Golfweek’s guide to golf shoes: Fit, form and function

Find shoes that fit perfectly, get the story on spiked versus spikeless, and find out whether you need waterproof or water-resistant.

Even when they ride, golfers do a lot of walking on the course. And while strolling around town in running shoes can be comfortable, by swinging a golf club you create significant torque in your feet and ankles. And golf courses, being outside, put you out in the elements, so a shoe’s ability to handle hills, water, sand and dirt is also essential.

For all these reasons, golf shoes are among the most complicated pieces of footwear made. Here are some tips to help find the perfect pair.

Fit is critical
Under normal circumstances, the best way to find a good-fitting pair of golf shoes would be to go to your local pro shop or golf specialty store and try on a few pairs. However, we’re not living in normal times right now, and many stores and golf courses are closed. Shoe companies are selling products online, but trying on shoes before you buy them may not be possible.

It may seem obvious, but to find good-fitting shoes, start with what you know and what has fit well for you in the past.

“Over the last three years, we have not changed our sizing at all,” said Masun Denison, Adidas’ global footwear director. “If you have worn an Adidas shoe in the last three years, there is an excellent chance that the size you were comfortable with then is the size you would be today in any model we offer.”

However, things are not always as simple as buying the same size, because the most crucial factor in how a shoe fits is the last. The last is the mold or form that the shoe is designed around, and it determines things such as how wide or narrow the shoe will be, how much room is in the toe, the curvature and the shoe’s height. Companies often use a different last for different types of shoes, so if you are changing styles or opting to buy a shoe from a different brand, the last in the new shoes likely will be different, and that could make them fit differently.

Adidas Codechaos golf shoes
Adidas Codechaos golf shoes (Adidas)

For example, Adidas’s Tour 360 XT will feel different on your feet than the new Adidas Codechaos Boa because different materials are used in their construction. The shoes also have different lacing systems, and one is a spiked shoe while the other is spikeless. You would likely need the same size in both shoes, but they would feel different on your feet.

“If you look at the shoe from the toe-down view, as if it was on your foot, you can see that some are more rounded and some are pointy,” said Andrew Lawson, Puma Golf’s product line manager for footwear. “You can then look at your foot’s shape and tell if you have a wider foot or a narrow foot. Comfort is king, so if a shoe doesn’t fit your foot’s shape, it’s never going to be comfortable.”

FootJoy Tour X golf shoes
The FootJoy Tour X golf shoes (FootJoy)

Richard Fryer, FootJoy’s director of product management, said it’s worth noting that if you have a favorite pair of shoes, updated versions and new editions of that shoe will almost always fit the same way.

“As you look through our different categories, if you look at DryJoy Tour, Tour X, Pro S/L, the FJ Fury, they’re all based on the Laser Plus last,” Fryer said. “So if you were a 9 last year, you’ll be a 9 this year and be very happy.”

If you chose to buy a pair of golf shoes online, check the return policy before completing your purchase. It might be smart to buy two pairs, try them both on at home and keep the best-fitting pair if you are offered free returns.

Wearing spikeless Ecco Street shoes at Augusta, Fred Couples changed golf style

To celebrate the anniversary of Fred Couples wearing the Ecco Street shoes, the company is re-releasing the footwear that changed the game.

Back in 1980, a 20-year-old Fred Couples was in Tucson, Arizona, playing in one of his first PGA Tour events as a pro, when he spotted Johnny Miller on the range.

“I literally flipped out,” Couples said. “He was such a cool guy.”

Couples, the winner of the 1992 Masters, is now 60. For a generation of golfers, Couples played a role similar to Miller as that cool guy. The effortlessly powerful swing, the walk, the casual mannerisms, the hair. Boom Boom is the complete package when it comes to cool, and a decade ago, he unwittingly became a style icon when he wore a pair of Ecco Street golf shoes while playing the 2010 Masters.

To celebrate the 10-year anniversary, Ecco is re-releasing the Golf Street Premiere ($150) and the limited-edition Golf Street 10 ($230).

