5 Golf Ball Myths Debunked!
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5 Golf Ball Myths Debunked!

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5 Golf Ball Myths Debunked!

As with most things in the golf equipment world, there’s an abundance of myths surrounding the golf ball. That’s a problem because bad info can cause golfers to make bad decisions about the golf balls they choose to play.

Today, we put some of those myths to bed.

I need the right golf ball compression for my swing speed

This is perhaps the most pervasive myth in the golf ball world which is why it’s starting to feel like the dead horse I just can’t stop beating.

I place the blame squarely on Matt Kuchar’s dad and the ridiculous Google algorithms that relentlessly continue to misinform golfers about this critical part of golf ball fitting.

Let me say it yet again.

There is no right golf ball compression for your swing speed. You need a golf ball that’s going to deliver optimal performance for your swing and while you swing speed is part of that discussion, there’s a lot more to it.

The reality is that while many slower swing speed players think they need a soft golf ball (and many more just like the feel), a healthy number of them would be better served by playing a firmer, higher-spinning ball.

It’s true that many high swing speed players should avoid lower-compression balls but, even then, there are exceptions to the rule.

Generally speaking, unless there’s a non-negotiable feel (or price) preference, it’s rare that I recommend a golf ball softer than 80 compression which is at the very low end of what’s played on Tour.

Soft balls spin more than firm ones

A soft golf ball on a marshmallow

I’m not positive where this one came from but my best guess is that some golfers believe that ,as golf balls get softer, it’s easier for the clubface to grip and create friction and spin.

That’s kind of true but what gets lost in that thinking is that the softest covers are found on firmer Tour balls.

Golf ball spin is the result of hardness differences between layers. More specifically, spin increases when a soft layer is placed over a hard one, like when a soft urethane cover is placed over a firm ionomer mantle layer.

With soft golf balls, the inner layers need to be soft so there’s typically not a firm layer for the cover to pinch against and generate spin. This is especially true in two-piece constructions where a firm ionomer layer covers a soft core material.

Said another way: Soft doesn’t spin.

The Titleist Pro V1 spins more than the Pro V1x

Chalk this one up to golfers having long memories. For a good part of their existence, the Pro V1 was the higher-spinning of Titleist’s flagship golf balls, so maybe Titleist is to blame for the confusion.

So what changed?

With the launch of the 2017 golf balls, Titleist flipped the script … well, half of it, anyway. Titleist kept the higher flight of the Pro V1x, but pushed spin rates beyond the Pro V1. Eight years later and there’s still some confusion.

Keep in mind that both balls offer low spin off the driver and plenty around the green, too. With that, where you should notice the most difference is off the irons.

The more dimples, the better the ball

Thankfully, this one doesn’t come up a lot but there are some golfers who believe that the more dimples a golf ball has, the better it will perform.

To be sure, dimple patterns are critical to golf ball performance but there’s no magic number. While dimple count plays a role, there’s a whole lot more to it. Things like dimple size, depth and edge radii all contribute to performance.

Ultimately, what matters is that the aerodynamic package (the dimples) work with other design aspects of the golf ball to consistently deliver an optimized trajectory to the golfer.

So, while most golf ball covers have between 300 and 400 dimples, the actual number is nothing much to worry about.

I’m not good enough to tell the difference between golf balls

What I always tell golfers is that even if you’re not good enough to see differences from one shot to the next, you can certainly appreciate them.

Whether or not you notice, a tree falling in the forest still makes a sound. The same is true for golf ball performance and quality differences.

I’ve tested thousands of golf balls both with golf robots and in our Ball Lab and I can assure you the differences are real and that means whether you notice from one shot to the next, they impact your game.

Look, I get it. We’re not pros so discerning performance and quality implications from one swing to the next is nearly impossible. Even at the Tour level, the professionals are looking for a golf ball to fly through certain windows.

They’re not necessarily astute enough to know when a five-yard miss is because of a golf ball. The difference is that while you may not realize the ball is the reason you just hit your driver OB (sometimes it is the ball), the best golfers in the world will.

