Monday, June 09, 2008

Golf Universe

Our Featured Golf Article


This is the secret you've been searching for. The
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How To Customize Your Golf Cart And Improve Your Golf Game

by Steve Gillis

Since golfing can be an exhausting at times when your carrying around your golf bag for 18 holes or pulling around pull cart.

Instead, driving around in your golf cart will make your game more relaxing and help your overall game.

If you are an avid golfer who regularly rents golf carts and are looking to invest in your own custom golf cart. You have many options to consider when it comes down to your own personalized design and style.

A standard golf cart holds two people and their golf clubs. Golf carts that hold four people and their clubs are also common, but for those who decide to customize their golf cart, will have the option to extend to multiple golfers such as a limousine or other multiple passenger vehicle.

When customizing your golf cart, there are many options available to you, all depending on your budget. You could start out with a brand new golf cart or buy a used golf cart. There are many professional custom golf cart stores nowadays where you can purchase your golf cart already customized for you or order
specific parts and accessories for your cart.

Here Are Some Tips On Customizing Your Golf Cart

When choosing the materials such as wheels, you need to make sure they are appropriate for the terrain where you will be using your custom golf cart.

You can enhance the look of your golf cart with body kits and add customized parts such as seats, sound systems, steering wheels and much more. You can also choose how many passenger seats available in your golf cart.

And don't forget about choosing your color or multiple colors to make your custom golf cart completely unique to your personality.

You can customize your golf cart yourself or seek help form golf cart mechanics. They may be able to help you with the exact specifications for your custom golf cart and what accessories or custom materials will fit your cart.

To receive more information about custom golf carts,
how to improve your golf game and free golf tips.
Master Your Golf Greens



Tips About Golf

Cobra Golf Irons



Two basics of golf shafts that beginners should most pay attention to are shaft composition (steel or graphite) and shaft flex (how much the shaft bends during the swing). Graphite is lighter and can help generate swing speed; steel is more durable and cheaper. Women and seniors will most likely benefit from graphite shafts with a softer flex. Younger, stronger men might go with regular or stiff shafts, but keep in mind that most teaching pros say many golfers use shafts that are too stiff.
Improve your distance and save money with Precept used golf balls.

Titanium Fairway Woods



A golf tip for a golfer that plans to regrip his clubs: Be cautious. This is because the grips are the only contact points one can access to affect the shot. Before carrying out the regripping, know the core grip of the club and your hands grip size. To determine your core size grip, measure the diameter of the butt of the shaft you're going to re-grip. The shaft's diameter should match the grip's core diameter. In determining your hands grip, the available size grips are regular, mid-size, oversize and jumbo. Use only the best re-gripping materials that will provide optimum performance for your golf clubs.
Improve your golf game with a new fairway woods head today!

Wilson Golf Irons



When buying a putter remember that grips and weight are factors with major impacts on feel. Many believe that a thicker grip helps prevent wrist bend, but a
thicker grip won't be comfortable for all. Weight is entirely a personal preference, and you can find putters that run the gamut from feathery to lead-ish in weight.
Get greater distance on your drives with great Slazenger golf balls from our store.

The driver is now a specialty club, much like a putter. Our set-up, ball position � everything is different from any other club in the bag. You shouldn't be hitting the ball at the bottom � or apex � of the golf swing like a fairway wood. The ball should be struck past this point, on the upswing. This will lead to a higher launch angle and lower spin rate � which is how we are going to hit the ball farther than we ever have before.
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Golf Related News

TITLEIST IS THE OVERWHELMING FAVORITE GOLF BALL AT THE WOMEN’S NCAA DIVISION I CHAMPIONSHIP

Fri, 23 May 2008 00:00:00 GMT
120 Players in Field of 126 Trust Pro V1 or Pro V1x in Most Important On-Course Test of Year

The PGA Tour could learn a thing or two from the USGA

Sat, 07 Jun 2008 08:30:00 EDT
Two problems facing golf these days are slow play and the game's lack of growth. When second-tier events set up their courses to be as tough as the majors, they contribute to both. It's fitting that golf's four most prestigious events -- the Masters, the U.S. Open, the British Open and the PGA Championship -- are the most challenging. But it seems that every week the players now face deep rough and ultra-fast greens that force them to play a plodding, defensive style of golf. Instead of showcasing their talents, they are forced into a battle of attrition.Depending on which organization you want to believe, the total number of people playing golf today is either staying steady or decreasing slightly. I wonder why? Sure, the game is too expensive to attract new players in droves. But let's get real. Last week's Memorial and Senior PGA Championship both featured hack-it-out rough. If you had never played golf before and you saw those tournaments on TV, would you want to take up the game?Contrast that with the 1986 Masters, when Jack Nicklaus shot a back-nine 30 on Sunday. A low round like that attracts people to the game.At the heart of the problem is a testosterone battle waged by the organizers of the PGA Tour's week-to-week events. By growing ankle-deep rough, getting greens rolling to 13 on the Stimpmeter and tucking pins in crazy positions, they're saying to players, "My tournament is as good as a major."There has also been a knee-jerk over-reaction to technology, manifesting itself in courses that are stretched longer and longer.We need to take a deep breath and examine what's happening. I can't believe that I'm writing this, but the PGA Tour could learn a few things from what the USGA's done with the U.S. Open.I tip my hat to the USGA for implementing the staggered-rough strategy. Players who miss the fairway by only a few feet should not be penalized as harshly as players who blow their shots 20 yards off target. At Torrey Pines this week, the 2 1/2-inch first cut of rough will give players a chance to hit recovery shots (Hooray! Recovery shots!), but balls will fall through the thick Kikuyu rough in the primary cut. Playing out of that stuff will be brutal. I also love the idea of pairing the game's best players. Golf, like every other sport, is star driven. Fans don't just want to see the best players competing in the same tournament, they want to see head-to-head matchups between Tiger and Phil, Vijay and Ernie.Having played Torrey Pines last week, I can tell you that the South Course is in unbelievably good shape. The layout is fair, but very tough. Its fairways are running fast, so length may not be a huge factor, but the greens are also extremely firm. Unless there is rain in La Jolla, look for them to roll to 13 or 13 1/2 by next weekend. If that happens, the green contours will be exposed for the disasters that they are.The PGA Tour needs to get with the program. Phil Mickelson's recovery shot on 18 Sunday at Colonial, which led to his dramatic birdie and victory, gets my vote as Shot of the Year. That kind of shot would never have been possible at Muirfield Village or any number of other courses that want "fairway or death" set ups. Pebble Beach got it right this year, as did Riviera. Interestingly, in areas where it has been a poor season for growing grass or where it rained in the middle of the week (like in Atlanta and Hilton Head), organizers could not create over-the-top setups, so the courses played wonderfully. No one is looking for 30 under to be a winning score, but the way things are now on the PGA Tour, David Duval and Al Geiberger should not expect any new members in the "59 Club." And we should not expect to grow the game.




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