Is A 60-Degree Wedge Hurting Your Game? We Looked At The Data
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Is A 60-Degree Wedge Hurting Your Game? We Looked At The Data

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Is A 60-Degree Wedge Hurting Your Game? We Looked At The Data

We recently looked at the golf clubs that cost amateurs the most strokes and nearly across the board, the answer was the 5-iron. But if you tell that to the player who just set up for a “cute” little lob shot and watched their 60-degree wedge rocket 20 yards over the back of the green, you’ll probably get a very different opinion.

The lob wedge has long carried the reputation of being a club for “emergencies only.”

It’s seen as high-risk, high-reward, and something average golfers shouldn’t lean on too often. To find out if that’s the truth, we asked Shot Scope for amateur performance data specific to the 60-degree wedge. The numbers reveal how golfers at different levels use it and whether it really helps or hurts.

How golfers actually use the 60-degree wedge

Before we dive into performance, it’s worth looking at usage. The 60-degree wedge shows up in very different ways depending on distance and on the player’s handicap.

Usage climbs steadily as skill improves with scratch golfers pulling the lob wedge far more often than higher handicaps. Even at the elite level, the 60-degree doesn’t dominate every situation.

Full shots (100–75 Yards)

For many golfers, the idea of taking a full swing with a lob wedge feels reckless. Yet scratch players do it nearly one out of every five times (20 percent) in this range, compared to just five percent (one out of 20) for 25-handicaps.

On full swings, the lob wedge holds its own. A 15-handicap golfer finishes in 3.49 strokes on average with a lob wedge compared to 3.47 with their other wedges. There is essentially no difference.

Scratch golfers have a tiny edge, finishing 0.02 shots better with the lob wedge.

Takeaway: On full swings, the lob wedge isn’t an “emergency only” option. Skilled players can make it work and the performance gap compared to other wedges is negligible. Of course, you’ll have to be comfortable with your wedge and practice it to see the best results.

Pitching (75–25 Yards)

By the time golfers reach mid-handicap levels, the lob wedge starts to become a common tool for pitching. Fifteen-handicap players use it for more than one in five shots (20 percent) while scratch players lean on it for 42 percent of pitches.

Similar to what we saw with the full shots, the lob wedge doesn’t produce better (or worse) results than other wedges. A 15-handicap averages 3.21 shots with a lob wedge versus 3.19 with a pitching, gap or sand wedge.

For scratch players, the numbers are almost identical: 2.89 with a lob wedge versus 2.87 baseline.

Takeaway: The lob wedge is trusted more as skill improves but it doesn’t outperform safer wedge choices for the average golfer.

Chipping (Inside 25 Yards)

High handicaps use the 60-degree wedge just 12 percent of the time while scratch players push that number to 34 percent, almost three times as often.

Scratch players are clearly capable with the club, averaging 2.59 shots to hole out with the lob wedge. But even at that level, the baseline (2.51) is slightly better. For 25-handicap players, the gap grows larger: 3.16 strokes with a lob wedge compared to 3.04 with other wedges.

Takeaway: For elite golfers, the lob wedge adds options. Better players aren’t really saving strokes by using the lob wedge but they could be using it out of difficult areas or places where they need to get up and down quickly. For higher handicaps, the lob wedge does come with a small added risk, just over a tenth of a stroke.

The lob wedge Isn’t Just for Emergencies

Scratch golfers prove the 60° wedge is a regular part of the rotation, not a last-resort club. What was once considered too risky has become a trusted option when used by skilled players who understand its limits.

Risk/reward depends on skill level

Better players can handle the precision needed to hit great 60-degree wedge shots, but the average golfer is more likely to pay a penalty. The lob wedge magnifies both good and bad swings, which is why it can either look like magic or a disaster, depending on who is hitting it.

When you look at overall strokes to finish, the risk is still not enormous compared to other wedges.

It’s another tool in the bag

Even at the scratch level, the lob wedge doesn’t outperform other wedges. It’s about giving players one more shot type to choose from. Think of it as a specialty tool in the bag. When you need a lot of loft and a softer landing, a well-struck 60-degree wedge is a solid choice.

Final thoughts

The Shot Scope data doesn’t support the old idea that the 60-degree wedge is only for emergencies. In reality, its performance is nearly identical to pitching, gap and sand wedges across full shots and pitches. Even around the green, where it’s most divisive, the lob wedge is only marginally worse.