If you’re just out to bang balls and have a good time, it doesn’t much matter, but if shooting your best score is important to you, then you really should be playing a quality golf ball that meets your performance needs.

Are there others?

What other golf myths are you curious about? Let us know.

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Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony is the Editor of MyGolfSpy where his job is to bring fresh and innovative content to the site. In addition to his editorial responsibilities, he was instrumental in developing MyGolfSpy's data-driven testing methodologies and continues to sift through our data to find the insights that can help improve your game. Tony believes that golfers deserve to know what's real and what's not, and that means MyGolfSpy's equipment coverage must extend beyond the so-called facts as dictated by the same companies that created them. Most of all Tony believes in performance over hype and #PowerToThePlayer.

Tony Covey

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      Trusty Rusty

      1 week ago

      People spend a lot of money and time on equipment, the exact lie, loft, cast vs forge feel, shaft specs, grips. If they would apply the same science to their golf ball. They would soon realize each and every shot for the entire season should be with the same brand, same model golf ball- no exceptions. Their game, short game and even putting would eventually improve. I have played with the same ball manufacturer and model for every shot, for well over a decade. I’m a single handicap but I am convinced any low to 20 handicapper can benefit from using the same ball.

      Reply

      Alan Clifford

      1 month ago

      The three balls I’ve liked (I don’t know why!) are Callaway Superhot, Srixen ad33 tour and Callaway Warbirds. Why? Are they similar? I try to read about golf ball characteristics but it all seems to be marketing gobbledegook.

      Reply

      FakeRichGuy

      1 month ago

      Great if they work for you. Sounds like you’re not going to break the bank when you go ball shopping.

      Reply

      RG

      1 month ago

      I play a lot of golf in the winter when temps are often in the 40s and occasionally in the 30s. I switch to a lower compression ball when it’s cold and it seems beneficial. Thoughts?

      Reply

      Graeme Trew

      1 month ago

      The % difference between a blade and a cavity iron.
      1mm to 20mm off centre strikes.
      I have never been able to find any data on this subject.
      I personally don’t see/feel a big difference and yet sales people generally push most golfers into cavity/perimeter clubs

      Reply

      League Golfer

      1 month ago

      What if you put a batch of white balls vs another batch of the same model white balls? Would we see the same differences between groups one and two of white golf balls of the same model as we see between groups one and two of white vs yellow balls? The differences have been very small, and might fall within the parameters of “margin of error” or variation between batch one and batch two, or regardless of the paint color.

      Reply

      Kuso

      1 month ago

      Most Joe Schmos say they are not good enough to tell the difference because those players are the ones who never practice and just go out to play just to be on the golf course, they are not playing to score, they are just playing because it’s just fun to go play golf, with no regard for the etiquette or consideration for others as they hold up the course and trash the place

      Reply

      Mr Ed

      1 month ago

      Its going to be okay……..

      Reply

      KR

      1 month ago

      I am truly amazed by your daily mastery of the game of golf and everything associated with it, would you please start your own website so that we that we may bask in your glory of knowledge? Inquiring minds want to know how you continue to spew forth such BS on a daily basis! Please advise!

      Reply

      Kuso

      1 month ago

      Cos I go outside daily and OBSERVE, respect the game’s rules, traditions and etiquette and play by those rules, unlike you ignorant stoned and drunk folks, obviously LMAO

      Rick

      1 month ago

      Fuck you! I play because I enjoy playing. I am always looking for my best score. I am also well aware of golf etiquette. I always let a faster group play through. It is quite apparent from your comments that you are just an arrogant asshole. I seldom reply to a comment with this type of language, but you just pushed the wrong button this morning!

