My buddy pulled out a 64 degree last weekend. Cracked the ball straight up over a huge tree and it fell perfectly onto the green just on the other side. Pretty much only time I’ve seen a club like that used at the perfect moment with flawless execution.
Bought the new vokey 62, once you master this thing there is really no bush, no lip, no rock u can’t get over. It’s amazing for the trap and around the greens in a good lie. Any lie that’s to deep I stick to a 56
I had a 64, I replaced it with a 58 to better fill my distance gap. Learn to open the face a bit and it’s just as good and significantly more versatile
@@hsbdbsjsjebbdbsbsb370 I was sharp with mine, anything inside 60 yards I was using it for. Only problem is the distance gap that club leaves in your bag
Gotta disagree with your SW definition. Not 54-58*, more like 54-56. LW is 58-60. Anything above that is a flop wedge and also wholly unnecessary for almost everyone.
@agawied2910 If you hit a flop with any of the other wedges, you have to open the face to increase the angle. So essentially, you're turning your lob wedge from a 60° to a 64°+.
I think it matters what the strengths of your game are. Some people only have one shot they can execute around the green and for them a 60 or 64 wouldn’t make sense. I carry 5 wedges and my 64 is extremely useful for me. On the flip side I don’t have a single fairway wood cause I can’t hit them consistently
I have a hard time justifying using my 52 or 58 over my PW because I can open the face as needed and get more loft out of it, I almost always hit better shots with it no matter the lie.
Really enjoyed that. Every single shot you take I always feel so confident that it’s gonna be perfect, you’re that good. Wish my game was half as accurate as yours 😃
I’ve got a 62 degree and use it for all those hard shots around the green. You don’t even need to open the face up to get a high and soft shot making it very easy to hit lobs.
Exactly. It’s just learning what lie will make you skull it. Nothing better out of the trap than my 62. Very easy to control distance with a decent lie
48° pw, 54°sw & 60°Lw is my preferred set up. I prefer traditional lofts because I’ve been playing them for over 30 years but a lot of new/game improvement irons have jacked up lofts though so another wedge is often necessary. The PW will be like a 9i at 44°, shit Bryson PW is the same loft as Tigers 8i (40°) & it has a 7i length shaft in it. 60° is my usual go to, can flight low spinners, medium hight chips/pitches, cut the legs out & make is stop like a butterfly with a sore knee or send it to the moon, any shot really.
Its a shame most companies are not making 64 degree wedges anymore. I am still hanging on to my 64 Callaway Jaws MD5 lob wedge. I asked them if they could custom make the new Opus Wedge in 64 and they said no. Holed out from 80 yards for Eagle at Pine needles 2 weeks ago with it. Love my 64
Well it depends how far back you go in history Whippersnapper. The PING EYE2 had 50° PW and 57/12° SW. The PING EYE2 was also the first set which came with a 61° LW. Due to the way PING milled the grooves after casting to take off the too-sharp edges the USGA and PGA banned them PING sued and won getting cash and a lifetime exemption for PING EYE2 from any future rule change which in 2011 had Pros like Mickelson and Harrington putting PING LW back in their bags. I know this because I started playing back in 1983 with a set of Browning Premiere blades with 50° PW and 56° SW, 9i-3i, 5W, 3W, 1W which was the pretty standard set-up then. The first hybrid design was marketed in 1999 by Taylormade as “Rescue” club because most recreational players couldn’t hit a long iron out the rough and they soon started replacing the 3i and 4i then the 5i in some sets. The 5W got pulled from the bag and got replaced with a 60° LW. Dave Peltz popularized the four wedge system by tracking PGA stats and realizing pros where most consistent in their short games if using full swing vs. partial that’s how the 52-53° “Gap” wedge got its name filling the yardage gap between full swing 50° PW and 56° SW with 60° LW being the fourth. I got a set of PING EYE2 3i - 9i, PW, SW, LW around 2013 for $60 at a thrift store and there was par 3 that fell between my full PW and full SW to I bought a second 50° PW, took them to a shop and had them adjusted to PW = 50°, PW2 (Gap) = 53°, SW = 56°, LW=60° The early 2000s saw surge of interest in golf thanks to Tiger and loft inflation. That’s makes changed the numbers on the club by one. 46-47° which had since the 1930s been the norm for a 9-iron now because the “NEW 10% LONGER PITCHING WEDGE. The reason some PW can be hit 160yards is that due to the loft inflation and leaning the shaft forward to dynamically de-loft the face the angle at impact is around that of a 1980s 6 iron.😮
Came here to say this. PW was traditionally 50, but it's moved all the way to some being at 40. Average now is 43-46. It's disappointing he didn't call it the 10-iron it's become.
