Hybrid, Utility or Rescue Club – Which to Choose

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Norman Stanley asked:

The short answer is any one as they are all the same thing. They are all a cross between a wood and an iron utilising the best features of both. I shall use any name as I go depending on where my fingers are on the keyboard.

A 3 or 4 iron will give you a decent penetrating shot with a fairly low flight trajectory and a corresponding roll. However this can be difficult to control with any great accuracy especially on a dry firm fairway. The reduced top spin produced by the average player with a long iron also gives a greater margin for side spin off the more upright face leading to a pronounced curve to the ball flight. A / utility/ rescue golf club with its lower centre of gravity helps to launch the ball higher with more top spin giving a straighter shot and a more “drop and stop ” characteristic. This makes it ideal for those shots into the green where a long iron will bounce or roll off.

So, how does work?

The design of the club generally follows two formats, some look like a conventional iron for example and some, like the Callaway have the appearance of a small fairway wood. This is just two ways to skin the same . An iron look will have a lump like bulge at the back of the head, this allows the weight , i.e. centre of gravity to be further back and it is this that affects the angle of trajectory making the ball take off at a much steeper angle, thus giving a longer flight and the drop and stop capability. The fairway wood design is just another way of achieving the same effect. Some golfers like the look of the iron type over the ball and some prefer the wood look, it’s a personal thing.

One other reason for making the head deeper is that it allows the club designer to bring in another characteristic which is ‘perimeter weighting’. What’s that I hear you ask, well it means that the forces from the club head are channelled to the outer edges or perimeter of the club head and the benefit of this is a much larger ‘sweet spot’ thereby cancelling out some of those less than perfect contacts.

Why would I buy one?

Playing from the rough is where these clubs really come into their own as the sheer mass behind the club help to drive through the grass without twisting, some even have a rudder on the sole which further helps to get the clubface square so you can hit straight almost all the time.
A further use for the hybrid golf club is shots from just off the green where you need just a little loft to get over the fringe or where you are against the fringe and need the club to get to the back of the ball. The hybrid is almost made for this. The shorter shaft also makes for greater controllability as it is often said it’s easier to make the shot when you are closer to the ball.
Hybrid golf clubs are made in a variety of styles, lofts and designs and their sheer flexibility has earned them the other title of rescue club, a more fitting title couldn’t be nearer the truth. Pick a hybrid golf club and you will soon wonder how you got along without it.

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