Scratch golfers use it with confidence because they know when it’s the right tool, while higher handicaps may see mixed results if they lean on it too often.

The lob wedge is a specialty option that adds variety without costing much. It may not save strokes, but it also doesn’t really deserve its reputation as a “danger club.”

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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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      Lyle

      8 months ago

      I only use my lob wedge out of the bunker or one of the very few times that I need to hit a flop shot over something

      Reply

      DaveMac

      8 months ago

      Once again a severely flawed generalisation regarding the performance of 60 degree wedges.
      Consider this, Shot Scope has no attributes to identify the difficulty of a short game shot, so 25 yards down hill over a bunker to a firm green is exactly the same as 25 yards with no obstacles and a holding green.
      It stands to reason the 60 degree strokes to finish will be higher because often the shots to finish would be higher.
      This article reveals more about the weakness in Shot Scope’s data collection than any statistically meaningful insight in to 60 degree wedge performance.
      For the record my Shot Scope season data for my 60 degree is
      Full swing Shots to finish 2.9 proximity 15 ft
      Short Game Shots to finish 2.7 proximity 17 ft
      The data from the app includes bunker shots which I play with my 60 degree. My 54 which is my stock short game wedge has slightly better numbers.

      Reply

      Jake Forrest

      8 months ago

      Great points, but it is generalization. Most generalizations about data suffer that same fate.

      However, I will say it was refreshing to read an article about a LW and not have it say it’s terrible unless you are a pro. Or worse some touring pro telling me not to use it because they know about what I should do with my game because they are good.

      Reply

      Jon

      8 months ago

      I took it with a grain of salt when the author did not include that only 39% of scratch golfers carry the 60-degree wedge

      Reply

      Ray

      8 months ago

      Not a risk any more than a sand wedge if you know how to use it.

      Reply

      Mark R

      8 months ago

      Full 60 is 87 yds for me. I use the lob anywhere inside of that range. Very versatile club…if you are willing to practice.

      Playing it off my back foot around the greens, I can get the ball to two-hop & stop. A par-saving shot.

      Reply

      Jake Forrest

      8 months ago

      Here is the key, practice. I hit so many great shots with my 60, I consider it a top 5 club.

      Reply

      DaveyD

      8 months ago

      I have a couple 60 degree wedges, both of different grinds and bounces, to deal with which particular course I’m playing and the time of year/condition of the course. I’ve had a lot of success with this approach, utilizing the 60 on chips & pitch shots only, reserving full swing shots for a non-lob wedge.

      Reply

      OpMan

      8 months ago

      It’s all I use around the greens and from 85 yards and in.
      I found the perfect wedge with extra high bounce and a great sole, I can make it fly low and roll it out with very little spin, or make it check in a flash Phil Mickelson style from the front foot. And it’s great from thick stuff as well as the bunker.

      Reply

      Fake

      8 months ago

      If you’re in that mess, better off getting lessons than trying to buy your way out of trouble LMAO

      Reply

      OpMan

      8 months ago

      Shot 66 today at my local Muni. It’s a perfect club. Missed 3 greens, got up and down with all. No bogeys.
      Thanks
      ☺️
      😂

      Dave

      8 months ago

      I won’t own a 60. I have an Opus Platinum 56 that I’ve been working with a lot to get it to work for me and it’s still a work in progress. I recognize that my skill level doesn’t include using a 60, except to humble myself into remembering why I won’t own one.

      Reply

      Harry

      8 months ago

      Use 60 degree wedge in thin/wet sand and for 30-50 yard pitch over bunkers.

      Reply

      Sean

      8 months ago

      If you chip with a 60 deg, you’re just making the game harder for yourself.
      The only shots you should use a 60deg for are flop shots and deep bunker shots.
      It’s basically a waste of a club.

      Reply

      OpMan

      8 months ago

      “depends on skill level”
      LMAO

      Reply

      Mike

      8 months ago

      I see so many high handicapped players using a lob wedge around the green when a much simpler and easier option would be the old pitch and roll with an 8 or 9 iron. I switched to the latter method last year and it has saved me countless strokes.

      Reply

      Fake

      8 months ago

      I bought a 60 degree a while back because…it was a 60 degree wedge and I wanted to fill out my bag. Truthfully, there’s maybe 1-2 shots/round where it might work, and I can more confidently hit my 56 degree in this situations.

      Reply

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