Quote from: Chuck Brown on August 22, 2010, 04:28:16 AM
Quote from: Jim Nugent on August 22, 2010, 04:22:39 AM
Quote from: David_Tepper on August 22, 2010, 01:53:03 AM
My guess is lighter weight shafts and advances in club fitting have enabled tall golfers to learn and play the game a little more easily. This could be what Steve Smyers is speaking about. If you recall, George Archer looked rather stooped and hunched over the ball at address. This may have been a function of having to play with clubs ill-suited for someone of his height.
DT
In the 1960's, my recollection is that a driver could be no more than 43" long. Am I right about that?
No.
Standard was 43.5" for all drivers, and they could be longer. Of course with steel and solid persimmon heads, much longer turned into unGodly swingweights. Unless you backweighted, which turned in the unGodly static weights.
This alone might be the reason most top golfers back then were under 6', with many way under.
Garland -
The question I am asking is did the limitation of heavier weight shafts and clubheads in the 1940's-50's make it difficult, even for the relatively few customer clubfitters of that era , to properly fit (in terms of swing weight, static weight, balance, etc.) a very tall person? Carl Rogers says his 1.5' longer shafts produced a "heavy" set of clubs. Since you are the clubfitting expert, do today's options in clubheads and shafts make it easier to produce extra-length clubs that are not "heavy?"
DT