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Hosel

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Hosel
The piece of an iron club head, which the shaft is fixed. This part of the club head is hollow.
MyGolfRounds.com Golfing Terms Glossary ...

 


Hosel
The crooked area where the clubhead connects to the shaft. Hitting the ball off the hosel is known as a shank.
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Hoseled Shot: A shanked shot (see "Shank" and "Pitch Out") that results in a ball flight directly to the right as a result of the ball being struck on the hosel.
Hustler: Someone who plays better than they claim to.

Hosel
The hollow part of an iron club head into which the shaft is fitted
Hustler ...

hosel-- The hollow portion of a club head where the shaft is inserted and fastened.
hustler-- A golfer who has a high golf handicap on purpose in order to gain an advantage in a golf match.

Hosel
Place on a club where the shaft and club head come together.
Iron ...

Hosel: The socket or tube in which the shaft is inserted to make a connection with the club head.
Hosel Pfeffer: Colloquialism for a shank. Pepper of the Hosel.
Hustler: One who maintains an artificially high handicap in order to win bets.

Hosel: Curved area where the clubhead connects with the shaft.
Hustler: A golfer who plays for a living. Plays better than he claims to be.
I ...

hosel The portion of the golf clubhead that holds the shaft.
initiation Fee paid prior to joining a private club. An initiation fee may be a few hundred dollars to hundreds of thousand dollars at some elite country clubs.

Hosel: The topmost part of the clubhead where the head and shaft are joined.

hosel
Socket on an iron-headed club that serves to connect the iron club head to the shaft.
interlocking grip ...

Hosel: The part of the club connecting the shaft to the clubhead. (When the PGA Professional studied Tom's 5-iron, he saw that it was bent at the hosel.)
I ...

Hosel : The part of the clubhead into which the shaft is inserted.
Golf Terms : I : Golf Terms ...

HOSEL
The extension of the head of the club into which the shaft fits.
IN ...

hosel
The bit that joins the shaft and head aka shank.
interlocking grip ...

Hosel design of antique wooden shafted clubs in which the hosel has holes drilled in it to reduce weight.
Meadowland
A lush grassland course.

HOSEL - The neck of a club into which the shaft fits.
INVESTMENT CAST - A manufacturing process which effectively expands the
sweep spot by perimeter-weighting the clubhead. The clubs are cast in a mold.

Hosel
Hollow part of clubhead where the shaft is attached. Sometimes called the 'neck'.
I ...

HOSEL
The opening where the shaft intersects with the club head
IRON (submitted by: tiger101)
A golf club used for fairway or bunker shots. Check the Golf Club section.

HOSEL - the hollow part of the clubhead that the shaft fits into.
INTERLOCKING GRIP - a type of grip where the little finger of the lower hand is interlocked with the index finger of the upper hand.
IRON - a club with a metal head which is not a wood! ...

A hosel type in which the shaft penetrates through the sole of the club. Callaway™ clubs are the best examples of bore-through heads.
Boring (Hosel Boring) ...

hits hosel or heel of club
weak shot, no distance
SHOTS THAT END UP RIGHT OF CENTER
TYPE OF SHOT ...

A type of hosel configuration, common in putters, in which the shaft enters the head toward the center. Bullseye-type putters are the best known examples of center-shafted putters.
Coefficient of Restitution (COR) ...

The socket and hosel are the golf club parts that connects the head to the shaft. The hosel is a hole or opening where the shaft fits into the head. Opposite to the heel is the toe. The back opposite to the golf club face.

Place a club head hosel on the golf shaft. Mark the point where the hosel rim meets the shaft.
3 ...

Blade The hitting part of an iron clubhead, not including the hosel. 2) To hit the ball with the leading edge of the blade of an iron.

Heel The part of the clubhead nearest the hosel. (Fuzzy Zoeller addresses the ball off the heel of his driver). A shot hit off the heel is said to be "heeled".

shank (also "lateral") when the ball is contacted by, and ricochets off, the hosel or neck before it hits the clubface causing an errant direction and trajectory (low and to the right for a right-handed player) Note: not usually much fun ...

Shank - A shot struck by the club's hosel, or neck of the golf club usually ends up to the right of the intended target.
Short game - The part of the game that is made up of chip shots, pitching and putting.

