I find it really difficult to believe that an average PGA Tour player is only hitting a 7 iron 165, and Euro tour players are only hitting a 5 iron 184! I don't really believe I'm a club longer than the average pro on both tours. I'm trying to figure out if that's really possible or if it is as bogus as the TV propagated lie that the pros all hit a 5 iron 230. But I guess its possible if you make a few assumptions...
I'll assume these distances are how far they actually hit the ball, not how far they pulled the club from....maybe they are not making perfect contact as often as we've been led to believe? That could account for a few yards. If you include my mishits I might have trouble matching those numbers those numbers with my 5, and maybe even my 7.
I guess another factor, especially on the Euro tour, could be conditions. If I tried to figure out what my average distance with a 5 iron was, I'm sure I'd get a higher number hitting 20 shots on a calm day versus hitting 10 shots into a 25 mph wind and 10 shots with a 25 mph wind -- because I'll hit a 3/4 arm swing punch to take the spin off it and keep it from ballooning, and probably lose 20 yards more against the wind than I'd gain going with the wind. The Euro tour probably sees a fair number of days with temperatures below 60F, which could further hurt distances there.
Depending on how they measure things, if they measure you chopping out of the rough and losing distance on the one hand and getting flyers on the other it can make the numbers get further out of whack.
Doug,
Off of a tee, pros will hit it farther than out of the fairway. I have 2 uncles that played the tour a long time ago but I did caddy one tournament on the PGA tour for an old college friend in 1996 or so. I know that is 11 years ago but I don't think the pros distance has jumped so much with the irons--no more than 10 yards anyway.
Of course, lofts on clubs have changed dramatically. A callaway 7 iron has a loft close to a 5 iron of the 1970's!! But, I caddied for Charlie Rymer (no short hitter--at the Bellsouth Classic at Sugarloaf he reached the Par 5 10th hole in two with a drive and six iron and the hole was right at 600 yards!!!) But his "normal 7 iron from the fairway was 165-170 max.
People really underestimate how firm and fast the courses are these guys play and how far they CAN hit the ball if they want. What makes them so good is their distance CONTROL--the ability to hit each club a consistent, reliable distance. That ability, not how far they could hit it if they really tried, is what matters.
Often the huge distance you hear about is due to unusual turf/wind conditions or the result of a "jumper/flyer" from light rough that takes off.
A normal six iron from the fairway on the PGA tour--I stick with 170-185 yards