Toski T54 Iron Loft
I had a Cleveland Launcher Driving iron in my bag until probably a year ago, maybe a bit more. I hit a lot of good shots with that club it came at 21. (the one i bought at least) and i bent it to 19.5. so it would basically be my 5 wood, i don't think i hit it quite as far as a 5 wood but still it worked for my distance gap.in retrospect bending it down probably wasn't the best idea i've ever had since that mother had like no bounce in the sole anyways, it prob had negative bounce after i bent it. It was a good club though.
Toski, 75, a Boca Raton resident who still teaches at the Toski-Battersby Golf Learning Center in Coconut Creek, has teed it up with Sam Snead, Ben Hogan and Jack Nicklaus. Model Reviewed: bob toski VEC ions i bought a set of the vec irons in 84 and love them still!i let my son use them one time and he lost my 7 iron and havn`t found one in 2yrs.help if you can anyone please!!!!bob toski 960-vec`s843-499-6691.
I think the best shot i hit with it was my sophomore year in high school par 5 finishing hole, drove it up the right side and there was an OB fence prob 6-7ft high so you were blinded from the greeen. I was like 220 so i hit the DI over the fence to about 10ft, prob not the closest shot i've hit with it from that distance, but certainly the most clutch as the 2-putt birdie gave us the win.i really don't know why i wrote all that i just started thinking about that club and it got me off on a rabbit trail. When I was first getting back into golf after a long hiatus, I got suckered by that club, the driver with 'armor piercing metal,' and that weird wedge (Condor?) that are advertised as quick and easy ways to success. The siren song of a magic piece of equipment rather than learning to do things right was irresistible at that time.
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None of them worked.That driving iron was supposed to give drives as long or longer than a driver, but be accurate and easy to hit. If somebody can hit that thing, they could also hit normal clubs.To put it into historical perspective, though, hybrids had hardly any market share at that time, but most of the annoying predatory dinosaurs had been cleared from the courses, and I'd graduated all the way to feathery balls and full hickory shafts. Yeah Pinger, it's funny how you remember the great shots. I used to play this 2 iron that I just flush off the tee most of the time. I also hit some tremendous fairway shots with that club, but I also hit some terrible shots with it. I also used to have a Callaway 1 iron that was more like a driving iron, back when I was probably a 15.
I had myself convinced that it was a money club until I actually starting keeping track of all the garbage it used to produce.yeah i was also thinking about how there were those times that i would try to hit it out of the rough and due to the almost negative bounce on the sole the club would almost come out of my hand after being caught in the grass. Or the time in the fairway then i'd hit it knee high. Lol thinking about it is funny the good shots were always good of course but the bad shots not so much, those clubs aren't the most forgiving. I think I've still got one of those Controllers wedged somewhere in pitch darkness in the corner of one of my sheds. Bought it at a Play It Again sports for $10-12 maybe 15 years ago. Tried it one the range and yes, it was a 50-50 club.
In the early '80's my father gave me a real wonder-Stan Thompson Ginty 1 iron.anyone remember those? It weighed about as much as a Gibson Les Paul but that sum. would cut through the rough with its v-shaped keel. Liked it so much I had a Neuman leather grip put on it. The best driving iron I used was a Ping Eye 2 1 iron with the stock stiff steel shaft.
Played it for a couple of years with no woods in the bag. I'd play if off my right foot and beat down hard on it off the tee and fairway and it was mostly 235-250 down the center of the fairway. Then the shaft snapped on the range and it was never the same. God bless hybrids. Another club that everyone who has been playing for 15 years had at some point, the original Adams Tight Lies fairway wood. And if you had it for more than a couple rounds it would inevitably have skymarks.
That face was about dime height, but it was so easy to hit out of the fairway.I used to bag the strong 3 wood (13 degrees) in the orginal Tight Lies series. It was a great club but it got so dinged up from tee hits. If i needed a solid 250 yard fairway shot, tjhsi club was the go to club. I eventually figured out that I needed to tee this ting to iron heights, like a 5 or 6 iron on a par 3 tee box to get it to hit long off the tee. I bagged it for the same time I bagged the Controller, thinking I would be tough with a 17 degree driving iron and a 13 degree 3 wood. I also had a Tm Burner driver with the bubble shaft.
I do not regret the Tight Lies though. My irons were a solid choice then too - Cleveland TA3s. I have since grown into an appreciation for forged blades and cavities.Incidentially, I picked up a Tommy Armour 1 iron, 16 degrees loft. It has a bit of offset, but not like the hacker shovels of today. It is much easier to hit than that Controller ever was.
That thign stung the hands really bad even on good shots. I still train with that Tommy Armour 1 iron at the range. I did bust it out during a match play round and used it for a driving club.
Toski T54 Iron Loft For Sale
Golf irons generally come in sets from the 3- or 4-iron club through the pitching wedge. It is also increasingly common these days for the 3- and 4-irons to be replaced with hybrids.
Toski T54 Iron Loft Bed
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