TECHNOLOGY · IRON 7
Iron 7 — The favorite iron of senior golfers.
Statistically, the 7-iron is the most frequently used iron among senior golfers: 125 m median carry, high GIR (Green in Regulation) percentage, versatile in many lies. What makes the 7-iron so special — and which three shot variations every senior golfer should master.
MA 7-iron is the most used club in the bag after the putter. On a typical 18-hole round: 4-6 times. Approach, par-3 tee shot, safe layup on a long par-5, sometimes even a chip out of deep rough. It's the universal iron—and that's precisely why every senior golfer should master it technically.
The 7-iron is the favorite club of most players in the senior bag. Loft (32-34°) produces an ideally high trajectory, the sweet spot is generous, and it has very good contact properties from all lies. Three specific shot variations make it a score-booster – full, three-quarter, and half swings.
Three 7-iron swing variations
Three tips for the 7 iron
The 7-iron is the senior golfer's Swiss Army knife. Master three swings with it — full, three-quarter, and half — and you've got a club for every approach situation.
— Bob Vokey, Wedge and Bag Designer (Titleist)
Three Principles for Iron-7 Mastery.
Master three swing variations
Full, three-quarter, half. These three 7-iron swings cover 75-125 yards — a huge distance range with just one club.
Median beats best
Plan with the median carry, not the best drive of the season. Avoid the systematic short-landing that often costs senior approaches.
Consistent pre-shot routine
Identical setup steps before every 7-iron shot. Tour pros are consistent for many reasons, not least of which is that they do the same thing every time.
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What the 7 iron doesn't replace
The 7-iron is the most versatile iron in a senior's bag, but it doesn't replace wedges or putting. It's the approach anchor for the 75-125 meter zone, not the entire score. Mastering it gives you a reliable approach weapon – combined with a good short game, it becomes a real score booster.