for the PGA Tour.Ĩ3 mph club speed, 102 mph ball speed, 1.23 smash factor, 9303 rpms ball spin, -5.0 degrees angle of attack, 24.2 degrees launch angle, 52 degrees landing angle, 89 feet Max. Trackman publishes a tour average report showing launch, ball speed, club speed, angle of attack, etc. Spin numbers for decent check with a sand wedge will be nearly 10,000 rpms. ![]() They get good spin on their shots because they strike the ball perfectly and the courses they are on are mint. I would think that 6500+ would be enough for some decent check, but 8500+ for backspin.Īll that being said,spinning the ball WILL NOT help you drop your scores, it will make it ust me these are low percentage shots even for the pro's. I also use Vokey SM2 wedges with the square grooves and a KBS Rev shaft.ĭepending on conditions,angles ect. Hard to explain.This shot needs to be struck very clean and precise. I like when people use the expression of trying to keep the ball on the face, or to make it climb the face. Too keep it low I would keep the ball a little bit back in the stance, although that would cause me to loose a bit of spin. it's important for a open club face while keeping that face open all the way through impact. I find if I want to hit a 12000+ spinner I need a maxed out 60* swing, I hit from a out-to-in club path while having a open stance. There are a ton of factors involved to make a ball bite or backup like greens,slope,launch angle,ball,wedge, ect ect. Spinning wedge shots is pretty much the reason I own a GC2. ![]() when their ball keeps rolling and they are still yelling "BITE" I yell "RELEASE" lol I don't think it is as much as you might think and would suspect coming down on the ball 4 degrees is likely what is needed.Exactly.
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