A niblick is the name of a chipping wedge made by Cleveland Golf. It is specifically made for chipping around the green.
How I Play Golf by Bobby Jones No- 4 'The Mashie Niblick' - 1931 was released on: USA: June 1931
Golf (It is a club similar to a 9 iron)
Last of the Summer Wine - 1973 The Kink in Foggy's Niblick 3-5 is rated/received certificates of: UK:PG (video rating) (2004)
A 9 iron is also commonly called a pitching wedge in golf.
While a modern set of club is limited to 14 clubs, there is no certain number of clubs in a hickory set. Frances Ouimet only carried 7 clubs when he won the U.S. Open. Players like Bobby Jones and Walter Hagen carried over 20 clubs in their bag. Most people who play hickory golf today, carry between 7 and 14 clubs in their bag. I would consider 7 clubs a minimum for a serious hickory golfer. These would include a Driver, fairway wood, putter, mid-iron, mashie, mashie-niblick, and niblick or some slight variation. I carry 10 clubs in my set....Driver, fairway wood, mid-iron, mashie, spade mashie, mashie niblick, 50 degree niblick, 56 degree niblick and a putter. Part of the fun of hickory golf is building a set that suits your style of play.
I just bought a Mashie at a local swap meet for ten bucks
niblick. a type of golf club, now usually called a two wood.
Golf players
Niblick Henbane covered it on their first self-titled album and later re-released it on a later album titled Happy Happy Oi Oi. The former is a far superior version in my expert and learned opinion.
AnswerI think the terms you are looking for are "brassie", "spoon", and "niblick" (and possibly "driver") . The woods and the brassie were named for their materials, while the spoon was named for its shape. I have no idea where the term niblick comes from. If you find a set of clubs made before WWII, you won't find 1, 3 or 5 woods, etc. Instead, the clubs carried actual names. At that time, the brassie was a long fairway wood; I believe it evolved into the 3 wood. I think the niblick was a medium fairway wood; evolving into the 5 wood. The spoon was a shorter fairway wood; I believe it evolved into the 7 wood. The 3 & 4 hybrids look very similar to a spoon, and essentially recreate it. My understanding is that, before there were true irons, the spoon was used in the same way the short irons are today, the niblick was used in the same way the long irons and the short fairway woods are today and the brassie was used like we use the long woods (driver & 3 wood). I believe that the irons themselves grew out of the spoon, as it differentiated into different shapes optimized for different playing situations and as new materials were introduced.It's fascinating that "woods" are no longer made of wood, and that the long iron hybrids aren't irons, but spoons.However, if you are looking for the names of the types of clubs, a prevous poster stated, "IF I HAD TO TAKE A GUESS, DRIVER, IRON AND PUTTER. IT IS THE THREE DIFFERENT TYPES OF CLUBS IN YOUR BAG. ALL CLUBS ORIGINATE FROM THE PUTTER FROM WHAT I HAVE BEEN TOLD."I don't know about that last statement - its not something I had heard before.
Thorney Park Golf club is the friendly golf club house in Iver.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 3 words with the pattern -IB--C-. That is, seven letter words with 2nd letter I and 3rd letter B and 6th letter C. In alphabetical order, they are: bibcock niblick pibroch