AP
This precision extends down to the
I was at the
As I was walking away from the range, I spied buckets of different balls — Titleist, Bridgestones, Srixons, etc.
Someone working at the U.S. Open noticed me grabbing a peek at the balls. I said I had always wondered if players hit their own balls on the range, and if the people scooping up the balls had to sort the balls out later. Turns out the answer is yes.
Golfers are a fussy bunch of people.
They believe they can feel a difference between, say a Titleist Pro V1 and a Pro V1x. Therefore, they should warm up with the exact ball they're going to play. Golf is mental, and pro golfers want no doubt in their heads as they warm up about why the ball is doing what it's doing.
Woods is particularly fussy. Unlike some players who drop their current clubs for the latest thing their sponsor is making, Woods patiently waits and tests each new thing Nike makes until he's comfortable. Then, maybe, he switches equipment.
For instance, earlier this year, he finally started using a new 5-wood after six-years of using the same model. And even that new 5-wood from Nike is supposedly custom built to fit his specifications.