The story really begins in November 2009, when Couples was living and playing golf in Palm Desert, California. A friend who ran a pro shop that sold a lot of Ecco shoes called Couples and asked if he’d seen the new Street shoes. The former University of Houston star had not, so he got in his car and drove to the shop.

“He showed me the shoes and in a roundabout way, I paid for them,” Couples said. “He wasn’t allowed to give them to me because he didn’t have many pairs and they were so new.”

Ecco Golf Street (Ecco)

Couples started playing golf in them, sockless, which in Palm Springs was easy because the weather was perfect. However, when he brought three pairs of Street shoes (and no cleated footwear) to the Mitsubishi Electric Championship at Hualalai in Hawaii, “all hell broke loose.”

Sure, Couples shot 65-66-64 to finish second that week on the Champions Tour, but all anyone wanted to ask him about were his shoes.

“People started calling them deck shoes, boat shoes, walking shoes,” Couples recalled. “I said, ‘Yeah, basically you can do all that in these shoes.’”

Aside from the casual style, what made the Ecco Street unique back in 2010 was the sole. At that time, golf shoes were cleated. Everyone wore golf shoes with plastic, replaceable spikes except a few pros who continued to wear steel spikes. Spikeless, hybrid-style golf shoes with traction-enhancing elements were more scarce than double eagles at Augusta National. Until a few months later when Couples, still sockless, wore Ecco Street shoes at the 2010 Masters, played in the final group on Sunday alongside Phil Mickelson and finished sixth.

Fred Couples
Fred Couples at the 2010 Masters. (Don Emmert/ Getty Images)

At that point, demand skyrocketed. The shoes looked comfortable to wear and Couples had proved that you could compete and play serious golf in the spikeless Street shoes.

The 2020 version of the Street has a leather upper that has been given a water-resistant Hydromax treatment to help repel water. The rubber outsole is covered with small nobs that create over 800 traction angles to enhance traction while you swing.

“It was kind of comical,” Couples said, thinking back to the 2010 Masters. “I was playing pretty well and was in the golf tournament, and all anyone worried about is the shoes that I’m wearing!”

Hey Fred, no one said being cool was easy.

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Coronavirus: Callaway’s Chip Brewer joins CEOs foregoing salary

Callaway’s Brewer earned $900,000 in base salary in 2019, according to an SEC filing.

Callaway’s Chip Brewer joined the list of high-profile corporate leaders — among them PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan — who have opted to forgo salaries as the COVID-19 pandemic wreaks havoc with the global economy.

According to public records, Brewer earned a base salary of $900,000 last year. (His total compensation, including stock incentives, amounted to $5.8 million.) He will forgo any base salary beginning with the next pay period.

Callaway’s 8K filing on March 25 noted that it was “proactively taking actions to significantly reduce costs and conserve cash in order to mitigate the impact of the coronavirus outbreak on its business.”

The Carlsbad, California-based equipment maker’s filing on Monday also said that other executive officers, including Brian Lynch, executive vice president and chief financial officer, had joined Brewer in voluntarily taking pay cuts of their base salary of 20 percent. Callaway’s board of directors also elected to waive its annual cash retainer fees for 2020. In addition, members of senior management and other employees had their base salaries “reduced in graduated amounts.”

Callaway’s stock price has been slashed in half since February when it was trading for more than $21 per share and closed on April 6 at $10.58.

Puma releases limited-edition 2020 Masters-themed apparel and footwear

The 2020 Masters has been postponed until November, but Puma Golf has released the gear Rickie Fowler was going to wear this week at Augusta

When the Augusta National Golf Club announced that it was postponing the 2020 Masters because of the coronavirus pandemic, it not only disappointed the players and golf fans around the world, it put many golf manufacturers in an awkward position.

Several companies annually create limited-edition merchandise like golf bags, shoes and apparel that is themed around symbols of the season’s first major. Those products had already been created by the time it was announced that the Masters would not be played in April.

With the tournament now pushed back until the week of November 9, should they make the merchandise available to golf lovers anyway, or hold on to it and try selling it later?

