Three Things Slow Swing Speed Golfers Should Look For In A New Driver
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Three Things Slow Swing Speed Golfers Should Look For In A New Driver

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Three Things Slow Swing Speed Golfers Should Look For In A New Driver

We tested 42 drivers this year. The marketing machine tells slow swing speed golfers the same thing: you need more forgiveness, more distance technology, more everything. Buy the biggest head. Buy the most offset. Buy the club designed specifically for your swing.

I decided to break things down a little further and picked some individual tester case studies to look at. These golfers have swing speeds ranging from the high 70s to the mid-80s. Here are the three things that helped them maximize performance from a driver and ultimately save shots.

1. Smash factor is everything when you can’t generate speed

The drivers that produced the best Strokes Gained results in our case studies weren’t always the longest on paper. They were the ones that consistently turned clubhead speed into ball speed, shot after shot. A smash factor difference of 1.40 versus 1.45 might not sound like much but, at slow swing speeds, it translates to roughly five to eight yards of carry. A golfer with a 105-mph swing speed can make up those yards but slower swing speeds cannot.

If you’re testing new drivers, look at smash factor data, not just ball speed. It will tell you how efficiently your swing is interacting with that specific club.

2. Playability percentage outperforms peak distance

Across all the case studies I looked at, the metric with the strongest and most consistent correlation to Strokes Gained was the playable shot percentage. The percentage of shots that ended up in a playable position matter more than carry and total distance.

One golfer hit their single longest carry of the entire test with a driver that had only a 46 percent playability rate. The driver that won their overall performance ranking had a 100 percent. The longer club cost them more strokes than it gave back.

Slow swing speed players are already giving up distance to faster swingers. When you add offline shots on top, it’s difficult to recover from. A driver that keeps you in play on 90 to 100 percent of swings is worth far more than one that occasionally rips it but sprays the ball.

Check out our best drivers for slow swing speeds and best fairway-finding drivers for clubs that scored well on both counts.

3. High spin is costing you more distance than you think

Excess spin can quietly be one of the biggest distance killers in the bag. Having the wrong spin rate can cost 15 to 20 yards in carry, even at slow swing speeds.

You don’t necessarily need the lowest-spinning driver. Zero spin is not the goal. Some players need more spin just to get the ball airborne. The key is spin management.

How a driver handles spin across a range of strikes is sometimes worth considering in your fitting session. Watch what the spin rates are doing from shot to shot. See how high or low spin is impacting your total distance and overall playability.

One more thing worth noting

The best-performing drivers in these case studies weren’t all “game-improvement” or “max distance” designs. Several golfers got their best numbers from mid-sized or even compact heads, simply because those clubs happened to deliver the right combination of smash, spin and shot shape consistency for their swing.

Slow swing speed doesn’t automatically mean you need the biggest, most forgiving driver.

And if you’re curious whether a better player’s driver might actually work for you, you might be surprised what our 2026 data showed.

For You

For You

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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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      Mike Hook

      4 weeks ago

      I play a longer driver Jupiter shaft than the average 45-inch; mine is 47″ long with a soft regular flex. I have the Callaway Smoke i Max D set to 10.5 loft, and my swing speed is about 85mph. I get good dispersion, and around 2800 spin, I can still hit 200-plus distance no problem. If I go to a shorter 44″ shaft, I will lose a ton of distance and at 85, I need all the help I can get. On my Callaway Smoke Max D 3 wood with a lightweight soft flex and up the loft to 17, and I have no problem hitting it off the fairway or tee peg. I think the shaft is the most important part of the clubs. Get that wrong, and you will struggle big time, so once you find the right shaft and grip size, which is important too, you should have a lot more confidence in your game, especially with the big stick.

      Reply

      HeftyLefty

      4 weeks ago

      I would suggest what slow swing speed players, and probably most “average golfer” need is shorter shafts and more loft. A shorter shaft will help improve contact. Additional loft will help with carry distance. Better contact and more carry will result in better playability. I ditched the driver all together and went with a mini driver (13* loft, 43.75″ shaft). I lost little if any distance on decent strikes. On mishits it is still more playable than driver mishits. I believe anyone with a swing speed of less than 90 mph shouldn’t use a driver with less than 12* of loft.

      Reply

      Rob

      4 weeks ago

      I ditched my driver about a year ago. I could never hit it consistently and it was killing my game – my stats showed that I was averaging 180 yards off the tee. For a few months I was using my 3W or 5W as my tee club and consistently getting 200+ yards. I have now switched to a mini driver, 43″, 13.5* loft, and averaging 230 off the tee and usually in the middle of the fairway.

      Reply

      O2BGolfn

      4 weeks ago

      So much good and accurate info in this article and reply. You need to get over the ego and move to more loft and depending on factors length too. Hitting fairways leads to more GIR and better scores. Moving to a ball with more compatibility to your swing also of benefit. Get over your ego and start winning your Nassau!

      Reply

      Jdk

      4 weeks ago

      New drivers have to be over hyped because for the average golfer there is no difference you might gain a yard or two. Look for Rick shields on YouTube where he did a 25-year-old driver versus a new top of the line driver. He gained like a yard per year.

      Reply

      vito

      4 weeks ago

      Agree with you for many players. But it depends on attack angle. if you are like me, a 13 degree driver would give me a static launch angle of 18 degrees(yes, I have a 5 degree up impact angle on my driver). At my average 88 mph swing speed I need a 10 degree driver to maximize my launch window. Been proven on Trackman.

      Reply

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