Hitting a 7-Iron Is Not An Iron Fitting: Here’s What Data Shows

Here’s how most iron fittings go. You walk in, the fitter sets up a launch monitor and you hit five or six different 7-irons. Numbers come up on the screen. One iron looks better than the others. You buy that iron—in a full set—and you walk out thinking you’ve been properly fitted.

For that one club? At that one loft? You probably were.

The problem is you play six or seven different irons every round and the data shows very clearly that the club that wins at 7-iron doesn’t always win anywhere else in the bag. In some cases, it doesn’t come close.

When we do iron testing at MGS, we do it across 5-iron, 7-iron and pitching wedge. We looked at proximity to the hole, carry distance and Strokes Gained at every loft. What we found is that the rankings shift, sometimes dramatically, as you move through the set.

Getting closer to the pin depends on which iron you’re asking

Pin proximity is simple to understand. How many feet from the hole does the average shot finish? Lower is better. It’s one of the most direct measures of iron performance because it combines accuracy and distance control into a single number that every golfer can relate to.

When you chart proximity across the 5-iron, 7-iron and pitching wedge for every model in the players iron test, a clear pattern emerges.

Players Irons — Pin Proximity

Players Irons · Fig. 1
Pin Proximity Across the Set
Proximity in feet — lower is better. Hover any point to identify the model.
5 iron 7 iron PW
15 players iron models · proximity in feet from the hole · lower = tighter

The Apex Ai 150 ranks 12th in proximity at the 5-iron and 13th at the 7-iron and then climbs to second at the pitching wedge. The Titleist T150 ranks fifth at the 5-iron and second at the 7-iron, then falls to 13th at the PW.

The Tour Edge Exotics CB is worth calling out for the opposite reason. It ranks 13th at the 5-iron but comes all the way to first at the 7-iron and pitching wedge. That kind of turnaround across the set is exactly the type of information a proper multi-club fitting reveals.

The distance problem nobody talks about in a fitting

Carry distance in a fitting is usually treated as a single number. But the more interesting question is whether the carry distances across a full set are consistent and properly gapped. If a club that leads in carry at 7-iron drops to the middle of the field at 5-iron, you could have a gapping problem you’d never catch from a single-club test.

The Wilson Staff Model XB drops from ninth at 5-iron to 15th at PW and the Ballistic CB climbs from 13th at 5-iron to 8th at PW. In a full-set scenario, they translate to real gaps in your distances you can’t determine from swinging one club.

Players Irons — Carry Distance

Players Irons · Fig. 2
Carry Distance Across the Set
Carry in yards across 5-iron, 7-iron and PW. Crossing lines indicate where carry rankings shift. Hover any point to identify the model.
5 iron 7 iron PW
15 players iron models · carry in yards

Strokes Gained: Where the scoring iron matters most

Strokes Gained is the best scoring metric available for irons. It measures how much better or worse a club performs relative to the field average. A higher number is better. The absolute values matter less than the spread between clubs and where in the set that spread is widest.

What the data shows is that the SG spread is widest at the pitching wedge. The scoring end of the bag, where precision to the pin matters most, is where the biggest performance differences exist between iron models.

Players Irons — Strokes Gained

Players Irons · Fig. 3
Strokes Gained Across the Set
Higher is better. The spread between best and worst is widest at PW — where it matters most. Hover any point to identify the model.
5 iron 7 iron PW
15 players iron models · strokes gained · higher = better

The PING i240 is the standout in the SG data at PW, posting the highest Strokes Gained of any club in the scoring iron test. It sits dead last in the field at the 7-iron. A 7-iron fitting would give you no reason to prioritize it. The PW data tells you it could be the best scoring iron in the test.

The best players in the world know this

If you needed any further evidence that one iron model doesn’t optimally serve every loft in the bag, look at what the best players in the world are putting in play.

Roughly 70 percent of PGA Tour wins this season have come from players carrying combo sets. Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Collin Morikawa, Cameron Young and Matt Fitzpatrick all play combo sets. They’ve all independently arrived at the same conclusion: the best iron for your long game isn’t the best iron for your scoring game.

Morikawa, widely considered the best iron player on Tour, carries three different iron models. He has a driving iron, a mid-iron and a short iron model, each selected for what it does best at that point in the set. Cameron Young plays a T200 at 4-iron, a T100 at 5-iron and a prototype model from 6-iron down. These decisions are the result of testing irons across the full range and building accordingly.

Does the same hold true for game-improvement irons?

While the data above focuses on player’s irons, that’s not the only test we run. As a comparison, when you look at the game-improvement irons across the same three clubs, you’ll see the same issues.

The ONOFF Iron A.K.A. moves from 11th in proximity at the 5-iron all the way to first at the 7-iron before finishing third at the PW. The Titleist T350 ranks first at the 5-iron then drops to 11th at the 7-iron. The Stix Perform Series 2.0 sits 12th and 13th through the longer clubs then jumps to second at the pitching wedge. The ranking shifts in the GI test are every bit as significant as what we saw in the player’s irons which matters because game-improvement irons are marketed specifically on consistency and forgiveness. The data suggests that consistency doesn’t necessarily extend across the full set.

Game Improvement Irons — Pin Proximity

Game Improvement Irons · Fig. 4
Pin Proximity Across the Set
Same test, game improvement category. The ranking instability is just as present — in some cases more so. Hover any point to identify the model.
5 iron 7 iron PW
14 game improvement models · proximity in feet · lower = tighter

What an iron fitting should look like

A proper iron fitting should test a minimum of three clubs: a long iron, a mid iron and a scoring iron. Club rankings are not stable across the set and a 7-iron fitting only tells you which iron wins at one point in the middle.

You probably got a good result from your last fitting. The club you bought is likely the best 7-iron for your game. But there’s a reasonable chance the irons sitting in your bag right now are leaving shots on the table at the long end—where dispersion costs you distance and position—and at the scoring end where proximity to the pin is directly tied to your score.

The best players in the world have solved this by building sets that perform across the range. The data says the rest of us should be asking for the same thing.

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