Should Your Wedge Shafts Match Your Iron Shafts?
Should Your Wedge Shafts Match Your Iron Shafts? I received an email recently from Kevin in Virginia who asked: "Bill, I play steel shafts in my irons. Should I use...

Some rounds feel easy. Other days it feels like you're fighting your game from the first tee. The good news? Your biggest opportunities are also the fastest ways to lower your scores.
A few improvements around the greens and on the putting surface could transform the rest of your season.
You probably recognize these rounds:
That's inconsistency.
And it's incredibly common.
The encouraging news?
Most golfers don't need a swing rebuild.
They need more consistency in the scoring zone.
Because every golfer has days when the driver misbehaves.
The golfers who still post good scores are the ones who can save themselves around the greens.
Breaking 100 doesn't require perfection.
It requires eliminating just a few costly mistakes.
Those small improvements add up quickly.

Build consistency with scoring clubs.
Pick random distances:
Hit only one ball from each distance.
Finish every shot inside:
30 feet.
Golf doesn't give us the same shot over and over.
Random practice produces on-course results.
Learn to save pars.
Drop 10 balls around the green.
Play each ball until holed.
Get up and down:
4 of 10 times.
5 or more.
Every successful up-and-down is a stroke saved.
Eliminate three-putts.
Putt from:
Every putt finishes inside:
3 feet.
Miss one?
Start over.
Distance control is the fastest way to eliminate big numbers.
Build confidence.
Make:
Miss one?
Start again.
Confidence is earned through repetition.
The right scoring clubs won't fix every bad shot.
But they can make your good swings better and your misses more manageable.
The right wedge can improve your contact and distance control.
The right putter can reduce costly three-putts and improve confidence.
Consistency often comes from eliminating small misses.
Choose one:
✔ Break 100
✔ Break 90
✔ Break 80
✔ Lower Your Handicap
Then commit to improving just one thing:
Your scoring zone.
The fastest path to lower scores isn't hitting it farther.
It's becoming more consistent from 100 yards and in.
Download your free Short Game Guide and start improving immediately.
_____________________________________________________________________
About Bill Totten
Bill Totten is one of the most experienced wedge fitters in the game, with more than 40 years helping golfers improve scoring from 100 yards and in. As the former Director of Golf at Fripp Island, SC, Bill has worked with thousands of players—from beginners to low handicaps—focusing on the part of the game that matters most: the scoring zone.
His approach is simple—better contact, better distance control, and smarter practice lead to lower scores. The insights in your scoring profile are based on the same principles he’s used to help golfers consistently hit it closer and convert more opportunities.
Should Your Wedge Shafts Match Your Iron Shafts? I received an email recently from Kevin in Virginia who asked: "Bill, I play steel shafts in my irons. Should I use...
Phil Mickelson made the lob wedge famous, but has the 60-degree wedge actually cost amateur golfers more strokes than it's saved? Discover the risks, rewards, and whether carrying a lob...
The U.S. Open isn't won by the player who hits the most perfect shots. It's often won by the player who recovers best when things go wrong. Bill explains why...
While recovering from hip replacement surgery, Bill found himself thinking about Northern Michigan—its world-class golf, cooler summer weather, Mackinac Island, the Soo Locks, and the memories that still draw him...