@@jaaaake no shit, I watched the video and know what they’re actually called. I don’t ‘call them a gap and sand or sand and lob… I use them in the way described , with my ranges. I could give a shit what sub category of wedges they’re actually called, I only refer to them as my ‘54° and 60° wedges’ when I refer to them
I have only pitching wedge and 54, I bet I am better than 90% of players out there 100 yards in. Just yesterday stuck it in with my 54, foot and a half 25 yards away on a close to the fringe pin like 3 yards front pin when there was no room for almost any bounce, it literally bounced and stopped. Most people would use 60 here to get ball more up in the air but up in the air doesnt mean more spin automatically. I'd advise people to learn to use either 54 or 56, learn to add loft, deloft, learn to draw it, to cut it, I guarantee you will be better short game player. My point is my brother has pitching, gap, 56 and 60 but he cant pull shots I do because he didnt practice them because everybody reaches for a different club instead of developing a feel. Tiger said how he only had a 56 I think growing up.
I agree with you. I think there's a case for carrying a lighter bag, concentrating practice onto fewer clubs, learning each club thoroughly developing controlled shot variation and flexibility with each one.
agreed...I carry a 47* Mizuno (but not the one that came with my Mizuno iron set), a 52* Callaway, and a 56* Titleist. I blow people away with my short game. I'm 41 and have been doing short game drills since I was like 11 years old. I love hitting from the sand. I do better with my 56* than 97% of golfers can with their 60*
just played in a HS team golf match, and a guy on another team pulled out his 78 degree. i lost it, that was the funniest thing watching him hit that thing.😂
Incorrect! Incorrect! Pitching Wedges of the 1950s into the 1980's traditionally had lofts of 52 degrees!!!!!!!! But club companies monkeyed with iron lofts, gradually decreasing the lofts of irons until by the beginning of the 90's, pitching wedges were down to about 48 degrees of loft, creating a gap between pitching wedges and sand wedges, which remained at 56 degrees because of their function. So club companies created the Gap wedge to fill that hole. 4 woods disappeared from in between 3 and 5 woods in most regular golfers sets at this time to make room for the gap wedge.
A gap wedge is what a PW wedge was before the nineties when the club manufacturers decided to make their PWs the same loft as a traditional 9i so they could say their clubs go further. It's so ridiculous, but people love it.
The “classic” P wedge loft is 50-51°. And has incrementally decreased in loft to the tune to 43-44° in some game improvement sets due to delofting ( which is mostly marketing though up for debate). This has necessitated “gap” wedges to fill between the sand wedge which has remained at 56°. There is essentially no difference between a gap wedge and a classic P wedge. And some P wedges might require up to 3 “gap”wedges to have appropriate gaps to the 56° wedge. It is absurd really
Correct. All in the aid of strengthening lofts so club companies can say "our clubs hit farther!" In fact, I'm pretty sure the classic pitching wedges from the late 50's-early 60's were more like 52, since classic 9 irons were about 48 degrees, if not higher. I actually have a 30 degree 4 irons from around 1960 in my basement somewhere. That would make for a 9 iron of around 50 degrees. Such a set would probably have had an old dual wedge of around 54 degrees. That was common in commercial sets at that point, although touring pros were carrying 2 wedges by then.
@@seanbaines What’s even crazier is that the 47-48° P wedge is now becoming “obsolete”. Even most blades have a 46° P wedge now. I will give the manufacturers a little bit of a break on some of the GI irons because of the lower CGs. But then they are just chasing their tails lowering CG to raise launch but then turning around and lower loft to keep launch angle the same. To your point about multiple wedges, a short iron blade of x° loft is no different than a wedge of the same loft. Only one way to stop the madness--stop buying new iron sets
@@jaysonlavie603 Exactly! Feels like I am reading my own posts from other threads. Lol. I've been saying this stuff since I was a club repair/club builder and apprentice fitter 15-20 years ago. Glad to see how many other people understand this, too. My favourite image is of a conveyor belt, dropping the low number irons off one end and adding new wedges at the other. Yet at any given time, the 8-9 clubs on the conveyor belt are the same clubs, just with different names. We'll eventually have a bunch of different named wedges, but they'll be the same lofts and lengths as current clubs, and will hit the same distances. The only thing that gives me hope is the newer trend to start calling wedges by their lofts, not their names. Instead of saying, "I'm going to hit my sand wedge here," they say "I'm hitting my 56." Maybe eventually we'll get people saying of, say, the 7 iron, "I'm hitting my 32." Then maybe the madness will stop.
