Johnny Wunder
Xander Schaufelle does not take his fairway wood fittings lightly.
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Ed. note: This is Part 3 of a special six-part fitting series from the minds of the world’s most skilled club-fitters.
Previous installments: How to find the perfect golf ball | How the pros get dialed for their drivers
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For Part 3 of our Tour fittings series, I turned to the gear rep who taught me the most in my time on Tour: Kellen Watson of Callaway Golf.
Kellen oversees the bags of Jon Rahm, Xander Schauffele, Min Woo Lee, Blades Brown and a gaggle of others. His approach to fitting stems from years of experience as a rep, club builder, player and just generally having an intense love of equipment. His skill for shepherding his players bags has resulted in countless Tour wins and, since 2021 alone, four major championships: 2021 U.S. Open, 2023 Masters, 2024 PGA, 2024 Open.
So, yeah, the results speak for themselves.
For this assignment, I asked Kellen for his approach to fitting fairway woods. He did not disappoint. There is so much to learn here far beyond just fairway woods that it’s one of those explainers I’d encourage you to bookmark and revisit any time you’re in the market for a new stick.
Enjoy!
My Approach to Fairway Wood Fittings
By Kellen Watson, Sr. Tour Performance Representative, Callaway Golf
Every proper fairway wood fitting begins with the consultation process, which sometimes takes longer than the fitting itself. What are you looking for? What are your needs? What purpose should this metal wood serve?
In some cases, I find myself fitting a player for something that has a singular purpose, but in others — like with Xander, for example — the goal is to find a versatile club that travels with him everywhere. That means a fairway wood that attacks longer par-5s and also is a weapon off the tee when driver is too much. With my players, the consultation process begins only when one of their clubs isn’t performing or their bag is lacking harmony and needs an immediate tune up.
There is no finer feeling for a fitter than when a player can take the clubs off the plane, roll into an event that requires a higher lofted 3-wood to hit in four crucial places each round and know they already have that club at their disposal based on the work we have done. The bag is set early in the year and rarely changes. Their pool of clubs usually includes 16, 17 or 18 options, which should cover every need at every Tour stop. It’s chess, not checkers, and being wise beats being smart.
These are the kinds of questions we’ll ask a player during the fitting and testing process:
—What do we want this fairway wood to do?
—Are we hitting this on tight par-4s off the tee?
—Is this being played off the ground 70% of the time?
—Are you considering the long par-3 on the back 9?
—The 4-iron is spot on, but is the gap between that and the 3-wood still an issue?
These questions aren’t answered only by the player but also the caddie. Ultimately, it’s the player who will be looking at this metal wood at address and starting the backswing, but the caddie, if experienced, already will know the course and any changes that may have been made. Simultaneously, the coach, if well versed in equipment and how to process feedback, also will be an asset in finding a solution before, during or post testing.
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GOLF Editors
Last but certainly not least, taking on board historic data from the player is also key, along the lines of these kinds of nuggets:
—“This 3-wood I had in high school was amazing.”
—“I’ve always played a 2 iron.”
—“This shaft was my favorite, but didn’t work in my driver.”
—“I hit his club, and…”
The foreword is complete! Now, we’re ready to look at “real time” decisions and strategy.
I. What role(s) will this club play?
1. Tee club
2. Short/tight course
3. Right to left tee club for a player who cuts driver
4. Par-5 club
5. 50/50: Great launch off the deck with a drawing pattern off the tee/layup yardage
6. Par-3 club
7. 3 iron/UT replacement?
8. Hybrid replacement?
II. What characteristics/aesthetics are important?
1. Deep face
2. Shallow face
3. Smaller head
4. Contrast of top line to body
5. Scoring lines
—Full scoring lines
—Sharpie the scoring lines to hide the loft that we have decided on while making said head look open at address
6. Face angle
—“I want to see loft”
—“Please filet that open”
—”I need it to be Square”
7. Lie angle
—Flat (Start Right)
—Up (Start Left)
—Love everything else upright, but if it looks flatter it will be easier to hit a cut into par 5s and I can turn anything over.
