Revealed: King Scottie Scheffler of the Iron King uses prov1 ball?

If you haven't grasped the dominance of all Titleism balls in professional games, these statistics should hammer it back:
– Getting Every Player in the Top 10: The Appeal also played a championship golf ball in Quail Hollow's PGA Championship
– 101 competitors have covered the Pro V1, Pro V1X or Pro V1X on the left DASH, more than five times the recent competitor (18).
– 73% of players played a championship golf game on the PGA Tour this season
The highest point of the pile is world number one and fresh PGA champion Scottie Scheffler, who has played championship ball since his junior year. The current three-time major champions rely on the Prov1, which is a lower launch and more penetrating senior champion ball, and has a slightly softer feel and lower spin, although it can still produce a lot of revs around the green.
“I started playing Titleist when I was a kid. I remember the first twelve guys I had with my coach gave me. It was just one of the best deals at the time and I think it's still the best now.”
Around the green, Schefler will start the test ball.
The first thing I always have to do is bring them to the short game area, which is always the most important thing. From there I will go into range, just look at the numbers, carry around, something like that. From there, I will start hitting the ball. The same thing I did in the short game area, in my short game area, there are a few balls, only a few new ones, just try and hit the shot, see what kind of stuff is there, see what the benefits are, see what it works, and it's a response after another, and that's certain. explain.
“One shot I’ve been practicing is when I take some shots out of it. It does feel like 132,” if that distance is that, it really matters to me, which gives me confidence in what that golf is going to do. ”
For all the discussion about driving distance statistics, the real skill of a golfer is to hit the correct yardage number that sets them apart. While we probably hit our 7-iron over-high, the Tour pick pros need to kick off for every yardage.
“You've been playing different types of shots. I seldom hit straight stocks, you've been trying to do something with the ball. So, having that consistency and knowing that golf reacts the way I need it, when it stands out from the face, when it goes into the green, when you go into the tour, when you go into the tour, you're going to blow in, you're going to blow in, you're going to blow in, where you're going to blow in, where you're going to blow in. For years, with this alignment with the titleist ball, I really believe in the way it reacts.
“Prov1 only gave me the best overall performance. I could hit all the different shots I needed. I could spin, spin, and do almost everything I needed to do, whether it was a long time, a straight tee, a straight shot, or a soft weak guy around the green, we could be consistent in what we did, and if we were to adapt to a certain victory, we could do it with competence. A bunch with spin numbers, for me, controlling what I wanted to control was much harder than a stable golf ball.”
For the rest of us, a comfortable crumb is that when we want to get the ball close, a quality ball will have a real impact on the rotation we see or cannot see.
“There is a huge difference between what they do when they hit golf balls around the world. So, a lot of the inconsistencies they see in the game may just be using other balls,” Scheffler said.
“They are like, ‘Man, how do professionals spin like they do?’ But if you give me a regular ball I wouldn’t be able to shoot with the Pro V1, it’s just the nature of the ball, so giving yourself a product that gives you the opportunity to shoot the shots in some way the way we do, and I think they’ll see some huge improvement.
Read more: Bryson DeChambeau calls with Titleist after PGA Championship pain with Tierist Tireker Golf Ball