@@seanbaines Also I think there is a growing realization by many that blades, at least in the short irons, may be more accurate than GI designs and are not hard to hit ( loft=forgiveness). And there’s a growing body of actual evidence ( ie my golf spy iron tests, RUclips fitting sessions) supporting this.
@@357Cornbread so I have irons 5-gap wedge which I found out is a 50 degree. So I have a 50,52,56,58, and 60 which I only really use for out of the sand. 58 is close fringe flop shots, 56 is like anywhere outside the green to about 80 yards. 52 is like 100 yards and in, and gap wedge is like 110-120
@@HeinekenSkywalker636so the way I’m understanding this is if your P wedge is say a 46 and all the others you have 6 wedges yes that’s a overkill 4 is about all you need and if your playing for fun u can have as many clubs as you want but I try to stick to 14 club rule any way
Maher relies so much on his own intuition and reflexes that he just comes off as immature. He goes for the east punch lines. He really is not suited to these serious discussions. The cats and dogs thing for instance sounds ludicrous to a westerner such as Bill. To someone more traveled and exposed to the world and other cultures they wonder and investigate to find out if it is true in this instance.
My buddy pulled out a 64 degree last weekend. Cracked the ball straight up over a huge tree and it fell perfectly onto the green just on the other side. Pretty much only time I’ve seen a club like that used at the perfect moment with flawless execution.
I love my 64. I use it anytime I'm 60 yards and closer and out of the sand.
Bought the new vokey 62, once you master this thing there is really no bush, no lip, no rock u can’t get over. It’s amazing for the trap and around the greens in a good lie. Any lie that’s to deep I stick to a 56
I had a 64, I replaced it with a 58 to better fill my distance gap. Learn to open the face a bit and it’s just as good and significantly more versatile
If you actually do a bit of practice with a 64 it can be the best club in the bag
@@hsbdbsjsjebbdbsbsb370 I was sharp with mine, anything inside 60 yards I was using it for. Only problem is the distance gap that club leaves in your bag
There's 5, the Texas wedge has 3° loft, 0 bounce and is incredibly difficult to hit fat or thin.
I actually have a 61° lob wedge that says "Texas Wedge" on it, so I was very confused when I first heard people call their putter a Texas Wedge.
Don’t forget the foot wedge!
@@squirrelydan3 to be faaaaaiiiirrrrr
Nah there's only 1 wedge for me, and that's blading it 140 yards past the green regardless of what I use. Call me racist, but all wedges are the same!
@kalebstuckey570
So... 6 wedges. Hope they fix the title 😂😂😂
56 degree is the most versatile club in my bag. It’s a great feel club and it’s just so workable. I use it for most shot within 125 yards
Gotta disagree with your SW definition. Not 54-58*, more like 54-56. LW is 58-60. Anything above that is a flop wedge and also wholly unnecessary for almost everyone.
flop wedge? haven’t heard it called that before
😂 no idea what you’re talking about lob wedge is used to hit a flop shot.
@agawied2910 If you hit a flop with any of the other wedges, you have to open the face to increase the angle. So essentially, you're turning your lob wedge from a 60° to a 64°+.
I think it matters what the strengths of your game are. Some people only have one shot they can execute around the green and for them a 60 or 64 wouldn’t make sense. I carry 5 wedges and my 64 is extremely useful for me. On the flip side I don’t have a single fairway wood cause I can’t hit them consistently
love my 64 for anything 35 and in
My pitch is used for anything below 140 yards
Its such a versatile club
I have a hard time justifying using my 52 or 58 over my PW because I can open the face as needed and get more loft out of it, I almost always hit better shots with it no matter the lie.