—I struggle so much with metal woods when they match my iron lie. If it looks upright/flat, it will trick my mind into playing the shot called for IE player reacting
8. Aiming icon
—I need that thing on top to feel where middle is
—Clean slate
III. What shaft is going to best satisfy all the needs?
1. Weight
—Typically a touch heavier than the driver shaft, but nothing suggests that this common assertion is best.
—In more lofted cases, we reference the UT iron (if played), iron shafts, swing mechanics and pair these with the dynamics of the head
2. Handle feel
—The stiffness, or lack thereof, of a handle can match up to a player’s feel, whilst providing the performance needed
—What seems to be the feel that the player likes in the iron shafts he plays
3. Mid section
—Do we want something uber stable in the middle to mitigate drooping and deflection on the vertical plane
—Do we want to cause drooping to center hit location based on CG of head
4. Tip feel
—Active tip for added spin and ball speed
—Stable tip to match iron feel
—Goldilocks tip to make club a reliable unicorn
5. Tip-to-butt relationship
—Do we want a shaft that launches, but doesn’t spin too much
6. Historic data
—Reference above
7. Swing Pattern similarities
—Every swing is a snowflake, but the striking resemblances of swing patterns allow the fitter to recall what has worked for others and possibly add this to the matrix for testing
8. Player Input: “I use this one in my driver, could you build me a 3 wood with this shaft?”
—OK
—This could work
—The driver swing is drastically different than the metal wood swing
—You’re asking to draw this 3 wood, but you hit beautiful cuts with driver
—You want this to land on the green like a butterfly with sore feet, but your driver goes knee high to a grasshopper
9. Length: Most important piece here is how far do you want this to go?
Fitting case study: Xander Schauffele
Xander plays what some call a “high lofted 3-wood” and others call a “4-wood.” This was an adjustment we made a few years ago as he continued to get faster. The 4-wood fits him perfectly because a traditional 3-wood is too fast (175+ ball speed) and doesn’t launch nearly high enough for him. So we have to add speed limitations in his build, which you will see below.
Xander’s common denominator in his swing: a huge pull of the shaft handle while maintaining a stable face. He can move the ball either way with the whole bag, but again, his 4-wood has its roles.
What Xander needed
1. We need a club that can be hit off the tee most places with cut or draw and a great spin number
2. We need this club to be used off the ground on “go for it” par-5s where the statistics say “push it closer to the green” with a great launch and spin number to hold firm greens
3. We like a clean slate on the top with a bit deeper face IE Triple Diamond
4. We like the ease of the cut with this club, so we love a slightly open face angle
5. We’re flat (lie angle) across the board in most cases as well as weaker in loft
6. We’re still fast…with everything
7. We’re going to go heavier shaft wise to slow the ball speed down, we don’t want this club to compete with his driver
Where we landed
1. Elyte Triple Diamond 3 HL 16.5
Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond Custom Fairway Wood
FEATURES & BENEFITS
Penetrating Flight With Low Spin
The compact shape and deeper face of the Triple Diamond fairway wood allow players to shape shots with ease and control.
A forward weight screw promotes a lower spin rate and a more piercing ball flight for added workability.
All New Tungsten Speed Wave for consistently fast ball speeds
Featured on the 3-7 wood, the new Tungsten Speed Wave is a 35g weight that positions mass low and forward to promote fast ball speeds.
This new, innovative design is engineered specifically to enhance misses low on the face.
Ai 10x Face for Optimal Launch and Tight Downrange Dispersion
Our most advanced Ai face to date, the new Ai10x Face delivers 10x more control points than the Ai Smart Face.
Designed with our C300 Face cup to produce exceptionally fast ball speeds, tight dispersion, and optimized launch across the face.
