For years Mike Austin was well known by professional golfers for his length off the tee. But it was one drive in 1974 that secured his name in history. While playing in the U.S. National Seniors Tournament, at the Winterwood Golf Course (now the Desert Rose) Austin was put in a foursome with PGA Champion Chandler Harper. After hitting several 400-yard drives, Chandler said, "Mike, let's see you really let one go." Austin drove the ball on 460-yard par 4. It carried to the edge of the green, bounced over and rolled past the pin and off the back edge. In a 2003 interview, Chandler said he found a ball on the next tee box and called to Austin, "This is impossible, but there is a ball over here." They identified the ball as Austin's and stepped off the distance back to the center of the green. The drive was 515 yards.
How can a sixty-four-year-old former actor with a steel-shafted persimmon driver and an old fashioned two-piece ball could outdrive today's best golfers? I don't think he could. If anyone here has hit a ball with a wood driver & an old topflite you understand what I am talking about. When I last tried a wood driver, I hit it maybe 250 yards & about a foot off the ground. I fly a ball about 290 with my current driver, so how is it that guys like Brian Pavlett, Sean Fister & Jason Zuback can't reach the old timer with their 50 inch cobras & their pinnacle long drive balls? There are certain physics that need to occur at impact in order to propel an object that far. Club heads need to be traveling above 150 mph. Ball speeds need to be over 210. Spin rates have to be low, well below 3,000 rpm. There is no way this could be achieved with a persimmon driver & a steel shaft.
What do you guys think? misidentified ball? Super powered balsa wood? .99 cor? or just good old fashioned country strength & a couple cart paths?