Choosing the right golf club can feel overwhelming when you're starting out. A golf bag can hold 14 different clubs, depending on the style of and knowing when to use each is key to improving your game. This guide will show you exactly how to choose the perfect club on every shot and help you to play smarter and score better.
Whether you’re in the market for your first set of clubs or just want a better understanding of your current equipment, mastery of club selection is the quickest way to lower your scores and have more fun on the golf course.
Understanding the Types of Golf Clubs
Each golf club is designed for a specific shot on the course. Realizing how each club can help you will allow you to strategize during your round.
Golf clubs fall into six main categories: Driver, Woods, Hybrids, Irons, Wedges, and Putters. Each can be used for various distances, trajectories, and course conditions. As you build your set of golf clubs, it's important to know how each type is going to be used in your overall strategy.
The Role of Each Club
Driver
Your driver is your longest club and you hit it off the tee. It has the largest head along with the least amount of loft (usually 8-12 degrees), allowing you to hit the ball long distances off the tee on par 4s and par 5s. Most players hit the ball 200-300+ yards with the driver.
Do not be afraid to pull your driver out when you are looking for your purest contact and you have wide open fairways with no real hazards in the way.
Fairway Woods
Fairway woods (3-wood, 5-wood, 7-wood) bridge the gap between your driver and irons. They're more forgiving than drivers and they do a good job off both the tee and the fairway. These clubs usually travel 180 to 250 yards and can be more accurate than drivers. Select fairway woods if you want good distance but more control than a driver offers, or if you’re hitting from the fairway on long approach shots.
Hybrids
Hybrids take the best elements of woods and irons. They’re more hittable than long irons and more versatile than fairway woods. More forgiving and consistent than long irons, hybrids are considered an excellent golf club accessory for golfers of every skill level. Use hybrids on long shots (150-200 yards) from a variety of lies, including rough that traditional irons can struggle with.
Irons
Irons (4-iron through 9-iron) are your clubs for approach shots. Every iron has a different loft so different distances are gapped. Lower-numbered irons (4-6) hit the ball farther and are harder to control; higher-numbered irons (7-9) are more accurate and higher-flying. They're perfect for approaches to the green, as well as shots where accuracy matters more than length.
Wedges
Wedges are specialized irons designed for short-game shots around the green. Common wedges include pitching wedge (PW), sand wedge (SW), and lob wedge (LW). These clubs create high, soft-landing shots perfect for getting close to the pin. Use wedges for shots within 100 yards of the green, bunker shots, chip shots around the green, and any situation requiring a high, soft-landing ball flight.
Putter
Only used for putting on the green to get the ball in the hole. It is low-lofted and has a flat face that is designed for accuracy not distance. No golfer, regardless of skill, can go without a dependable putter. For everything on the green and from just off the green when the ball has to roll more than it flies, you can use the putter.