      Reply

      Kuso

      1 month ago

      If you never touch alcohol ever again for the rest of your life you will understand where I stand

      Yer face

      1 month ago

      Are you a member at my club? We have a rash of members who don’t fix ball marks or take traps at a semi private course where the membership fee is $325 a month plus $100 cart/range fees… They barely can afford to keep cart staff, much less pay maintenance to spend an hour on every green fixing ballmarks beyond just sanding over the whole thing once a week… it’s pathetic. I’ve started pretending to work there and just telling people what tf to do. I wear my club logo shirt whenever I play and if it’s super slow I will ride ahead until I find the problem group and tell them that it’s my off day and the clubhouse asked me to come tell them to pick up the pace. A few weeks back I saw a set of footprints going from one end of the bunker to the other so I finished out my hole and took off driving… I get 4 holes ahead and find a guy with his kid with one Walmart set on the cart for both of them, and they’re both standing in the bunker while the dad hits. The footprints covered the whole sand trap. As soon as they climbed up onto the green without picking up the rake I yelled, “hey guys the club would really appreciate it if you take your footprints” and the guy was ready to fight me… “We paid our money!! Don’t y’all have maintenance?”

      I uninvited him back lmfao I told him we don’t want his money if he’s gonna trash the place and make us pay it all back to maintenance to stay late and clean up his mess… He was not a member… They at least act ashamed when they are caught breaking the rules.

      I’ve mentioned to the head pro that I’d be willing to do this and he was appreciative because the high school and early college age kids they have there don’t like being confrontational… But since I carry around a bag of weapons the whole time I’m there it doesn’t scare me one bit. You should talk to the pro at your club and volunteer your services. It would at least make you happier so that you have some agency over all of this stuff you’re complaining about. And you’ll help a lot of new golfers learn the etiquette we all hold so dearly. Most of us learned golf from our dad or his dad or something like that but since COVID a lot of people have just decided “I’m gonna start playing golf” and they don’t know the first thing about how they’re supposed to act. They think if they paid their money they can take from sunup to sundown and the people behind them should have just gotten there earlier…. You’d be surprised how many people didn’t realize that if they aren’t keeping pace they should be letting people play thru.

      Reply

      Roy Jamesen

      1 week ago

      Letting a group play through does nothing. Its a ladder effect, groups placed 8-10 minutes apart

      Sandbggr

      1 month ago

      The article was terrific. The replies were great too. Especially the one about scuffed balls. I would like to know the data on water balls. There is a lot of information/misinformation out there concerning time in water and its effect on the ball. 5 mins? 1 day? 1 week? 1 month? I know players that will play without issue and others that won’t touch one that they didn’t just hit. Thanks!

      Reply

      Kuso

      1 month ago

      I replied to the other one about water –
      I would play my ball if I find it right away in that lake, but if it’s a ball that was “marinated” over night and soaked for a day, I will not

      Reply

      Gord Forman

      1 month ago

      All golf all coverings are impervious and being under water for any length of time cannot alter their characteristics.

      Reply

      James

      1 month ago

      As soon as I read this it made me think about the MGS video I saw on TikTok this morning where Adam is talking about how Titleist golf balls are by far the best he’s ever tested, and that it’s not even close. Predictably, the comments turned into a mix of “You’re obviously being paid by Titleist to say this,” and “AcKShuLLy…Brand [X] is better and only costs $20/dozen.” I don’t even use Pro V1’s ( Maxfli Tour X), yet I will be the first one to tell someone that the Pro V1 series is the best, hands down. 70+% of professional golfers don’t all use Titleist golf balls because they’re being paid…they use them because they are the best. Callaway, Srixon, TaylorMade, et al make great balls too – but Titleist is in another universe.

      Reply

      Kuso

      1 month ago

      So YOU must work for Titleist huh? 😂
      No, Titleist balls are not in another universe, that is a silly thing to say, don’t you think? 😂
      If it’s in another universe, what is everybody doing then? Where are they existing?

      Reply

      Mr Ed

      1 month ago

      Relax mustache……

      Mike E

      1 month ago

      The video explains clearly about best perfomance and best quality control over time, he literally mentions other companies coming on top on some years, but over time titleist is way ahead of everyone else.

