and off the fairway (eventually
)
7-iron - the handiest club in the bag - you can use it on the fairway, in the rough, out the sand, you can chip with it and it's pretty forgiving too.
9-iron - get some height and spin on your approach shots
Sand wedge - good out the sand and easy to spin up for pitch shots.
Putter - if you make it to the green, you'll need one
I'd recommend:
4 iron - can use it to drive and off the fairway (eventually

7-iron - the handiest club in the bag - you can use it on the fairway, in the rough, out the sand, you can chip with it and it's pretty forgiving too.
9-iron - get some height and spin on your approach shots
Sand wedge - good out the sand and easy to spin up for pitch shots.
Putter - if you make it to the green, you'll need one

MoleVision said:
I personally use the following and find they cover all bases..
3 Wood
5, 7, 9 irons
Sand Iron
Putter
I struggle to use irons lower than 5... rarely find i need one though
3 Wood
5, 7, 9 irons
Sand Iron
Putter
I struggle to use irons lower than 5... rarely find i need one though

ooh..maybe a 3 iron just for when your game's in 'the zone'!
eta.
Edited by Blib on Wednesday 23 January 10:06
I'm in the same boat (although now looking for a full-set). Avoided woods completely to begin with (and still don't use them on a round).
I now have: -
Driver (1 wood)
3 iron
6 iron
Pitch wedge
for driving range use. If I'm playing a round, I borrow the rest of a set - along with a cheap stand-bag. Main thing (I think...and I'm crap) is to get a consistent swing, and remember that hitting with a 3 iron is THE SAME as with a 9 iron, it's the club that dictates the length of shot.
I now have: -
Driver (1 wood)
3 iron
6 iron
Pitch wedge
for driving range use. If I'm playing a round, I borrow the rest of a set - along with a cheap stand-bag. Main thing (I think...and I'm crap) is to get a consistent swing, and remember that hitting with a 3 iron is THE SAME as with a 9 iron, it's the club that dictates the length of shot.
I'd question the need for a beginner to take a driver along - long shaft and steep loft will exaggurate any swerve on your shots.
Take another iron I reckon, leave the woods until you can get it in the air and straight consistently - I reckon it's perfectly possible to play round most courses to or below your handicap with just irons. ie. what you gain in distance on a couple of good drives is offset by the strokes ones loses hacking one's way out of the deep rough after another errant drive
Take another iron I reckon, leave the woods until you can get it in the air and straight consistently - I reckon it's perfectly possible to play round most courses to or below your handicap with just irons. ie. what you gain in distance on a couple of good drives is offset by the strokes ones loses hacking one's way out of the deep rough after another errant drive

mat1227 said:
I'd question the need for a beginner to take a driver along - long shaft and steep loft will exaggurate any swerve on your shots.
Take another iron I reckon, leave the woods until you can get it in the air and straight consistently - I reckon it's perfectly possible to play round most courses to or below your handicap with just irons. ie. what you gain in distance on a couple of good drives is offset by the strokes ones loses hacking one's way out of the deep rough after another errant drive
Exactly (I said as much myself Take another iron I reckon, leave the woods until you can get it in the air and straight consistently - I reckon it's perfectly possible to play round most courses to or below your handicap with just irons. ie. what you gain in distance on a couple of good drives is offset by the strokes ones loses hacking one's way out of the deep rough after another errant drive


As a beginner I wouldn't bother with a driver - you need to have a swing that is relatively predictable and repeatable in order for it to do more good than harm!
I'm surprised no-one has suggested a hybrid club yet - kind of a cross between a fairway wood and a long iron. You use them as you would an iron, they're pretty easy to hit and you can get them in a number of lofts to replace your long irons. I'd be tempted to go for a 3-iron hybrid equivalent, then 5, 7 and 9 irons, PW and SW and a putter.
I'm surprised no-one has suggested a hybrid club yet - kind of a cross between a fairway wood and a long iron. You use them as you would an iron, they're pretty easy to hit and you can get them in a number of lofts to replace your long irons. I'd be tempted to go for a 3-iron hybrid equivalent, then 5, 7 and 9 irons, PW and SW and a putter.
MoleVision said:
I personally use the following and find they cover all bases..
3 Wood
5, 7, 9 irons
Sand Iron
Putter
I struggle to use irons lower than 5... rarely find i need one though
Best suggestion this one, at least until you get used to playing. You WILL want a full set at some point though, and that's where the REAL fun begins. 14 clubs gives you oodles of choice. I've gone for a driver (or a Sasquatch as it's known), 1-9 irons, PW, Gap Wedge and SW. And of course a putter. I wouldn't suggest anything lower than a 4 iron though if you're just starting. I play off 7 and still have issues with the long irons sometimes. 3 Wood
5, 7, 9 irons
Sand Iron
Putter
I struggle to use irons lower than 5... rarely find i need one though
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