140 and below 😤
Favorite club to use
Really enjoyed that. Every single shot you take I always feel so confident that it’s gonna be perfect, you’re that good. Wish my game was half as accurate as yours 😃
I’ve got a 62 degree and use it for all those hard shots around the green. You don’t even need to open the face up to get a high and soft shot making it very easy to hit lobs.
Exactly. It’s just learning what lie will make you skull it. Nothing better out of the trap than my 62. Very easy to control distance with a decent lie
I recently completed a set by buying the D Wedge. It's just want Cleveland called the Gap Wedge. I think it stands for Dual
actually p wedges used to be 50 degrees in the 60s-80s sand wedges around 55 and 9 irons about 45
48° pw, 54°sw & 60°Lw is my preferred set up. I prefer traditional lofts because I’ve been playing them for over 30 years but a lot of new/game improvement irons have jacked up lofts though so another wedge is often necessary. The PW will be like a 9i at 44°, shit Bryson PW is the same loft as Tigers 8i (40°) & it has a 7i length shaft in it. 60° is my usual go to, can flight low spinners, medium hight chips/pitches, cut the legs out & make is stop like a butterfly with a sore knee or send it to the moon, any shot really.
Its a shame most companies are not making 64 degree wedges anymore. I am still hanging on to my 64 Callaway Jaws MD5 lob wedge. I asked them if they could custom make the new Opus Wedge in 64 and they said no. Holed out from 80 yards for Eagle at Pine needles 2 weeks ago with it. Love my 64
Just take it to a master club fitter and get it bent to 64 it’s the same thing
Because how easy it is just add loft to your 60.
My Approach wedge is my most consistent 100 yard club in the bag
Well it depends how far back you go in history Whippersnapper. The PING EYE2 had 50° PW and 57/12° SW. The PING EYE2 was also the first set which came with a 61° LW. Due to the way PING milled the grooves after casting to take off the too-sharp edges the USGA and PGA banned them PING sued and won getting cash and a lifetime exemption for PING EYE2 from any future rule change which in 2011 had Pros like Mickelson and Harrington putting PING LW back in their bags.
I know this because I started playing back in 1983 with a set of Browning Premiere blades with 50° PW and 56° SW, 9i-3i, 5W, 3W, 1W which was the pretty standard set-up then.
The first hybrid design was marketed in 1999 by Taylormade as “Rescue” club because most recreational players couldn’t hit a long iron out the rough and they soon started replacing the 3i and 4i then the 5i in some sets. The 5W got pulled from the bag and got replaced with a 60° LW. Dave Peltz popularized the four wedge system by tracking PGA stats and realizing pros where most consistent in their short games if using full swing vs. partial that’s how the 52-53° “Gap” wedge got its name filling the yardage gap between full swing 50° PW and 56° SW with 60° LW being the fourth.
I got a set of PING EYE2 3i - 9i, PW, SW, LW around 2013 for $60 at a thrift store and there was par 3 that fell between my full PW and full SW to I bought a second 50° PW, took them to a shop and had them adjusted to PW = 50°, PW2 (Gap) = 53°, SW = 56°, LW=60°
The early 2000s saw surge of interest in golf thanks to Tiger and loft inflation. That’s makes changed the numbers on the club by one. 46-47° which had since the 1930s been the norm for a 9-iron now because the “NEW 10% LONGER PITCHING WEDGE. The reason some PW can be hit 160yards is that due to the loft inflation and leaning the shaft forward to dynamically de-loft the face the angle at impact is around that of a 1980s 6 iron.😮
How many degrees is the Lofted wedge that use in the first video of lofted wedge performance
Active user of a Nicklaus 61’ it’s my go to around the green making my approach game look way better then any other aspect of my game
Gold life bringing the video to a close got me 😂
Big Ange duffing one 😂
Lob wedges start at 58 degree
I use p, 52, 60 and 64
Ping G430 PW is 41⁰. I think they just pushed the numbers of the clubs up and left the specs the same.
Came here to say this. PW was traditionally 50, but it's moved all the way to some being at 40. Average now is 43-46. It's disappointing he didn't call it the 10-iron it's become.