      Yer face

      1 month ago

      I swore by TP5s for a long time. They go further for my swing than a proV1x, and they spin more too but not left/right too much to handle. Then one day I read about Bryson’s trick where he floats all his balls in Epsom salt and finds the balance point and marks it so that his ball is rolling “end over end” every time. I started doing it with my TP5s, and some of them had MASSIVE imbalances. I posted my findings to reddit, and more than a few people there were like “yeah… that’s why you just buy Titleist…”

      So…

      I did. I bought 3 dozen Yellow -prov1x balls and dropped them four at a time into my tub of Epsom salt water. I couldn’t find a heavy point on any of them. Not ONE out of three dozen. Ever since then, unless I’m slumming it and playing whatever of the big 5 I can find in the woods (ironically, usually a Titleist, although in white and not the left dash which I’m a huge fan of now that I’ve had them), I will spend the money for the Titleist. Their durability is unmatched too… I would have to scrap a TP5 every 12 holes or so from the cover being cut, whereas I’ve made it 80-something holes with the same -proV1x and it was still just as pristine when it sailed into the woods as when she came out of the box. I looked for that ball for 10 minutes and I’m not ashamed of it lmao.

      I very much like the new chrome Tour X and I haven’t done much experimenting with it yet (it’s more expensive than the -proV1x so I’m sort of afraid of what I’ll find…) but the hype around Titleist is a lot more than just hype.

      Jon

      1 month ago

      If I’m not mistaken the tech that has been developed through the left dash ball has made its way into the Pro v1x. In my opinion the V1x has become a superior ball to the V1.

      Reply

      Hans Knudsen

      1 month ago

      I very often get asked by customers how many layers a certain model has. They often believe that the more layers a ball has, the better it is.
      Not sure where this got starter, but it might have been when Taylor introduced their 5-piece ball

      Reply

      Willie T

      1 month ago

      Great article on what are seen as pretty much the top 5 ball myths. Water logged balls – used balls – found balls – these have been discussed before. Here’s a one that I’ve got some playing partners that swear by – “once even slightly scuffed a ball is no longer playable, that the areodynamics have been adversely affected to the point the ball cannot be played”. All that to say – how scuffed is “too” scuffed….

      Reply

      Kuso

      1 month ago

      I would play the ball I hit into the water if I find it right away, but I will definitely not play it if a ball has been soaking over night.
      Like everything else in life, an overnight “curing” or “marinade” will definitely affect golf balls.

      Reply

      Mike

      1 month ago

      Overnight? One night? No, it won’t.

      League Golfer

      1 month ago

      You have to hit some pretty badly damaged balls alongside your regular ball sometime when you are playing alone or with other guys who are wondering the same thing. I don’t like to play any golf ball where I can see or feel the scuff, but I don’t think it makes nearly the difference we think it does. One of my tests I hit a very good drive for me, and since I had just found a golf ball with the cover cut all the way through, with a flap of cover about a half inch long and sticking up about an eight of an inch. I was going to throw it in the garbage since it was “litter” on the course, but I hit it instead. I put the flap pointed on the front of the ball toward my target, the center of the fairway and hit it the same as my really good, straight drive, and to my amazement, it flew the same and ended up about four yards shorter. Same quality contact, and just a little bit of difference, and on 235 yard drive, with a golf ball that was truly garbage in any persons opinion. So, I don’t think very minor scuffs make much difference, yet I still won’t play golf balls with even the smallest of scuffs.

      Reply

      jjgolf

      1 month ago

      I sometimes think “perform” is the incorrect word. Maybe the better word is “preference.” If you look at the biggest names within the top brands (pro v, chrome soft, tp5) they are all reasonably well made balls but they absolutely have a different feel. I like a little “click” and so while the chrome soft is a good ball, it doesn’t give me that feedback, so I play something else. But I bet if all the other companies had no product to sell and I HAD to game the chrome soft, I would eventually adjust to the sound difference and score similarly to what I normally game.
      Do I think Tiger (top pros) might shoot a couple shots better with the ball he prefers? Absolutely… but that same skilled tour pro could take the Callaway supersoft 2 piece ball and still shoot a great score.