Puma Golf has decided that starting Monday, which would have been the first day of Masters week, it is forging ahead. The company is making the Experience Collection available, including four new polos, hats, shoes and a special bag co-designed by Vessel.

Puma Experience Collection polos, shoes and hat. (Puma)

The Eleven, Twelve, Thirteen and Tournament polo shirts ($75 each) are made from Puma’s proprietary Fusionyard Flex fabric that allows for freedom of movement and should help to keep golfers dry and comfortable. The number-named shirts each have a floral print that matches the plant name of that hole at Augusta National, with Eleven have white dogwood blooms, Twelve featuring golden bells flowers and Thirteen covered in azaleas. Those holes comprise Amen Corner, and the Tournament polo’s print features a blend of all three plants.

Puma is also including a limited-edition version of the Poweradapt Caged ($170) and Ignite shoes ($220) in the Tournament print.

Puma 2020 Masters stand bag
CobraxVessel LE Tour Stand bag. (Puma)

Rickie Fowler had planned to wear those shirts and shoes around Augusta National this week, and carry his clubs in this limited-edition Vessel stand bag that was co-created with Cobra Golf ($599). Like the apparel and shoes, it has been given the Tournament print that features white dogwoods, golden bells and azaleas.

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Every Masters winners’ equipment since 2010

From Adam Scott and Tiger Woods to Phil Mickelson and Bubba Watson, see the gear used by every Masters winner since 2010.

The Augusta National Golf Club announced on Monday that the 2020 Masters is now scheduled to start on November 9. However, golf fans around the world are sharing their thoughts and appreciation for the Masters this week on social media because the tournament was originally slated to be contested this week.

To help you get in the Masters spirit, check out this list of every golf club used by every Masters winner since 2010.

Phil Mickelson
Phil Mickelson with his Odyssey White Hot XG Blade putter at the 2010 Masters. (Don Emmert/AFP/Getty Images)

2010 – Phil Mickelson

DRIVER: Callaway FT-9 Tour Authentic (7.5 degrees), with Mitsubishi Fubuki 73 X shaft

FAIRWAY WOOD: Callaway Big Bertha Diablo (15 degrees), a Mitsubishi Fubuki 73 X shaft

HYBRID: Callaway Prototype (22 degrees), with Mitsubishi Diamana Thump X shaft

IRONS: Callaway X-Forged (4), X Proto (5-PW), with Rifle Project X 7.0 shafts

WEDGES: Callaway JAWS (53, 60, 62 degrees), with Rifle Project X 7.0 shafts

PUTTER: Odyssey White Hot XG Blade

BALL: Callaway Tour ix

Will shorter courses that qualify as national treasures ever see a U.S. Open again?

In an age of 330-plus yard drives, plenty of courses are left wanting of a few hundred more yards when it comes to U.S. Open consideration.

The Forecaddie loves a short walk, but even your intrepid Man Out Front knows some courses – regardless of pedigree or architectural chops – just can’t handle a modern U.S. Open.

The U.S. Golf Association needs room for parking, hospitality tents, grandstands. … the list goes on and on when you expect to handle a couple hundred thousand fans during the week. Not to mention the 7,000-plus yards needed to handle the best players in the world. Those 500-yard par 4s chew up a lot of space.

The USGA and R&A released in February their combined Distance Insights Report, which didn’t lay out specific plans on how the ruling bodies plan to curtail the distances golf balls fly, especially at the elite level. But the report certainly reads as a call to action. However, the next steps in the process are on hold due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Golf courses have grown longer and longer over the past 125 years since the first U.S. Open in 1895, played across a wee 5,510 yards for two loops around the nine holes at Newport Country Club in Rhode Island. The winner, Horace Rawlins, surely would be slack-jawed by modern distance, with Erin Hills measuring 7,845 for the first round in 2017.

And in an age of 330-plus yard drives, plenty of masterful designs are left wanting of a few hundred more yards when it comes to U.S. Open consideration.

