TECHNIC · IRON 9
Iron 9 — Transition to the Short Game.
The 9 iron with 40° loft is the bridge between approach irons and wedges. 100m median carry, high trajectory, good for short approach and long chip shots. Three applications that lower the senior score.
MWith a 100-yard median carry and versatility between an approach and a chip, my 9-iron is the underrated scoring club. I not only use it as an approach club, but also for a „bump and run” from 30-50 yards before the green — low trajectory, lots of rollout, very consistent. The trick is swing variation.
The 9 iron is the transition between the approach irons and wedges in a senior's bag. It is suitable for three distinct applications: a full swing approach (100 m), a three-quarter swing approach (80 m), and a low hump-and-run chip (30-50 m). Anyone who masters all three has a versatile club in their senior bag.
Three uses for iron 9
Three tips for the 9 iron
The 9-iron is the most underutilized club in senior golf. Used correctly, it's a 100-yard approach club, an 80-yard precision club, and a 40-yard bump-and-run — three clubs in one.
— Bob Vokey, Wedge and Bag Designer (Titleist)
Three principles for Iron-9 versatility.
Three variants open up
Full (100m), Three-Quarter (80m), Hump-and-Run (40m). Senior golfers with all three variants have three clubs in one — without sacrificing a bag slot.
Hump-and-Run as a senior specialty
A low trajectory with rollout is more predictable than high pitches. Senior players with often unreliable pitches benefit disproportionately.
Three-quarter swing practice
The Eisen-9 Three-Quarter Swing is the robust alternative to the gap wedge full swing. Often a better choice when senior wedges are unreliable.
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What Iron 9 does not replace
The 9 iron is the most versatile club in the 80–100m range, offering a valuable bump-and-run option—but it doesn't replace the wedge family or putting mechanics. It's a transitional club, not a universal short-game substitute. It truly shines when combined with good wedge play and putting.