      Reply

      Kuso

      1 month ago

      No, that pro would definitely not shoot a great score with a supersoft

      Reply

      League Golfer

      1 month ago

      The pro would still shoot a great score with any decent two piece Surlyn golf ball. They would only lose some advantage on short sided pitches or chips, shots out of green-side bunkers and fairway shots to pins tucked behind bunkers. They would readily adapt to the little bit of extra runout on all their other shots into the green. Myself and friends shoot in the 70s on the hardest public course in our section of our state using Surlyn covered two piece balls and we are not that great, we are just pretty good amateur golfers with single digit handicaps. The pros are truly great and would shoot almost the same scores every round. They might shoot one to three shots higher, depending on the course, its length, and the firmness of the greens. Trust me.

      Kuso

      1 month ago

      No, that is a completely bogus statement you just made.
      I dare you to grab a Tour player to go play with you on a regulation , PGA Tour course in tournament conditions that are 7400 yards and greens running at stimp of minimum 12 using that no spin soft ball. Say, TPC Scottsdale or Riviera, in their normal, normal, dried out conditions. For them to shoot a GREAT score? Not going to happen. You are totally misguided on what balls do

      FakeRichGuy

      1 month ago

      There are a lot of rumors that many of the balls are all made at the same factories and just stamped differently.

      Fact or fiction? I honestly don’t know.

      Reply

      Jimmy

      1 month ago

      That’s a bit of an oversimplification. The DTC balls are made at a few different factories. MGS did a piece a few months ago where they outlined their best educated guesses on where each is manufactured.

      https://mygolfspy.com/news-opinion/where-are-golf-balls-made/

      Reply

      WiTerp50

      1 month ago

      You can add David Farraty for promoting the myths from the Kutcher family to boom the ball. As a slower swinger I have yet to find a ball better than the Pro-V1x. I could try DTC balls to save money and it likely won’t change my handicap. My losses are low enough that the $2 per ball won’t buy me another beer each round. I am certain that the next ball played is the last one found is detrimental to anyone especially in short game performance. What ball you play on every shot matters is not a myth.

      Reply

      WYBob

      1 month ago

      Myth: Yellow (or colored) balls perform exactly like their white counterparts. MGS has proven that there is a difference (albeit small) between the two. It would be an interesting test to see the effect different cover “paints” have on ball performance. For example, do all white paints perform similarly, or are there differences between the choices the various manufacturers make? On another note, when are we going to start to see more ball labs? It’s been 4 months since the last one, and it was the only one since June 1st. There have been new offerings from the major OEMs in 2024 that could be candidates for evaluation. IMHO Ball Lab is a real value to your MGS audience.

      Reply

      Rollin

      1 month ago

      I’m liking the Vice Pro Plus today. Tried a lot of mid range priced premium balls and impressed with the Vice feel and distance. Seems a good fit for my mid range swing.

      Reply

      JJ

      1 month ago

      Am loving the Vice Pro. I had been alternating between Pro-V1 and Vice Pro and the difference is almost negligible;PV1 holds slightly better but for a 10 hc like me, largely indiscernible. For$29 less a dozen, the Vice is a great value.

      Reply

      Scott

      1 month ago

      I agree with the other Scott that there’s a stigma around DTC balls – but its the same stigma as every second tier and DTC pieces of golf equipment: if the pros are visibly using it, then it must not be that good. Pros will use a lot of equipment if they’re paid enough and MGS has proven that just because a company can or will pay pros to use their equipment doesn’t mean its better – or couldn’t be better suited for us. All it really does is jack up the price for we consumers.

      Until companies stop selling the crap golf balls out there (looking at you, refurbished and 2-piece “distance” balls) and golfers quit buying them, the pattern won’t stop. I can’t generally ask for golf balls as a gift anymore because there’s the possibility that a well-intentioned person might buy me crap. I swear a couple times a year I’m asked what kind of golf balls I use suspecting its for gifting but that $40-55 box isn’t what the giver is thinking LOL

      Reply

      Jeff

      1 month ago

      Yeah, Companies have outpriced golf balls. In Canada, a mid-quality ball hardly ever goes under $45. If we add taxes, well, that’s over 50 bucks. No wonder I can’t afford to buy a golf shirt at my pro shop until they go on sale at the end of the season.