My old spaldings from the 30s have the 8 iron at 50. Absolute nonsense these ones have become now
I use a 54 degree as my gap wedge and a 60 as sand
You can call them whatever you want but that’s a sand wedge and lob wedge
@@jaaaake no shit, I watched the video and know what they’re actually called. I don’t ‘call them a gap and sand or sand and lob… I use them in the way described , with my ranges. I could give a shit what sub category of wedges they’re actually called, I only refer to them as my ‘54° and 60° wedges’ when I refer to them
My mate uses the leather wedge out of bushes and the rough
I have only pitching wedge and 54, I bet I am better than 90% of players out there 100 yards in. Just yesterday stuck it in with my 54, foot and a half 25 yards away on a close to the fringe pin like 3 yards front pin when there was no room for almost any bounce, it literally bounced and stopped. Most people would use 60 here to get ball more up in the air but up in the air doesnt mean more spin automatically. I'd advise people to learn to use either 54 or 56, learn to add loft, deloft, learn to draw it, to cut it, I guarantee you will be better short game player. My point is my brother has pitching, gap, 56 and 60 but he cant pull shots I do because he didnt practice them because everybody reaches for a different club instead of developing a feel. Tiger said how he only had a 56 I think growing up.
You seem really passionate about golf and I think you should treat yourself to a 3rd wedge.
@@user-lf3hy7wl3t Sarcasm? Anyway yeah 60 eventually.
I agree with you. I think there's a case for carrying a lighter bag, concentrating practice onto fewer clubs, learning each club thoroughly developing controlled shot variation and flexibility with each one.
agreed...I carry a 47* Mizuno (but not the one that came with my Mizuno iron set), a 52* Callaway, and a 56* Titleist. I blow people away with my short game. I'm 41 and have been doing short game drills since I was like 11 years old. I love hitting from the sand. I do better with my 56* than 97% of golfers can with their 60*
My Lob is a 58. 😮
just played in a HS team golf match, and a guy on another team pulled out his 78 degree. i lost it, that was the funniest thing watching him hit that thing.😂
I would say a 58 should be considered a lob not a sw
What's a 48-degree wedge if you have a pitching wedge at 44 ?
A 1990 pitching wedge. Your 52 degree gap wedge is a 1970 pitching wedge. At this rate, some day we are going to carry 8 wedges and no irons.
Incorrect! Incorrect! Pitching Wedges of the 1950s into the 1980's traditionally had lofts of 52 degrees!!!!!!!! But club companies monkeyed with iron lofts, gradually decreasing the lofts of irons until by the beginning of the 90's, pitching wedges were down to about 48 degrees of loft, creating a gap between pitching wedges and sand wedges, which remained at 56 degrees because of their function. So club companies created the Gap wedge to fill that hole. 4 woods disappeared from in between 3 and 5 woods in most regular golfers sets at this time to make room for the gap wedge.
GAP wedge broadcasting Tiger who never used...Modern Pitch wedge are namely only but the shape and the loft if the one of an iron...
A chipper is common. Is that a wedge?
A sand wedge is 54-56 not 58 because a lob wedge is 58-62 degree.
I remember I used my 60 and “flopped” it outta this dried up pond and landed it on the green the only time I used my 60 lol
I have a 72 degree and it’s beautiful
My pitch is 41. Ping 430
Approach wedge
This video is revolutionary, it really helped me out l!
58 degree is a lob wedge not a sand wedge
I have a lob and approach wedge
No idea what a gap wedge was before this. Never had one in the bag.
A gap wedge is what a PW wedge was before the nineties when the club manufacturers decided to make their PWs the same loft as a traditional 9i so they could say their clubs go further. It's so ridiculous, but people love it.
Buddy forgot the 5th wedge. The foot wedge.
Bingo! I was looking thru the replies to see if this was already here. Somebody else also mentioned the Texas Wedge. Think that makes 6 in all.
The “classic” P wedge loft is 50-51°. And has incrementally decreased in loft to the tune to 43-44° in some game improvement sets due to delofting ( which is mostly marketing though up for debate). This has necessitated “gap” wedges to fill between the sand wedge which has remained at 56°.
There is essentially no difference between a gap wedge and a classic P wedge. And some P wedges might require up to 3 “gap”wedges to have appropriate gaps to the 56° wedge.
It is absurd really
Correct. All in the aid of strengthening lofts so club companies can say "our clubs hit farther!" In fact, I'm pretty sure the classic pitching wedges from the late 50's-early 60's were more like 52, since classic 9 irons were about 48 degrees, if not higher. I actually have a 30 degree 4 irons from around 1960 in my basement somewhere. That would make for a 9 iron of around 50 degrees. Such a set would probably have had an old dual wedge of around 54 degrees. That was common in commercial sets at that point, although touring pros were carrying 2 wedges by then.