Myopia Hunt Club near Boston, for instance, hosted four early U.S. Opens, with its last in 1908. Without even considering other mitigating factors, the current 6,539-yard layout by Herbert Leeds (with a renovation by Gil Hanse) is simply too short to host a modern Open, let alone many other premier USGA championships. Myopia may be a dream course for architecture geeks and ranks No. 34 in Golfweek’s Best ranking of classic courses, but don’t bet on seeing it on any potential lists for upcoming venues.

St. Louis Country Club, a C.B. Macdonald gem ranked No. 52 on Golfweek’s Best classic list, hosted the 1947 U.S. Open but is a definite “no” today based solely on its 6,625 yards.

Inverness (No. 47 Classic) challenged Walter Hagen in 1920 and 1931, Arnold Palmer in 1957 and Jack Nicklaus in 1979, but would be unable to contain Brooks Koepka, Rory McIlroy and the like today. Cherry Hills (No. 89 Classic) hosted U.S. Opens in 1938, 1960 and 1978, with no player breaking 280, yet saw record scoring (266 by Billy Horschel) at the BMW Championship in 2014.

Without laying out any defined plan to curtail distance, the ruling bodies’ report did mention two possibilities: rolling back equipment standards across the board, or a local rule for gear that better contains elite players only – essentially bifurcation.

There’s no telling what’s to come, or if shorter courses that easily qualify as national treasures will ever see a U.S. Open.

The Man Out Front will keep his eye on the ball.

U.S. Open distances over the years

Year Course Yardage
1895 Newport* 5,510
1903 Baltusrol 6,003
1915 Baltusrol 6,212
1920 Inverness 6,569
1935 Oakmont 6,981
1948 Riviera 7,020
1954 Baltusrol 7,027
1964 Congressional 7,053
1974 Winged Foot 6,961
1986 Shinnecock 6,912
1997 Congressional 7,213
2007 Oakmont 7,355
2011 Congressional 7,574
2020** Winged Foot 7,477

* Two loops around the nine-hole course
** The 2020 U.S. Open is scheduled for June but that is subject to change.

Opinion: Poor taste or good cause? Popular brand’s COVID-19 headcover sells out

Stitch’s #Driveitaway headcover uses a symbol associated with COVID-19 while raising money for those affected by the coronavirus outbreak.

On a day when the death toll surged to more than 7,000 across the country and the CDC recommended all Americans wear a mask when going out in public, a popular golf brand that produces gear, bags and apparel launched a campaign aimed at raising money for COVID-19 relief efforts.

The #Driveitaway headcover uses a design we’ve all seen when reading about the serious public health consequences that novel coronavirus presents. According to the CDC, it’s an illustration of spikes adorning the outer surface of the virus as if it were viewed microscopically. It’s meant to reveal “ultrastructural morphology exhibited by coronaviruses.”

I’m not a scientist, but I think it’s safe to say the CDC didn’t expect a riff of the image would be used for commercial purposes, particularly for golf equipment – a headcover created by Stitch – that seems frivolous if not insensitive for the times we’re living in.

In Stitch’s defense, the advertisement sent to its customers Friday morning touted that “100% of the proceeds from our limited edition headcover will go to relief effort for COVID-19.” The company pledged that 50% will be donated to Samaritan’s Purse to fund emergency field hospitals and the other 50% will be directed to in-house production of masks for healthcare workers.

A spokesperson for Stitch said the company produced a limited quantity of 75 #Driveitaway headcovers and sold out in less than eight hours. The company also has produced more than 4,000 masks since production began Wednesday. As of Friday evening, the #Driveitaway headcovers were no longer on the web site, but other leather headcovers were priced from $78-$98.

Undoubtedly, these are noble causes that Stitch is supporting, but perhaps common sense should have prevailed and someone should have considered the optics of selling a black leather headcover adorned with a symbol that is associated with loss of life, unpredictable health consequences and disruption to everyday life for so many.

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Play smarter and have more fun with the latest high-tech gear

The newest electronic golf accessories are making the game more fun and helping golfers shoot lower scores.

