3 Mistakes Slow Swing Speed Golfers Make When Choosing A Golf Ball
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3 Mistakes Slow Swing Speed Golfers Make When Choosing A Golf Ball

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3 Mistakes Slow Swing Speed Golfers Make When Choosing A Golf Ball

Listen up! If you swing your driver around 85 mph, this applies to you.

In our 2025 golf ball test, slow swing speed conditions are set at 86 mph with the driver and 65 mph with a mid iron. That represents a large portion of everyday golfers.

Every year, we see some of the same patterns. Golfers sort ball test results by distance and look for the longest number instead of something that’s a better fit for their game.

But after years of testing, the data continues to show that ball fitting for slower swing speeds is more nuanced than simply finding the longest ball. Here are three mistakes to be aware of.

Mistake No. 1: Chasing low spin for more distance

Lower spin sounds like a solution.

Less spin should mean less drag and more rollout. For a player fighting to reach more total yards, that feels logical.

In the slow swing speed driver test, some of the lowest-spinning balls include Callaway Supersoft, TaylorMade Tour Response and Srixon SOFT FEEL. Those designs can reduce driver spin and increase rollout.

But driver ball speed is essentially flat across the board. The slow swing speed average sits at 123.46 mph and most balls cluster tightly around that number.

Distance differences come from spin and how that spin shapes the flight window.

When spin drops too low, carry can become less efficient. Slower swingers often need help keeping the ball in the air long enough to maximize carry. If lowering spin flattens the trajectory, you may gain rollout but lose efficiency.

The goal for slower swingers is not minimum spin. It is efficient spin.

Mistake No. 2: Confusing height with control

Slower swing speed golfers are often told they need more height to control their shots into the green. While that is somewhat true, height alone does not guarantee control.

In our slow swing speed iron test (65 mph), ball speed differences are minimal. Most balls sit within single mph of each other. The separation happens in how the ball lands.

Here’s a real example:

BallSpin (rpm)Descent AngleCarry (yds)Total (yds)
Titleist Pro V1x5,33840.66°112.61122.17
TaylorMade Tour Response4,26040.73°116.03129.64
PXG Xtreme Tour4,58942.84°117.04130.36

Pro V1x spins significantly more than PXG Xtreme Tour but lands more than two degrees flatter.

A ball landing at 42 degrees is coming in noticeably steeper than one at 40 and that difference isn’t about compression or just spin. It’s about how the entire flight window works together.

If you look only at peak height or total distance, you miss what actually influences how the ball behaves after landing. When choosing the right golf ball for your game, descent angle matters more than simply “hitting it higher.”

Mistake No. 3: Judging distance by total instead of carry

Carry distance is what matters.

Under slow swing speed iron conditions, the average total distance is 130.11 yards. But total includes rollout. Carry is what clears hazards and lands on greens.

BallCarry (yds)Total (yds)Descent Angle
Callaway ERC Soft119.11134.8339.70°
PXG Xtreme Tour117.04130.3642.84°

ERC Soft shows more total yards but it also lands flatter. That extra distance is rollout.

For slower swingers, carry distance determines whether you clear trouble and hit consistent yardages. If you sort by total alone, you may choose a ball that looks longer but doesn’t actually improve carry efficiency.

Final thoughts

For a complete look at how every golf ball performed under slow swing speed conditions, including spin, launch and descent angle, explore the full MyGolfSpy ball test results for slower swing speeds. (2025 Golf Ball Test Results– Slow Swing Speeds)

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Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





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      Pete W

      4 months ago

      At some point PLEASE could mgs do an in depth look and comparison of all the “lite” drivers for all us slow swingers?
      Force = mass x acceleration, so does the increased acceleration make up for the loss in mass?
      And why don’t manufacturers list the weight of their lighter (liter?) drivers on websites when it is their whole raison d’etre?

      Reply

      Alex

      4 months ago

      Hopefully you will address how MGS keeps saying Callaway Triple Diamond (i.e., low spin) driver is the best for low swing speed players— every Callaway demo day the fitter rolls his eyes when I bring up whether a Triple Diamond version is good for 90mph swing speeds. (In the Pacific NW, we need carry distance more than roll except from July-September)

      Reply

      MikeB

      4 months ago

      As a slower swing speed golfer in his late 70s, I look for a balance between distance and spin. I still hit the Pro V1x a bit longer off the driver than lower compression balls. The downside is that with the Pro V1x I give up about 1.5 clubs in distance with my irons. I just don’t compress them enough. Since most of the lower compression balls spin less, I use a higher lofted (12°) driver to help get the ball up and help with spin. I still want good short game spin, so I play urethane balls like the Maxfli Tour S and the Bridgestone Tour BRXS. I get decent distance with the driver and my irons. I also good spin for those greenside chips and pitches. These balls feel great, too, especially off the putter.

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      4 months ago

      There is obviously a delicate balance between carry, total distance, descent angle and spin. True, decent carry is necessary to fly greenside hazards, but is no good if the ball is unable to hold the green and ends up short sided in a swale with deep rough. The only way to resolve this is for each golfer to trial different balls and find out what works best for that individual’s iron/shaft/swing combination.
      No number of your charts can resolve this !!!

      Reply

      Gary

      4 months ago

      The point is to give some direction about ball performance. Players misunderstand their ball and how I performs. No one ball will guarantee a number. But if your ball flys flatter into the green than another ball with a higher decent, at the same swing speed, then no matter how you hit the ball it will perform consistent to its design. The goal of the article is to help players narrow down the field of choices and look for balls that performance at their level of play. So, numbers do matter and can help.

      Reply

      Chris Christoforou

      4 months ago

      My problem is that I had ought a ball since 2011, when I bought a 15ft ball scoop. However I do have plenty of every ball and give away many. It just feels wrong to an oldie that still remembers what you could buy with 10/- (50p) to spend money on new balls.

      Reply

      Fake

      4 months ago

      Urethane balls and spin are not the enemy for slow swing players or high handicap players.

      Reply

      Julius

      4 months ago

      This seems like a technical topic and reading this article I wasn’t fully convinced, what would your view be? Is it more around how the club is delivered at impact? Thank you!

      Reply

      Gary

      4 months ago

      Even with variations in club delivery at impact the ball will be the same. A ball flying lower into the green will fly lower despite angle of attack. Same with a higher flying ball. The differences will be on their same trajectory, one higher one lower. Data is our friend, and it helps avoid misconceptions. One can play a flatter trajectory into the green as long as you allow for more roll. But efforts to get it “higher” may be working against the ball.

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