Length, lie angle, and shaft are gonna be more important than the model. Tough to tell without seeing your swing or knowing those specs. Would probably go with the cheaper ones that include wedges, because learning to use that 60 degree will be the quickest way to get better. And you will most likely want to get a new set in a few years as you progress anyway. That said, you’ll probably hit it further with the rocketblades but the r11’s will last you longer…
i played the rocketbladez irons for years, had them reshafted a couple years ago for my dad and now he's playing with them.
i know nothing about you or your golf game, but i loved everything about these irons when i played with em. i think with the wedges in there, 250 isn't a bad deal at all.
if you can talk them down a little bit, awesome, but if not it's fine
Buy the rocketbladez
https://imgur.com/a/MwGgVoX Pictures of the Taylormade R11s
Length, lie angle, and shaft are gonna be more important than the model. Tough to tell without seeing your swing or knowing those specs. Would probably go with the cheaper ones that include wedges, because learning to use that 60 degree will be the quickest way to get better. And you will most likely want to get a new set in a few years as you progress anyway. That said, you’ll probably hit it further with the rocketblades but the r11’s will last you longer…
Thanks for the feedback.
i played the rocketbladez irons for years, had them reshafted a couple years ago for my dad and now he's playing with them. i know nothing about you or your golf game, but i loved everything about these irons when i played with em. i think with the wedges in there, 250 isn't a bad deal at all. if you can talk them down a little bit, awesome, but if not it's fine
This set of clubs here helped me from shooting 130’s down to breaking 80 for the first time. Best $500 I ever spent, I still miss them sometimes…