Old Tom Morris never could have dreamt that someday golfers would enjoy things such as laser rangefinders, GPS measuring devices and Bluetooth speakers. The newest electronic golf accessories are making the game more fun and helping golfers shoot lower scores.

Bushnell Wingman GPS Speaker, $149.99

Shaped like a tennis ball can, this Bluetooth speaker wirelessly connects to a smartphone to play music on the course, and it has a few hidden surprises. Pressing a button on the detachable remote control, which is the size of a silver dollar, decreases the music’s volume, and the Wingman will announce the distance to the front, middle and back of the green on the hole being played. There is also a powerful magnet on one side that securely attaches the unit to the side of the cart, which improves sound. The battery lasts 10 hours, and the Wingman also can be used as a smartphone charger.

Flight Scope Mevo+, $1,999.00

When considering that top-of-the-line launch monitors can cost as much as $25,000, the price tag of the Mevo+ seems like a bargain given everything it can do. Using Doppler radar, Mevo+ can measure basic things such as swing speed, ball speed, launch angle and spin rate, as well as compute landing angle, roll out and spin axis. It creates a Wi-Fi hotspot for fast connections to a smartphone or tablet, comes installed with five courses to simulate playing while on the range, and includes skill challenges to focus on distance control and accuracy.

TecTecTec ULT-G GPS watch, $119.99

Known for inexpensive laser rangefinders, TecTecTec branched into GPS watches with the ULT-G. The device uses satellites to automatically determine the course, the hole and precise location on more than 38,000 courses around the world. It provides yards to the front, middle and back of the greens, as well as hazards and doglegs. The ULT-G is water- and dust-resistant, and the company said a full battery charge lasts 45 holes.

Garmin S62 GPS watch, $499.99

The new S62 is the same size as last season’s S60 GPS watch, but Garmin enlarged the color display to make it easier to see, even in bright sunlight. The S62 has a battery that lasts 20 hours in play mode and comes preloaded with more than 41,000 courses. The unit displays distances to hazards as well as the front, middle and back of the green. When paired with a smartphone, the S62 can make caddie-style club suggestions based

on a player’s shot history and the conditions. On approach shots, the Green View provides an accurate image of the green’s shape for added confidence.

Voice Caddie SC300 launch monitor, $499.99

Easy to set up on the range or indoors, the SC300 launch monitor uses Doppler radar to measure launch angle, ball speed, shot apex and carry distance. It also audibly announces the distance of each shot, so it doesn’t interrupt the flow of a practice session. When paired with a smartphone or tablet using Bluetooth, the SC300 can also reveal spin rates and show representations of shots in real time. A practice mode and target mode can help hone distance control and feel.

Precision Pro NX9 Slope laser rangefinder, $269.99

The 6X magnification provides a clear look at the course when peering through the laser rangefinder, which makes hitting targets and spotting distant flags much easier. As the name implies, the unit has a slope function that calculates playing distances based on the measured yardage and whether a shot is uphill or downhill. The numbers and text in the viewfinder are bright, while the magnetic grip can be attached to a cart for easier access. The unit has a range of up to 400 yards, vibrates when it finds the flag and is water resistant.

SkyCaddie SX400 GPS, $299.95

The SX400 has many of the popular features found in the 5-inch SX500 but in a full-color, 4-inch touchscreen. Pre-loaded with more than 35,000 courses that SkyGolf measures and ground verifies for accuracy, the SX400 provides up to 40 reference points per hole to make finding the perfect carry and lay-up distances easier. The view of the green shifts to match a player’s perspective, and the RangeView with Club Ranges feature learns how far a player hits each club and then shows where each club’s average distance would go on the hole being played.

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Irons used by top 10 on the PGA Tour in greens in regulation

See the irons and shafts currently being used by the most consistent iron players on the PGA Tour.

Distance and power off the tee get a lot of attention, but there has always been an aura surrounding the players who are great at hitting iron shots. Ben Hogan had it, and so did Lee Trevino, Tom Kite and Jack Nicklaus. Tiger Woods has it too.

