Iron heads arranged at The Golf Station

The Experience

What happens in a session?

Equipment decisions get made with data, not inventory. We assess your swing, your clubs, and your ball flight before recommending anything.

Before you arrive

No handicap required

A lot of golfers wait because they think they need to fix their game before getting fit. We see it the other way. A good fitting is part of how you find out what actually needs to change.

Bring what you already play.

  • Current set of clubs
  • Any questions you might have for your fitter/instructor

Why most fittings fail

Surface-level specs don't solve delivery problems.

At most fitting centers you'll get the same routine: measure your height and wrist-to-floor, put you in “standard specs,” have you hit a few clubs, pick the one with the best numbers.

They'll adjust specifications. And none of it addresses the actual problem.

Our Philosophy

What makes a TGS fitting different

01

Assessment Before Recommendation

We measure everything before we change anything. Your clubs, your delivery, your ball flight, and your goals all inform what comes next.

02

A Fitting Becomes a Lesson

You can't separate equipment from delivery. Your fitting reveals what your swing is doing and what your equipment needs to support it — which inevitably means instruction enters the conversation.

03

Built and Verified In-House

Every club we recommend gets built and validated by the same team that fitted you. No drift between recommendation and execution.

04

No Inventory Pressure

We're not a retail operation with inventory targets. If your equipment is appropriate, we'll confirm that. Every recommendation serves your performance, not our sales objectives.

Measurement & Assessment

Numbers tell us what, you tell us why

Every swing has a story that data alone can't tell; we utilize industry-leading technology to optimize the relationship between player and club.

Every club is evaluated to determine how its build influences performance, consistency, and ball flight.

The most important details aren't found in a single swing, but in the patterns that repeat over time.

Ball flight provides a clear picture of how effectively the player and club are working together.

Your typical ball flight, your goals, and your playing context matter. Numbers only help when they answer the right question.

What a Fitting Looks Like

The session,
step by step

  1. I

    Baseline

    We document your starting point — club specs, ball flight, miss tendencies, delivery mechanics. This reveals what's working and what's forcing compensation.

  2. II

    Watching your ball flight

    A few swings in, the ball flight paints the picture. We observe delivery mechanics, force-plate data, and how your body interacts with your setup.

  3. III

    Reading your equipment

    We measure your clubs against your delivery, identifying where equipment supports your swing and where it forces compensation.

  4. IV

    The recommendation

    We tell you precisely what needs to change and what doesn't. That might be new equipment, specific modifications, or instruction to address delivery mechanics first.

  5. V

    Built in-house, verified before you take it

    If we recommend new equipment, it's built in-house to the exact specifications determined in your fitting. No variance between recommendation and delivery.

Where fitting and instruction meet

Some problems are equipment. Some are swing. We'll identify the problem.

You can't separate equipment from delivery. Your fitting reveals what your swing is doing and what your equipment needs to support it — which inevitably means instruction enters the conversation.

Equipment can create compensation.

If a club does not fit your delivery, your swing may be adapting around it. That can make instruction chase the wrong issue.

Your swing can inhibit the clubs potential.

If the better answer is instruction, the fitting should be honest enough to say so. The point is not to sell a category. The point is to solve the right problem.

What you leave with

You leave with a clear directive.

That might be equipment modifications, new clubs, technical instruction, or the confirmation that your current setup is appropriate.

How your current bag is performing
What your swing is costing you
What should change now
What should not change
Whether fitting, instruction, or build, is the right next step
How to move forward without guessing.

Questions

Still deciding if this is for you?

Read the Full FAQ

No. You do not need to be better to get fit. The session helps us find out what is actually affecting your game.

No. Sometimes the answer is new equipment. Sometimes it is an adjustment, instruction, or keeping what already works.

They can be booked separately, but they are connected in how we think. A quality fitting needs to understand the swing, and quality instruction needs to understand the equipment.

Every miss has an answer, we'll find it

Book Your Session