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6 Signs Your Wedges No Longer Work For Your Short Game

6 Signs Your Wedges No Longer Work For Your Short Game

I recently upgraded my wedges, and while I knew it was long overdue from a pure equipment quality standpoint, I realized there’s more to it than that. Wedges don’t just wear out. They can also stop fitting your game as your swing evolves or as the courses you play change.

The right wedges are often one of the most overlooked parts of the bag. Yet they play a huge role in scoring, recovery and confidence inside 100 yards. If you notice any of these signs, your wedges may no longer be working for you.

1. Your swing speed has changed

Swing speed isn’t static. It can increase with fitness training or decrease with age and injury. Either way, it impacts how your wedges perform.

Faster swingers often find they need less loft or bounce to flight wedges down and maintain control.

Shaft weight and flex also matter. Many stock wedges come with heavier “wedge flex” shafts, which can feel harsh for slower players or inconsistent if your iron shafts are lighter. Faster swingers may overpower lighter wedge shafts, leading to distance control issues and inconsistent spin.

If your swing speed has shifted since you bought your wedges, chances are both the head and the shaft setup no longer match your swing.

2. Course conditions no longer match your bounce

Your home course plays a huge role in wedge performance. Firm, tight lies call for low bounce. Softer turf and fluffier lies demand higher bounce. If your home course has changed or been renovated, your wedges might suddenly feel mismatched.

This is exactly why players at Augusta National test multiple bounce options during Masters week. As Dave Phillips of TPI explained, subtle changes in turf and grain can completely alter how a wedge interacts with the ground.

3. You struggle with consistent turf interaction

A wedge should glide through the turf, not dig or bounce uncontrollably. If you find yourself chunking one chip and blading the next, it’s often a sign that the bounce and grind no longer fit your swing.

Steeper players usually benefit from more bounce. Shallow players often need less. Technique matters too, but when the interaction feels “off,” it could be a sign that your wedges don’t fit your game.

4. Your spin control has disappeared

Even well-struck wedge shots can lose their stopping power once grooves wear down. On average, wedges lose significant spin performance after a couple of years of regular play. If you can’t get the ball to check, even on clean contact, it’s time to refresh.

Most golfers should plan to replace wedges every two to three years, depending on how often they play.

5. You’re playing one-size-fits-all wedges

Bounce and grind are not one-size-fits-all. The “standard” wedge setup you bought years ago probably wasn’t customized to your swing, course or shot preferences. Modern wedge fitting allows you to dial in bounce, loft and grind combinations that match your game.

If you’ve never been fitted or haven’t revisited your setup in years, you’re almost certainly costing yourself shots around the green. I’ve been playing golf for a little more than 30 years and I’d never gone to a wedge-only fitting until just a few months ago. I always looked at shots around the green as being skilled-based and while I still believe they are, the right equipment has helped put me back in control. I’m no longer adapting to make something work.

6. Your confidence around the green has faded

Equipment can’t fix every short-game issue but it plays a bigger role than you may think. If you’re second-guessing club choice or dreading tight lies, the problem may not be your technique. It could be your wedges.

With my old wedges, there were shots I simply couldn’t pull off. I had adapted my game to avoid them but it cost me strokes. Now, with custom-fitted wedges in the bag, I’m getting the ball closer to the hole, not because I changed my swing, but because my clubs finally fit my game.

Final thoughts

Wedges are the ultimate scoring clubs but the grooves age fast and the clubs themselves are highly sensitive to changes in your game. Next time you’re at the course, test different lofts, bounces and grinds. Small adjustments can mean big improvements.

The post 6 Signs Your Wedges No Longer Work For Your Short Game appeared first on MyGolfSpy.

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