The sound of the ball compressing against the metal face, the hollow thump made as the club works through the turf and then hissing of the ball as it zips through the air can be mesmerizing. The golfers listed below all demonstrate fantastic consistency from the fairway and lead the PGA Tour in greens in regulation. See who they are and what irons they play.

Xander Schauffele
Xander Schauffele’s Callaway irons. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

T-9. Xander Schauffele, 72.22 percent

IRONS: Callaway Apex Pro 2019 (4-PW), with True Temper Dynamic Gold X100 shafts

Fitting Files: How proper club fitting can help you gain yards, improve your game

Golfweek’s new Fitting Files series explores how proper club fitting can help gain yards, tighten shot patterns and improve a player’s game.

Television shows that conduct extreme makeovers are everywhere. It’s easy to relate to the person who wants to improve their fitness, the family that dreams of fixing up their old house or a couple that wants to improve their finances. It’s motivating to see how the right tools, training and support – mixed with a little time – can transform a person’s body, home or wallet.

The Fitting Files, a new Golfweek series, aims for the same kind of makeover. In the following pages and in future issues, we will share the basics of custom fitting and how golfers just like you were able to improve with professionally fit golf equipment that matches their swings and bodies.

To help, we enlisted Club Champion, one of the leaders in custom fitting with 74 locations throughout the United States. The company’s fitters have a brand-agnostic philosophy with a focus on matching players to their best gear, regardless of the name on the club. Using their universal hosel mechanism, Club Champion fitters can attach any head to any shaft, so golfers can test countless combinations of gear using TrackMan launch monitors and SAM PuttLab systems.

The three golfers featured this month all came to a Club Champion store near Chicago on a snowy January day in the hopes of getting an early jump on the season. The models of clubs they used before the fitting aren’t listed here, because it isn’t inherently important – their swings are theirs alone, and the results of their fittings almost certainly would be different for another player.

They all left with a reason to look forward to spring.


Player: Nathan DeBerry
Age: 35
Handicap: 21

Before: An athletic player with loads of power, DeBerry’s driver clubhead speed was almost 110 mph. That is nearly PGA Tour level, but after getting warmed up, he only averaged 221 yards of carry distance with his old 10.5-degree driver. DeBerry’s launch angle was 19.4 degrees, and he generated more than 4,300 rpm of spin off the tee. His moon balls were robbing him of yards, and his average driver distance was actually 3 yards shorter than with his 3-wood.

The Fitting: Smash factor describes the ratio of clubhead speed to ball speed and is a measure of efficiency that is capped by the USGA and R&A at 1.52. That means that if a player swings a club at 100 mph, the ball speed is not allowed to exceed 152 mph. Club Champion’s goal is for clients to achieve a smash factor of 1.48 or higher with their driver, and DeBerry’s was 1.32 with a tendency to slice.

“That number means you are leaving some serious yards out there,” said Brad Syslo, one of Club Champion’s most experienced fitters. “Every mile an hour of ball speed can be 3 to 5 yards.”

Syslo started by testing DeBerry with shafts of various weights. DeBerry had used a 60-gram shaft that came standard with his driver. After trying several models, he and Syslo discovered the Project X HZRDUS Smoke Yellow shaft reduced his excessive spin, lowered his ball flight and increased stability so his shots flew straighter.

Next, DeBerry tried driver heads on the Project X shaft. He liked several of them, and the Titleist TS3 with 8.5 degrees of loft provided him with the best match for his needs.

They repeated the process for DeBerry’s 3-wood and learned the same shaft, in a slightly heavier weight, fitted to a 15-degree TaylorMade SIM fairway wood produced more distance and a tighter dispersion pattern than his previous fairway wood.

Final impressions: “The shaft made a huge difference,” DeBerry said.

DeBerry gained 17 mph in ball speed with his driver, lowered his spin rate by about 1,500 rpm and reduced his launch angle by more than 7 degrees. His driver carry distance went up an astonishing 47 yards, his slice turned into a gentle fade and his smash factor climbed to 1.45. His new 3-wood also carried almost 13 yards farther than his previous fairway wood.