View Product
2. He loves the Mitsubishi Diamana PD in his driver so we just crank up the weight to SLOW it down
3. Weaker handle allows him to pull that shaft through impact without fear of it catching up and shutting down the face
4. Let’s go a touch shorter than standard length to mitigate distance and spin, he’s going to be down in attack on this so shorter will feel more connected
5. He likes a touch the lie flatter….let’s go a touch flatter, if hit location goes toe-ward, we can dial that back
6. In Triple Diamond, we have a lower spinning head with a touch of open clubface at impact. If need be, we subtract some of the sole weight and add it internally in the back to promote face closure
7. We’re going to sort for our highest lofted 3HL and then bend a degree strong leaving us around 15.5 ish loft
8. We maintain loft with an open clubface
Notes from Xander’s testing process
1. First shot – great starting line, great pattern downrange; sound is off so we add 2 grams of internal glue (hot melt) dead center on crown, anything on the crown will dampen sound
2. Second shot – great start, great pattern, better sound
3. Questions from Xander:
—”Major season is in our sites so it has to be perfect — is it? What do we know now that we didn’t before?”
—”Can we create an option that is better off the tee and do we really need a ‘par-5 club?’”
—“What do you think about a mini driver?” “You know better than me. Cook something up?”
—“This mini is pretty nice, but a small cut is a touch difficult.”
—“If we’re going to try the mini, can you build me a stronger UW to get closer in gapping?
—“There is too much manipulation that needs to happen to make this Mini work. Can we do a stronger TD?”
To finish, I build a “normal” 3-wood at “normal” 3-wood length for his tee-priority option, add another “weapon to the arsenal” but my player is ready to tackle any ball park on TOUR and I can rest easy. Now in the travel bag his fairway strategy looks like this. When the 3-wood goes in, a 21 (19.5 actual) degree UW goes in. When the 4-wood goes in, a 23 (20.7 actual) UW goes in. It’s all course dependent but at the end of the day he’s prepared, always.
Xander’s gamer fairway wood specs
3-wood: Elyte TD 15 (14.4, 57 lie)
Shaft: MCA Diamana PD 80TX (42.5 EOG, D1.7, Tipped 1.5)
4-wood: Elyte TD 16.5 HL (14.7, 57 lie)
Shaft: MCA Diamana PD 80TX (42.5 EOG, D1.7, Tipped 1.5)
Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond Custom Fairway Wood
FEATURES & BENEFITS
Penetrating Flight With Low Spin
The compact shape and deeper face of the Triple Diamond fairway wood allow players to shape shots with ease and control.
A forward weight screw promotes a lower spin rate and a more piercing ball flight for added workability.
All New Tungsten Speed Wave for consistently fast ball speeds
Featured on the 3-7 wood, the new Tungsten Speed Wave is a 35g weight that positions mass low and forward to promote fast ball speeds.
This new, innovative design is engineered specifically to enhance misses low on the face.
Ai 10x Face for Optimal Launch and Tight Downrange Dispersion
Our most advanced Ai face to date, the new Ai10x Face delivers 10x more control points than the Ai Smart Face.
Designed with our C300 Face cup to produce exceptionally fast ball speeds, tight dispersion, and optimized launch across the face.
View Product
Apex UW 21 (19.7, 57.3)
Shaft: MCA Diamana D+ 90TX (40.75 EOG, D3, Tipped 1.5)
Apex UW 23 (20.7, 57.3)
Shaft: MCA Diamana D+ 90TX (40.75 EOG, D3, Tipped 1.5)
To find the perfect fairway woods for your game, consult a fitter at your local True Spec Golf.
Johnny Wunder
Golf.com Editor
Johnny currently serves as the Director of Equipment at Golf.com, contributing to platforms like Fully Equipped Golf. Prior to this role, he was the Content Marketing Manager at Callaway Golf, where he led “Callaway Golf’s World of Wunder,” a platform dedicated to in-depth golf equipment content. Before joining Callaway, he was the Director of Original Content and host of “The Gear Dive” podcast at GolfWRX.com. Beyond his professional endeavors, Johnny is an avid golfer with a deep passion for the game, having played since his youth in Seattle, Washington.