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Does The Vokey WedgeWorks 44F Solve Modern Golf’s Most Frustrating Equipment Problem?

March 4, 2025
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Something curious has been happening in golf equipment over the past decade. What once was a pitching wedge has quietly transformed into something else entirely—something stronger, longer and increasingly disconnected from the rest of your wedge setup.

While you weren’t looking, the humble 48-degree pitching wedge of yesteryear (or perhaps yore) morphed into a muscular 44-, 43- and, in some cases, 42-degree club that behaves more like a 9-iron with an identity crisis.

And that’s created a problem that wedge makers have failed to address until now.

Let me tell you a story

As much as I’ll defend well-engineered strong-lofted irons until my death, I’ve experienced some of the headaches they can cause.

Not long after I wrote this piece comparing set wedges to specialty wedges, I swapped out my set-matched pitching wedge for a 46-degree Vokey SM9. Not only did I prefer the look of the Vokey at address but it also gave me a flatter and spin-ier trajectory than I was getting from my set wedge.

I was happy (until I changed irons).

My new irons were a bit stronger and the gap between my 9-iron and PW was unmanageable.

When Titleist fitted me into the T350, we (the fitter and I) made the painful (more like painfully obvious) decision to swap my Vokey for the set-matched PW.

That fixed one problem and created another. The gap between my 9-iron and PW was perfect but the gap between my PW and GW was pushing 20 yards.

Long story short: we fixed one problem, created another and in the process took a club I really liked out of the bag.

This isn’t what winning looks like.

When SM10 launched, I swapped my 50-degree for a 48 and while that made for happy little gaps, I was still down a Vokey.

With the announcement of the Vokey WedgeWorks 44F, I’ve got options again and so do you.

WedgeWorks 44F – A new starting point

For years, Vokey’s wedge lineup started at 46 degrees with the F Grind, a perfectly sensible entry point if you’re playing Titleist’s T100 irons or most anything else within the player’s iron category. The transition from irons to wedges is seamless, the gapping immaculate.

But what if you’re swinging T150s with their 44-degree pitching wedge? Or T200 or (like me) T350 irons with 43-degree PWs? That first step into Vokey territory becomes a giant leap—and not the Neil Armstrong kind.

And so, for the sake of all mankind, with the WedgeWorks 44F, Vokey has finally addressed the problem.

“The Vokey 46 has been such a valuable club for so many, Tour players and amateurs alike,” said Vokey Tour Representative Aaron Dill. “With the lofts getting stronger in iron sets, we needed a lower-lofted head to avoid the sacrifices that came from strengthening a 46.”

Those sacrifices? More significant than you might think.

Why “just bend it” isn’t the answer

Why not just bend a 46? (you might ask)?

When you bend a wedge strong, you’re not just changing loft—you’re fundamentally altering the club’s DNA. The offset increases while the bounce decreases.

Most of us aren’t likely to notice a one-degree change but any more than that and you’re starting to mess with the playability of the design.

So, as modern golfers with jacked irons, what are we to do?

That’s where the Vokey WedgeWorks 44F enters the conversation and for those of us who prefer specialty wedges to their set-matched counterparts, it potentially changes everything about how you transition from irons to wedges.

Not just for average golfers

Lest you think this is just a problem for average hackers like me, I should point out that even Wyndham Clark struggled with this exact problem.

Clark needed wedges that would perform consistently in soft, grainy conditions.

“When a player doesn’t have enough bounce, often the vertical impact location can be higher up on the face,” explained Dill. “Wyndham was originally in 46.10F bent strong, which decreased bounce. In softer conditions, his strike would tend to be higher on the face than optimal.”

Clark tried the new 44F, albeit with a twist. He bent it (well, someone bent it for him) slightly weak to 45 degrees. This counterintuitive move increased bounce and decreased offset, delivering exactly what he needed.

“It gave him more bounce and helped keep his flight down, and we stayed in a profile that fit his eye,” said Dill. “It added confidence, as he knew he could aggressively strike the turf and trust that he would get the result he was looking for.”

Clark immediately put it in play at the Sentry to begin his 2025 season.

Bridging the gap

With 10 degrees of bounce (identical to the SM10’s 46.10F and 48.10F models), the WedgeWorks 44F maintains proper turf interaction while filling the gap in your set that those of us with stronger-lofted irons struggle with.

Sure, you can stick with your set-matched pitching wedge but those of us who prefer the specialty wedge approach finally have a viable option to replace our jacked pitching wedges.

Finish Options, Availability, Pricing

The WedgeWorks 44F is available now in Tour Chrome or Raw finish for both right- and left-handed golfers. As with all WedgeWorks offerings, you have extensive customization options including unique toe engravings and custom stamping.

The stock shaft is a True Temper Dynamic Gold S200. The stock grip is a Titleist Universal 360. Numerous alternative shafts and grips are available through custom.

At $225, it costs a bit more than an average wedge but I suppose that’s the cost of solving a problem (and replacing a bulky set wedge).

The Vokey WedgeWorks 44F is available through golf shops and Vokey.com.

The post Does The Vokey WedgeWorks 44F Solve Modern Golf’s Most Frustrating Equipment Problem? appeared first on MyGolfSpy.



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