      Reply

      tim brackett

      1 month ago

      ok so that last part really intrigues me… ‘The difference is that while you may not realize the ball is the reason you just hit your driver OB (sometimes it is the ball), the best golfers in the world will.’
      my question is this, i guess a fitting is the way to find this out, right? how could i know if i’d be more accurate with the prov1 versus the x? or, in an roi way, is there a much cheaper ball out there that performs much the same, with maybe just 5 yards of distance lost? wouldn’t you need a pretty large sample size to figure all of this out? could the best fitters out there look at my swing data from 10 swings and say with certainty what ball i should use versus a less expensive ball with very similar performance? its all very technical and even though you spell it out pretty well here, there still isn’t a good formula for the average golfer to pick out a ball. i could go play tomorrow and shoot a 79 with a dtm $26/dz ball because i’m swinging well but then go out the next day and shoot a 90 with a prov1 and have the impression that the prov1 is not for me, when in fact, i just had a bad day. it would be awfully nice to know that i could plug in my data points and get a recommendation and reasoning of what ball i should play to get the best results on any given day. it would be nice to not be questioning that all the time. that’s really all we want out here!!!

      Reply

      Pete

      1 month ago

      I get Pro v1x free,so It doesn’t hurt so much when I lose one.

      Reply

      CJR

      1 month ago

      (Possible) Myth: Used/found balls will perform the same as new balls as long as there are no deep gouges/scratches in the cover. I believe this is a myth because balls absorb moisture over time, but that might not be as much of a problem with newer ball tech. Would be interested to see the latest takes on this!

      Reply

      Chopper

      1 month ago

      Living in the Pacific Northwest and playing 240+ rounds a year with a 6 index I use predominately balls found in the many water hazards on my home course. In my experience if a ball has not been submerged for a considerable period of time there is very little if any drop off in performance.

      Reply

      Kuso

      1 month ago

      Part of the myth comes from people buying repainted knock-offs that they sometimes comes across

      Reply

      Marc St-Jean (Crazy Canuck)

      1 month ago

      What about soft vs hard compression when putting? Softer balls are slower and tend to curve more vs harder balls tend to roll faster and curve less.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      1 month ago

      I’ll give you a myth that’s NOT a myth: “keep your head down”.

      That is stellar advice, but it’s NOT meant literally. It’s because of golf’s “feel ain’t real” dynamic. You should *feel* like you’re keeping your head down so that you stay down *through impact*, but not all the way to finish. By *feeling* like you need to keep your head down, you won’t peek, you’ll stay down in the shot longer, through impact, and NOT lose your posture/tush line too early.

      Reply

      Duffer1

      1 month ago

      Agree with this. Often read “don’t worry about it” but at the same time rotating head/body by peeking too early is a killer. When I try to ” watch the impact” results are much better.

      Reply

      Titleist Sales Rep

      1 month ago

      Another golf ball myth: It is better to swap out balls for a lower-tier ball when hitting over water.

      In fact, I recommend breaking out a brand-new premium ball when faced with water to instill in you confidence.

      Reply

      Scott

      1 month ago

      I think another myth is that DTC balls are inferior. I’ve been a Snell user for years and they are on par with any of the “Premium” balls. Can’t understand why anyone pays $60+ for a dozen balls these days when you can Snell, Vice, Maxili, etc. for less than half that price.

      Reply

      geohogan

      1 month ago

      Concur, Snell golf balls are best of all worlds.

      Reply

      ClarkWGriswoldIII

      1 month ago

      MrHogan

      1 month ago

      100%

      atxrich

      1 month ago

      UGH— I got 2 dozen MTB Prime X balls and the covers scuffed so quick, I swore I would never buy another Snell ball again.

      Reply

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