The Fitting Game-Changer: Why Club Fitting Should Transform How You Think About Your Equipment
Let me be direct with you: most golfers are playing with clubs that don’t match their swing. After 15+ years teaching high-level amateurs and tour professionals, I’ve seen this pattern repeat endlessly. A golfer will come to me with equipment that looks impressive in the bag but doesn’t actually work for their game. The frustrating part? They didn’t know what they were missing.
This is exactly where the conversation around proper club fitting becomes so valuable. It’s not about having the latest, shiniest equipment—it’s about having equipment that’s engineered specifically for YOU.
Understanding the Real Purpose of Club Fitting
Here’s what I tell my students: a club fitting isn’t a sales pitch wrapped in data. It’s a diagnostic tool that reveals truths about your swing you might not know yourself. When you walk into a professional fitting, trained technicians are collecting information about your swing speed, launch angle, spin rate, and ball flight pattern. They’re then using that data to recommend equipment that maximizes your strengths and minimizes your weaknesses.
Think of it like this: if you’re a golfer with a moderate swing speed, there’s no point playing equipment designed for players generating tour-level club head speed. You won’t get the distance benefits, and you might actually lose consistency. Conversely, if you’re generating higher swing speeds, equipment with different shaft profiles and head designs will help you control that speed rather than fight against it.
“You have your preconceived notions of what that driver is supposed to be. What it actually is, though, surprised me. Typically a driver like that for me is something I’m always worried about it spinning too much or just something I don’t need it to be, and this driver was significantly better than everything else that I hit.”
This quote perfectly captures what happens when you actually test equipment against your expectations. One of my tour players came to me convinced he needed a certain type of iron. After a proper fitting session, he discovered something completely different worked better for his game. The lesson here? Your assumptions about what you need might be holding you back.
The Gapping Conversation Nobody Talks About
One element of fitting that often gets overlooked in my instruction is club gapping—making sure there aren’t overlapping distances between your clubs. This matters more than you’d think. If your 7-iron and 6-iron are producing distances only 3 yards apart, you’ve got a problem. You’re carrying redundant equipment.
Here’s a simple checkpoint you can do right now: go to the range and hit 5 balls with each club in your bag. Write down the average distance for each club. Look for gaps of roughly 10-15 yards between consecutive clubs (this varies slightly depending on your skill level, but that’s a solid target). If you see clusters where multiple clubs are producing similar distances, you’ve found an area where a fitting could really help optimize your bag.
This isn’t about having the most clubs or the fewest clubs. It’s about having the RIGHT clubs that create logical progression through your bag. When your equipment has proper gapping, course management becomes simpler because you know exactly what each club does.
Try This: The Pre-Fitting Assessment
Before you book a fitting appointment, do some homework. Here are three things that will make your fitting session infinitely more valuable:
First, track your typical distances. Spend a practice session hitting 10 balls with each club and recording where they land. Do this on a calm day at a range where you can see results clearly. Don’t just guess—actually measure. This gives the fitter a baseline and helps them understand your swing.
Second, identify what’s frustrating you. Are you losing distance off the tee? Struggling with consistency in your irons? Having trouble with a particular yardage? Write these down. A good fitter will use this information to prioritize what matters most to YOUR game.
Third, be honest about your swing speed and skill level. I’ve watched golfers try to play equipment that’s too demanding for their current abilities because they wanted to “grow into it.” That’s backwards. Play equipment matched to your present game, and you’ll improve faster because you’re hitting more consistent shots.
“At the end of the day, we also had a special guest appearance from six-time PGA Tour winner and Fully Equipped contributor Rocco Mediate, who lives in the area. Rocco plays a full bag of Ping gear and told Johnny his journey was probably over.”
Notice what’s happening in this moment—a professional golfer is validating the importance of finding equipment that WORKS for your game. That’s the real takeaway. Once you’ve found clubs engineered specifically for how YOU swing, the constant searching stops. Your focus shifts to actually improving your game rather than wondering if different equipment might fix things.
The Mental Shift That Matters Most
In my experience, the biggest benefit of a proper fitting isn’t the equipment itself—it’s the confidence that comes with it. When you know your clubs are engineered for your swing, you can trust them. That trust translates to better decision-making on the course and more committed swings. You’re not second-guessing whether you have the right tool for the job.
Start with a fitting this year. Approach it as an investment in understanding your swing better, not just acquiring new clubs. The insights you gain will improve your game far beyond just the equipment change.

