Wedge fitting is important. Can we agree on that?
Good. Now Let’s get this on the table right away so there’s no confusion.
The absolutely, positively and unreservedly best way to get fitted for wedges is in person, outdoors, on a range, around a practice green and in a practice bunker under the watchful eye of a knowledgeable and experienced wedge fitter.
I know it’s the internet and all but I’d be shocked if anyone could argue effectively with that declaration.
Effectively is the keyword.
That doesn’t mean a custom-fitted driver and irons with the most expensive shafts will instantly turn a 20-handicap into a low single-digit golfer. It does mean that properly fitted gear can help anyone play better golf.
Coaching and practice improve the archer, which raises the ceiling. The right gear raises the floor.
Statistically speaking, however, wedges (along with hybrids) are the clubs you’re least likely to be fitted for. That’s a problem.
But is it a problem you can solve using the worldwide web?
Why Is Wedge Fitting Important?
Numbers don’t lie. Most of us don’t get fitted for our wedges. Sadly, the higher your handicap, the more that is to your detriment.
“The actual results from a wedge fitting are probably magnified more for the everyday player than the elite player,” says Jacob Clarke, PING’s Senior Design Engineer and Tour wedge fitter. “Give an elite player anything off the rack and they may not play their best with it but they’ll still play some darned good golf.
“But for the average player, if you give them a T-Grind and they really need a W-Grind, we’re having a very different conversation.”
Bringing wedge fitting to the masses is one of the equipment trends in 2024. Vokey, Callaway, Cleveland and TaylorMade, the top four in wedge market share, all have wedge fitting programs on their websites. PING badly wants a seat at the wedge table and believes its new S159 wedges and its new WebFit Wedge app might be the ticket.
Crashing the Wedge Fitting Party
Before diving into PING’s WebFit Wedge app (technically, it’s a tool on PING’s website), let’s discuss exactly what a wedge fitting does for you. Clarke is PING’s go-to wedge guy. He’s fitted Victor Hovland, Corey Conners and other PING staffers, along with high-handicappers with the chipping heebie-jeebies.
“What we’re doing with different grinds is trying to control your vertical impact location on the face,” Clarke tells MyGolfSpy. “It’s a combination of how the player delivers the club, what that player wants the club to do and a little bit of course conditions.”
“All we’re doing with all those different grinds is trying to get that strike around groove three or four because it gives you the best combination of height and spin,” he says. “If you hit it lower, you’ll get more spin but your launch angle and landing angle will be so flat you won’t have any stopping power.”
Tour players will wear out grooves three and four. But for we mere mortals, the right grind helps our mishits by controlling impact location and minimizing variation up and down the face.
What If I Have the Wrong Grind?
Call them the chip yips, the short game heebie-jeebies or the dreaded “chili-dips.” They happen to the best of us and the rest of us.
They’re usually followed by an I suck at chipping moan and a few expletives.
Sure, technique has plenty to do with it, but so does the wrong tool for the job.
“If there’s a massive difference between your good shots and your bad shots, that’s probably a good indicator of an ill-fitting wedge,” says Clarke.
“If I gave you a $500 pen and had you sign your name and then gave you an old crayon to sign your name, they’ll look different, but you’d still recognize your name,” Clarke explains. “Your signature is your signature. When we find a sole that matches up with your signature, that’s when you’ll find more consistent results, even if turf conditions or other elements change.”
That means if the sole matches your signature, you’ll still mishit shots. You just won’t want to set your clubs on fire.
So How Does PING’s WebFit Wedge App Help?
As we said, the unquestioned best wedge fitting is – say it with me – in person, outdoors, on a range, around a practice green and in a practice bunker under the watchful eye of a knowledgeable and experienced wedge fitter.
But OEMs realize most of us don’t have access to that level of fitting. Or they don’t want the expense or they’re simply intimidated by the process. They are trying, though. OEMs are providing retailers with detailed point-of-purchase signage explaining wedge grinds and bounce options and how to choose the right one for your game.
Two minutes if you dawdle.
“What we wanted to do is to put Jacob Clarke’s brain into this app,” says Marty Jertson, PING VP of Fitting and Performance. “We’re not asking about your current wedge. We’re starting from Ground Zero and taking you through a journey, educating you along the way.”
“It really starts with empathy for the customer,” explains Jertson. “They want to know why the results are what they are. They don’t want some black box telling them to use these because we said so.”
Wedge Fitting From Your Couch?
There, or anywhere else you have some quiet phone time.
The app starts with a short promotional video for the new PING S159 wedges (you can skip it if you want) before getting down to business.
Next, it asks for your highest-lofted wedge to determine proper gapping. If you answer, “I don’t know,” the app will assume 58 degrees.
Finalizing The Fit
The penultimate step is ball position. A middle-back ball position indicates shaft lean, leading to a higher bounce selection for ideal turf interaction.
Lastly, the app asks for your highest priority for your most lofted wedge. No ranking, no choosing two or three, just one highest priority.
“If you walk into a store and there are six grinds to choose from, you likely won’t know where to start,” says Clarke. “No one is going to try all six grinds. The app gives you a primary and a secondary to try. You can then go hit a few shots and even off a mat, you can actually feel if it’s hitting the right spot. If you’re not bouncing it into the ball, you’re not hitting it high on the face.”
“Gapping is a problem people have that they don’t know they have,” says Jertson. “If you come up short or long, most of time golfers think it’s their fault.”
How Accurate Can a Wedge Fitting Web App Be?
That depends on the data that created the if/then algorithms. It also depends on how much detail the app asks you to input. But in the case of web-based wedge fitting, more isn’t necessarily better.
“Don’t ask enough questions and you won’t get enough information to make a good recommendation,” says Clarke. “But if you ask too many people get lost and quit.”
PING’s goal was to make the process quick and painless, two to three minutes, tops. To make sure it could accurately do that, Jertson says they started at the range.
Jertson’s team then developed the questions to correlate to that user group. The final step was to create the algorithms.
“It’s a very detailed and nuanced tool. We distilled it down to the most important questions that correlate most to actual performance.”
Will It Make a Difference for PING?
Excuse the cliché but that remains to be seen. As mentioned, Vokey, Cleveland, Callaway and TaylorMade all have web-based wedge fitting tools, each providing varying levels of detail. Those four OEMs all have seats at the wedge market-share head table, with PING on the outside looking in.
PING knows it’s not the first name you think of for wedges or even the fourth. That’s not due to performance, however. PING’s previous wedge model, the Glide 4.0, scored top-10 finishes in the last two MyGolfSpy Most Wanted tests. Overall results were decent enough but the Glide did set new standards in wet condition testing, actually increasing spin when wet. The new S159 uses the same PING Hydropearl finish so it’s reasonable to presume continued high performance there. This year’s testing will tell us more.
“We whittle it down and give you a rank ordered one-two combo that you can try,” says Jertson. “If you don’t have a chance to try them, you can go with the top choice. There’s a very good probability it will work for you.”
This article was written in partnership with PING.
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