The driver what really, when we look at the face of the club should be the easiest club in the bag to hit. It's got the biggest surface area for you to get the ball connected with. Um, but in reality, it's the most difficult why? Well, the distance you're stood away from the object that you're trying to hit in one, but also the design of the club as well.
If we look at the driver, it's quite deep in its distance, from face to the back of the head, and because of that, those designers, they move the center of mass back here. Now the face itself is not flat. It's curved both top to bottom and heel to toe. So there's only rarely the true very center the face that points at you. If I move the tee to the heel side, they're not tee pointing more to the left as I look at it. And then if I move it to the toe side, it's points in more to the right as I look at it. So if I hit the golf ball here, as the ball connects and the force twists the club back around his center of mass, it changes the access that the golf ball is moving.