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The Hidden Wedge Spec That Predicts Distance Control (It’s Not Loft)

The Hidden Wedge Spec That Predicts Distance Control (It’s Not Loft)

Golf professionals love to tell you to “own your 40-yard shot.” Dial in the motion, repeat the length of your backswing, and learn the exact feel that produces that number. Your mechanics matter. But here’s the part most golfers never hear.

You can make the same swing and get different results … because of your wedge.

That inconsistency doesn’t only show up when your wedges are worn down. It can happen even with brand-new clubs if the wedge you’re swinging doesn’t produce stable launch and spin. In the 2025 MyGolfSpy wedge test, this was more obvious than ever.

Distance control isn’t about loft

Every wedge in the test was a 56-degree model. However, some wedges delivered much more predictable carry distances than others.

Wedges create different launch and spin windows based on:

face design grooves and microtexture how they handle moisture how stable the ball reacts on partial swings

When you struggle with distance control, one of the best things to help improve it is to find a wedge that produces a consistent launch window. When spin jumps or drops between shots or when launch gets too high in damp grass, your carry distances start to drift. That’s when the “same” 40-yard swing flies 35 or 47.

The wet test makes the differences impossible to ignore

The biggest separator in this year’s results was how the wedges performed when moisture was added.

Some wedges, like the Cleveland RTZ models, actually retained more than 100 percent of their dry-condition spin in moisture (105.3), while others, most notably the Wilson Infinite, at just 78 percent retention, lost so much spin that launch jumped and distance became far less predictable.

That’s where golfers see:

random fliers from the fairway shots that float instead of penetrating unpredictable carry distances distance gaps that don’t make sense

Why the Mizuno Pro T-3 was the best

The Mizuno Pro T-3 didn’t win because it was the spiniest wedge. It won because it delivered:

stable launch stable spin tight carry dispersion strong wet-condition performance

Across full swings and partial shots, it kept the window predictable.

Best wedge of 2025 Mizuno Pro T-3

What can you do with this information?

You don’t need a full MyGolfSpy test lab to use the information we just talked about. The easiest place to start is simply paying attention to how your own wedges behave.

Hit a few shots, both full swings and 40- to 60-yard shots and look for patterns.

Do your good strikes launch in the same window? Does the ball react the same way when the grass is damp or dewy? Are your carry distances reasonably grouped or are they drifting several yards even when the swings feel similar?

Some variation is normal. But big differences, especially on partial shots, often point to the wedge.

If you have access to a launch monitor, even a basic one, it becomes much easier to see this. Look for consistency: similar launch, similar spin, similar carry. If you think something may be off, go for a wedge fitting and look for a wedge that reacts the same way regardless of the conditions.

The post The Hidden Wedge Spec That Predicts Distance Control (It’s Not Loft) appeared first on MyGolfSpy.

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