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The controlled fairway-finder drive every golfer needs

David Armitage explains how to hit a fairway-finder drive

David Armitage explains how to hit a fairway-finder drive.

GOLF

Even the best golfers have days when their driver feels off. The key is knowing how to continue leveraging this advantage off the tee without letting it destroy your round.

That’s where the fairway-finder drive comes in handy.

Unlike the long bombs that everyone dreams of, this shot is all about control, consistency and keeping the ball in the short grass. As David Armitage, a GOLF Top 100 Teacher, explains, the fairway-finder drive isn’t just something to rely on when your swing is off — it’s a versatile tool that can help you navigate any course, in any condition.

To add this shot to your game, all you need to remember are Armitage’s five keys and this simple phrase: keep it small for more control.  

Tee it down

Instead of teeing it super high, Armitage says that you actually want to tee the ball down. 

“It’s almost like the top of the ball is level with the top of the face of the driver,” he says, “So it’s still teed up relatively high but not as high as the long bomb.”

This adjustment helps promote a lower, more penetrating ball flight that’s easier to control and keep on line.

Ball back in your stance

While your normal ball position with the driver is somewhere around the inside of your lead heel, Armitage explains that in order to generate a lower ball flight that rolls out, you need to play the ball further back in your stance.

“It’s just like 3-wood or 5-wood sort of ball position,” he says. 

Grip down 

Modern drivers can push well past 45 inches and that extra length isn’t always your friend if accuracy is the priority. Armitage says that choking down on the club can give you a bit more control without changing your motion.

“We really don’t need all that length [in the club],” he says, “We’re trying to find the fairway here.”

“When you are lower down on the club, you’ve got more control because you’re closer to the club head,” Armitage continues.

Focus on tempo 

If you want to find more fairways, Armitage says the priority is tempo. 

“All I want you to do is feel like you’re swinging a little more within yourself,” he explains. 

That doesn’t mean slowing down — it means finding a rhythm you can repeat under pressure. A smooth, balanced swing is very different from a tentative one. The goal isn’t to guide the ball, but rather, to make a controlled, committed motion that isn’t overly aggressive.

“Think smooth, you know, in rhythm — not something that’s going to be aggressive,” he says, “We’re trying to keep this in the fairway.” 

Trust your equipment 

Today’s equipment has also made this shot easier to trust than it used to be. Now, drivers are designed to perform more consistently across the face.

Take Callaway’s latest Quantum models, for example. They combine ultra-thin titanium, carbon fiber and an internal Poly Mesh structure to help stabilize the face at impact, leading to more consistent ball speed and direction — even on slight misses.

That forgiveness is further enhanced by a lighter chassis that allows weight to be positioned more precisely, tightening dispersion and improving overall stability. Paired with AI-driven face design, the result is more reliable performance across a wider area of the face, helping preserve speed, launch, and accuracy — exactly what you want from a fairway-finder.

Remember, the fairway-finder drive isn’t about distance. It’s about control and consistency. Whether your swing feels off or the hole demands precision, having this shot in your bag gives you a reliable option you can trust — which is key when trying to keep it in the first cut.

Callaway Quantum Triple Diamond Max Custom Driver

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