
Usually when we do a golf-ball test or sit down to pull apart new gear for Fully Equipped, it’s just Jake Morrow and I nerding out and acting as the guinea pigs. We spend our time traveling to OEM facilities across the country, testing the latest gear ourselves and then talking about the deep technical details on the podcast or analyzing data for our Fully Fit series. We track spin axis, efficiency metrics and landing angles until our eyes go blurry. It’s a pure gearhead echo chamber.
But for this session, we wanted to get away from all that. We wanted to see how a real ball-fitting actually impacts guys who play the game for fun —the everyday player.
So we headed out to the practice tee on a crisp Tuesday morning at Lake Merced Golf Club in California, set up a launch monitor and brought along four normal golfers. These guys represent a true cross-section of amateur golf. They play a ton, sure, but they don’t spend their late nights reading up on core compressions, mantle layers or cover formulations.
To help us make sense of it all, we had Tony, an expert from Titleist’s ball-fitting team — this dude is amazing, by the way — help us walk the guys through the mobile fitting app to show us exactly how to optimize a player’s flight windows by tracking real shots.
The philosophy of the fitting
But before watching the guys hit a single shot, we need to talk about the core philosophy here. It’s a concept I preach until I’m blue in the face: you must build your golf bag around your golf ball, not the other way around. Think about it. The ball is the single piece of equipment you use on literally every single stroke during a round. Putters get benched, drivers are used sparingly, but the ball is always there. Yet, most amateurs treat it like an afterthought. They’ll dig out whatever random, scuffed-up sleeve is sitting at the bottom of their bag, or they’ll buy a dozen based entirely on a commercial they saw during a major championship.
Tony started our guys on a hitting progression that looks exactly like what pros do on the PGA Tour. Instead of letting them rip drivers to chase big ball speed numbers and long-drive bragging rights, the Titleist system forces you to work backwards.
We started small. Half-wedge pitch shots from about 50 yards. Then we moved to full pitching wedges, transitioned into mid-irons and finally let them hit the big stick. Throughout the whole process, Tony was looking closely at three specific things: peak height, total spin rate, and descent angle. The goal isn’t about finding an extra 5 yards on that one perfect, flushed strike you hit every three rounds. Good fittings are about damage control. They’re about raising your floor. If we can fix your mediocre swings and slight mishits so they still carry the bunker and hold the green, your scores will drop instantly.
Meet the testers
CJ McDonald (11 handicap)
CJ is your classic mid-handicap amateur. He showed up already playing the standard Pro V1, a choice he made simply because he likes a soft feel around the greens. He’s got a pretty reliable swing, but when his timing gets a little sloppy, his typical miss is a weak block that leaks out to the right. During the testing, CJ’s baseline numbers were actually incredibly efficient. He showed great height control across the board, and the app confirmed something rare: he was already playing the right ball for his swing.
Matt Hegerty (2 handicap)
Matt is a serious player. He relies entirely on natural feel and still plays fairways, irons and wedges that are easily 10 years old. He flushes it, but he naturally hits a very low, piercing line drive. His main goal for the session was finding a way to get his iron shots higher in the air without having to change his actual swing mechanics. His data put him right on a razor’s edge between two completely different models, showing just how much ball construction can alter a player’s landing conditions. He is someone I can’t wait to get to TPI for a full bag fitting (his whole life will change).
Chris Mullin (15 handicap)
The basketball Hall of Famer joined us on the tee, playing to a 15 handicap. Chris openly admitted that his historical method for picking a golf ball was just making sure it didn’t have mud on it before he teed it up. He’s incredibly athletic and creates a ton of speed, but his delivery can be erratic, which leads to wildly different launch windows. Watching his ball flight change on the monitor was a massive wake-up call for him regarding how much the right ball can salvage a mishit.
Carl Bergstrom (6.5 handicap)
Carl is a strong single-digit handicap who naturally creates powerful, dynamic impact conditions. He came out looking for a way to tighten his dispersion and find a more predictable carry distance, especially with his long irons and woods. A higher spinner of the golf ball, he can easily cause a ball to balloon and stall in the wind. Carl’s data was a perfect example of using equipment to cut down excessive spin without losing short-game control.
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The performance wins of the day
Truth be told, the knowledge gained by all these guys was the biggie. Most golfers don’t pay that much attention to the ball. Whether these testers went from the wrong ball to the right one or were already in a good spot or anything in between, they all now have a deep understanding of who they are on the golf course and where they could go by playing the right ball. If anyone really gained substantial performance in terms of numbers, in was Matt Hegerty, who is already a 1-2 handicap. He hits nothing but knee-highs fastballs with the longer clubs, and swapping into the Pro V1x or Pro V1x Left Dash, he immediately found the peak height he so desperately needed. He’s now created new opportunities for himself on the golf course. Bunkers he stayed away from he can now carry, and back pins he was scared of can now be attacked.
Breaking down the Titleist premium lineup
To understand why these flights change so drastically, you have to ignore the marketing fluff and look strictly at how these balls are built. The standard Titleist Pro V1 is a three-piece ball engineered for a mid-launching trajectory and mid-spin across the bag. It has the softest feel of the three options. It’s built for the player who wants a penetrating flight that cuts cleanly through crosswinds while keeping that classic, responsive click around the putting surface.
The Titleist Pro V1x is a four-piece construction with a specialized dual core. This ball is explicitly designed to fly higher and spin more than the standard Pro V1 on full shots. It’s the perfect answer for players who need physical help getting the ball up into the air, or guys who need extra spin to stop their irons on firm, fast greens.
Then you have the Titleist Pro V1x Left Dash. This one is a bit of a unicorn. It uses the same four-piece dual-core structure as the standard X, but the performance profile is completely flipped. Left Dash is built to fly high but spin remarkably low in the long game, and it feels noticeably firmer off the face. It’s a specialized tool for high-speed players or heavy spinners who want a towering launch window but need to keep their spin from ballooning out of control.
At the end of the day, our morning at Lake Merced proved ball fittings aren’t just for guys playing on TV. When you find the specific model that optimizes your launch windows and descent angles, you gain total control over your flight. And elite golf, no matter your handicap, is all about ball control.
My conclusions
The golf ball is king. It’s just that simple. I don’t care how good your clubs are, if the ball is wrong your game will never be great. I can make a bad set good with the right ball, but I can’t make a bad ball good with the right set.