Player: Steven Jacobi
Age: 44
Handicap: 18

Before: Jacobi had never been custom fit for clubs and purchased a used driver online three years ago. A league golfer who plays twice a week in season, Jacobi loved his driver but arrived at his fitting searching for more distance and to reduce his slice.

The Fitting: Club fitter Andrew Moores explained that Jacobi was doing a lot of things well. His clubhead speed and spin rate were good, and his launch angle was not too bad. However, the shaft in Jacobi’s old driver was a bad match because of one key characteristic.

“When a shaft is too heavy and too stiff, you can’t get the head through, and the clubface stays open,” Moores said.

Moores and Jacobi tried six shafts at lower weights and learned an Accra FX 2.0 140 M3 shaft, which weighs about 45 grams, was ideal when set into a driver at a slightly flatter lie angle.

After finding the ideal shaft, Moores said, “You can see that his face-to-path measurement is almost 0, which means it’s square.”

Next, they started exploring heads. Jacobi liked Ping drivers, and a 9-degree G410 Plus with its adjustable hosel set to +1 proved to be the best fit.

Final impressions: The combination of the Accra FX 2.0 shaft and the Ping G410 driver helped Jacobi increase his ball speed by more than 4 mph, which resulted in 9 more yards of carry distance and 14 more yards overall. His dispersion pattern also tightened, and his drives flew straighter.

“Honestly, after tinkering and going through the fitting, that driver feels right,” Jacobi said.

“I think his distance is going to go up when he’s fresh,” Moores said after the fitting concluded with a slightly tired Jacobi. “When we started with this shaft, he was swinging 2 or 3 mph faster, so with his improved smash factor, that could be another 5 or 6 mph of ball speed.”


Player: Jerry Song
Age: 48
Handicap: 4.8

Before: Song is a steady golfer who plays two or three days a week. He loves the look and feel of classic muscleback blades, and like many accomplished players, Song is slow to make changes to his gear. He bought his irons seven years ago off the rack, but then about four years ago Song went to a Club Champion store for a whole-bag fitting. He likes a heavy iron, so the fitter added lead tape to the back of the heads.

“I hit a really high ball, so I’m looking to see if technology can help me hit it a little bit lower,” Song said before his fitting with Darrell Wyatt.

The Fitting: Trackman data revealed that Song’s typical 6-iron was flying a respectable 169 yards in the air with an apex height of 97 feet. Song believed he was hitting the ball too high, but Wyatt explained that his trajectory was close to ideal.

“His ball flight and height were not really too high for his standards. It felt high to him, but we were in a pretty good spot,” Wyatt said.

After testing various shafts, Song and Wyatt discovered that Oban CT 125 X steel shafts kept Song’s ball flight in the ideal height range while enhancing feel and delivering more ball speed.

“It just felt better in my hands, and I did not feel like it was dragging coming through,” Song said. He also said the shaft encouraged him to swing more smoothly and easily.

Wyatt saw that the stiffer shaft made contact more solid, and that helped Song’s efficiency.

After settling on the shaft, Song and Wyatt tested iron heads. He loved the look of Mizuno’s irons and discovered that the MP-20 MMC irons were a great fit on the Oban shafts. His ball speed increased 6 mph, his dispersion stayed tight and the ball came down more steeply, so approach shots would stop faster on the greens.

Final impressions: Song went from a muscleback blade to an iron that is forged from carbon steel with a copper underlayer, tungsten in the sole and titanium in the back of the heads. He loved the looks and those hidden technologies, but even good players can have misconceptions about their shots, and Song learned a few things.

“I’m a big weight guy and like my irons to be a little heavier, but understanding that I can go to an extra-stiff shaft, even though I’m getting older, was interesting,” he said. “But when I swung that shaft, it was easy. I didn’t have to muscle it. Everything went through crisp and I gained 9 yards!”

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