As you have no doubt realized, I’m MyGolfSpy’s resident contrarian. In staff meetings, I’m the walking, talking and golfing embodiment of the Beatles’ “Hello, Goodbye.”
You say yes, I say no. You say stop, and I say go, go, go….”
Oh nooo …
Hey, someone has to do it.
Anyway, my love for the Cleveland HiBore XL aside, please let me sing the praises of another golfing implement that isn’t getting the love it deserves.
The Wilson Dynapower Carbon 5-wood.
(Yes, I know it’s DYNAPWR, but I flatly refuse to go there. I stand in support of vowels.)
Oh, Dynapower, how do I love thee …
You shouldn’t sleep on the Wilson Dynapower fairway woods. The original Dynapower copped top honors in MyGolfSpy’s testing in 2023 and it was the first fairway wood I didn’t hate since my MacGregor Tourney persimmon from that distant Orwellian year of 1984.
The new Wilson Dynapower models were middle-of-the-pack performers in this year’s MyGolfSpy testing. The Dynapower Carbon finished 11th out of 22 models tested, while its more forgiving partner, the Dynapower Max, finished 14th. While accuracy and forgiveness scores were meh, both performed well in the distance category, with the Carbon model finishing fifth overall for length.
Revamping the long end of the bag
The long end of my bag is always a work in progress. While I still love that HiBore, I’ve rotated other drivers in for testing purposes. The biggest change was replacing the Dynapower Carbon 3-wood with the TaylorMade R7 Quad mini driver.
As the early season progressed, I noticed I was using my 3-wood almost exclusively off the tee and my 5-wood almost exclusively off the deck. After being fitted for the R7, something had to go. Losing the screw for the 3-wood’s adjustable hosel made the decision a little easier. To make the gaps work, I cranked the 18-degree 5-wood down to 16.5 degrees. That makes it a 4-wood and, so far, it’s been a beast of a weapon.
I play most of my golf at Breakfast Hill in Greenland, N.H. It’s not long, but it does require some thinking. The first hole is a 350-yard par-4 that’s narrow and downhill. It’s a nerve-wracking tee shot, but the Dynapower is the perfect solution to get the round started in the short grass.
The fact that I can hit it solidly and straightly most of the time makes it a weapon on the two reachable par-5s on the front nine as well.
Some Dyna-powerful stats
One of the reasons I love shot tracking is that it serves conflicting purposes. It simultaneously smashes any preconceived notions about how far you hit it while unveiling strengths you didn’t know you had. The stats show the duck hook off the tee is my round-killer. They also show I’m not nearly as inconsistent as I think I am. By combining the mini driver and Dynapower Carbon with my regular driver, I’m hitting 61 percent of my fairways and those awful OOB tee shots are at an all-time low.
The Wilson Dynapower Carbon 5-wood: Does it fit with a mini driver?
It’s fair to question the value of a mini driver. I think that, in this particular setup, bagging one makes sense. Several courses I play set up perfectly for it and on those occasions when the big dog gets squirrelly, it can be a more reliable fairway finder. I haven’t yet tried hitting the mini off the deck other than at the range but given my relative lack of success lately with 3-woods, I don’t have much hope.
Oh, yeah, because we’re golfers. That’s why.
Therefore, the Wilson Dynapower Carbon will stay in my bag in perpetuity.
Right up until I un-perpetuitize it, that is.
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