@@seanbaines
What’s even crazier is that the 47-48° P wedge is now becoming “obsolete”. Even most blades have a 46° P wedge now.
I will give the manufacturers a little bit of a break on some of the GI irons because of the lower CGs. But then they are just chasing their tails lowering CG to raise launch but then turning around and lower loft to keep launch angle the same.
To your point about multiple wedges, a short iron blade of x° loft is no different than a wedge of the same loft.
Only one way to stop the madness--stop buying new iron sets
@@jaysonlavie603 Exactly! Feels like I am reading my own posts from other threads. Lol. I've been saying this stuff since I was a club repair/club builder and apprentice fitter 15-20 years ago. Glad to see how many other people understand this, too. My favourite image is of a conveyor belt, dropping the low number irons off one end and adding new wedges at the other. Yet at any given time, the 8-9 clubs on the conveyor belt are the same clubs, just with different names. We'll eventually have a bunch of different named wedges, but they'll be the same lofts and lengths as current clubs, and will hit the same distances.
The only thing that gives me hope is the newer trend to start calling wedges by their lofts, not their names. Instead of saying, "I'm going to hit my sand wedge here," they say "I'm hitting my 56." Maybe eventually we'll get people saying of, say, the 7 iron, "I'm hitting my 32." Then maybe the madness will stop.
@@seanbaines
Also I think there is a growing realization by many that blades, at least in the short irons, may be more accurate than GI designs and are not hard to hit ( loft=forgiveness).
And there’s a growing body of actual evidence ( ie my golf spy iron tests, RUclips fitting sessions) supporting this.
Agreed, the numbers on the sole of tge club mean nothing. Iron sets stop at the 5 iron now lofted like a 3 iron.
Ange catching strays
What about the sexiest wedge in golf: 69⁰?
Never heard of attack wedge??
My set came with a gap wedge and I also have a 52 degree, is that pointless?
Yes very much pointless keep which one you like better add a 56-58or 60
It depends on the loft of the gap wedge that came with your set. My Cleveland set has a gap wedge of 48 degree so then I have a 52 and a 56.
@@357Cornbread so I have irons 5-gap wedge which I found out is a 50 degree. So I have a 50,52,56,58, and 60 which I only really use for out of the sand. 58 is close fringe flop shots, 56 is like anywhere outside the green to about 80 yards. 52 is like 100 yards and in, and gap wedge is like 110-120
And pitching wedge like 125-135
@@HeinekenSkywalker636so the way I’m understanding this is if your P wedge is say a 46 and all the others you have 6 wedges yes that’s a overkill 4 is about all you need and if your playing for fun u can have as many clubs as you want but I try to stick to 14 club rule any way
Yes, I do, but I'm not sure the producers of this video really do
They all go really far when you're trying to hit it short. That's what I know about wedges.
Buddy missed X wedge
And I play 5 of them😂
Bc I have high ball.speed so my irons are juiced
Forgot the Foot Wedge.
4 types of wedges... Cleveland RTX 6, Cleveland CBX2, Cleveland Smart sole, and Cleveland any other model. Yup... 4 wedges
My pitching wedge is ? My approach wedge is 46. My sand wedge is 60. Explain that experts
My pw is 40
Using big ange in the last video of a shit shot 😂 big up the golf life
My pitch is 42 deegrees💀
Actually there’s 5 the attack wedge
Gap wedge and attack wedge are same thing usually both 50-52 degrees don’t know why there’s two different names for them tho
My friend has a 69° wedge
I have an 84 degree wedge no word of a lie
Ange😂
Doing home DIRTY
80° Wedges are for the bounce to the face yourselves😂
Why is this video needed? At all....
Maher relies so much on his own intuition and reflexes that he just comes off as immature. He goes for the east punch lines. He really is not suited to these serious discussions. The cats and dogs thing for instance sounds ludicrous to a westerner such as Bill. To someone more traveled and exposed to the world and other cultures they wonder and investigate to find out if it is true in this instance.
80 degrees. Kind of useless.
A good golfer can shoot par with a 5-iron and a putter. You don't need all of this happy crap.
Must be a par 3 😂
7 iron
I think you mean "Attack wedge" 🫡