Justin Thomas is one of the few true shotmaking artists left on the PGA Tour, so it makes sense that his tools are precisely crafted.
Thomas, who broke a nearly three-year-long winless drought at the RBC Heritage on Sunday, games a specific set of four Titleist Vokey Design SM10 wedges.
His wedge setup consists of SM10 46.10F (@ 47.5 degrees), 52.12F (@ 52.5), 56.14F (@ 57) and 60.04T (@ 60.5).
Why the unusual lofts? Because by weakening each wedge to a precise loft, down to a half-degree, Thomas gets the exact yardages he is seeking. I’m not saying every player needs to have their lofts dialed to half a degree, but throwing out the numbers on your clubs and making sure they carry the distance you need need them to fill is something you can definitely take advantage of in your own game.
“I’ve used four wedges since college,” Thomas told Titleist. “This is something I feel like it’s very important for me to have this area in my bag, and be very precise in terms of gapping. It’s not like I try to get 15 yards here or there, but it’s just more of I want to be able to feel like there’s not a yardage, say under 145 that I can’t hit with all my wedges, and I have full faith and trust in Vokey and AD to get me the bounces and everything that I need.”
Why does Thomas weaken all of his wedges as opposed to strengthen them? Because when you weaken a club, you add bounce, and when you strengthen, you take bounce away. And almost always, and especially with wedges, it’s key to add bounce rather than take it away to help with strike location.
Titleist Vokey SM10 Raw Custom Wedge
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Thomas uses either a 60T (which comes at 4 degrees of measured bounce) or 60K* (which doesn’t have a stated measured bounce, but starts as a 6-degree low bounce K grind) grinds for his lob wedge, so he adds only half a degree of loft — and therefore half a degree of bounce — to maintain a club that can cut through turf quickly off tight lies.
With his set of wedges at the RBC, Thomas gained more than six shots combined on approach and around the green, leading to his first win since the 2022 PGA Championship, in a playoff against Andrew Novak.
Thomas’ SM10 wedges feature optimized CG locations based on loft and new TX9 grooves, which are cut narrower and deeper on stronger lofted wedges and wider and shallower on the higher lofts. There are also five finishes and an industry-leading 27 loft/grind combinations to pick from, with four more Vokey WedgeWorks grinds available on Fairway Jockey as well.
If you order on Fairway Jockey, you can customize every spec down to the ferrule, meaning you can get your lofts and bounces dialed just like JT.
Want to dial your wedges for 2025? Find a club-fitting location near you at True Spec Golf.