Hosel - The insert section for the shaft to join the head
Lag - A putt which is run close to the hole with the intention of leaving a simple tap in
Lie - Where and how the ball comes to rest ...

shank: A shot hit by the very edge (hosel ) of the club, This sends it at an extreme angle to the right
short game: That part of the game which involves shots played on and around the green.
shoulder line: The alignment of the shoulders.

a horrible shot in which the golf ball is struck by the hosel of the club. On a shank, a player has managed to strike the ball with a part of the club other than the clubface.

shank A shot struck by the club's hosel. Travels to the right of the intended target.
short game The part of the game that is made up of chip shots, pitching and putting
short irons The highly lofted irons.

Modern putters are designed with different degrees of face balancing, with varying hosel connections and unique shaft bends that can move the putter shaft off its vertical plane if it's not held correctly.

Shank---a ball hit from the neck or hosel of the club causing the ball to go to the right at a severe angle.
Short game---the part of shot making that consists of short swings (chip, pitch, putt) ...

Lie is the angle that the hosel of the iron makes with the rest of the iron head (an introductory article on golf club heads can be found HERE).

Turn your driver over so that you are holding the hosel (the part of the shaft that connects to the clubhead) with just your right hand (for right handers). Now swing the club back and forth as fast as you can using just your arm, hand and wrist.

If you start with the ball in the middle of the clubface at address, then move closer by an inch or 2, the ball will hit the hosel of the club. To remedy this problem, all you have to do is slow down and relax your arms.

Without question, the worst shot in golf is the shank or dreaded hosel fade. This shot occurs when the club swings too much out in front of you at impact.

Next time you see Senior PGA Tour player Fuzzy Zoeller on TV, watch how he has the ball placed next to the hosel at address position. He sets up like this because he straightens up slightly during his swing, which pulls the clubhead in during impact.

A shot struck by the club's hosel. Travels to the right of the intended target.
Shiperio
Similar to a mulligan where a player is allowed a second shot without penalty but is allowed to choose which ball to play, the first one or the second one.

Grip the club at the wrong end, by the hosel, and take a full swing.
It may feel awkward at first, but practising this dril helps you increase hand speed.
On the practice tee hit all your clubs with the same procedure, drill, shot, drill, shot etc.

Shank: A shot that is struck in the hosel area of the golf club. The resulting ball flight is generally straight to the right. A shank may also be called a "hoseled shot", a "pitch out" or a "lateral." ...

1) The hitting part of an iron clubhead, not including the hosel. 2) To hit the ball with the leading edge of the blade of an iron.
blade Putter
A type of putter with an iron head with the basic form the same as other standard numbered irons.

Shank - A shot struck on the clubs hosel that travels dead right (for a right-handed player). The shank is typically considered the worst shot in golf - even worse than a "whiff".

Area of an iron's clubhead at the hosel; hence a shot hit by the clubface at this point, which flies off to the right (right-handed player).
Short Game ...

A shot that is struck in the hosel area of the golf club resulting in a ball that flies immediately to the right.

shotgun start ...

Shank
Area of an iron's clubhead at the hosel; hence a shot hit by the clubface at this point, which flies off to the right (right-handed player).

Look at the ferrules, (the plastic piece that the shaft goes into before the club head.) if they are unseated from the hosel it could be an indication of other problems. Check the heads for gouges, cracks, rust, etc.

Making light of the situation, Romeo called them the laterals, and the el hosels (hozel). That’s exactly what a shank is.

Shank is a totally mistimes shot, often made with a short iron, in which the ball comes off the junction between the hosel and clubface and travels at right angles to the target intended.
Short Game ...

CLUB HEAD - the component of the golf club that makes contact with the golf ball. All golf club heads consist of three basic parts; the face, hosel and the body.
COMPRESSION - the measure of the hardness or softness and density of a golf ball.

or not we wouldn't venture a guess but from the dark blue moulded insert in the back of the clubhead to the bore-through shaft there is a sense that the Super Hawk and X16 were separated at birth. However, judging by the shape of the hosel and ...

See also: Golf, Swing, Hit, Shot, Iron