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Cobra

Cobra King Wedge Wedge

Tour Grind202548°-60°

The Cobra King Wedge in the 2025 Tour Grind is the short-game club Cobra built for players who shape shots instead of just pointing and swinging. It's forged, which you feel the moment the ball comes off the face on a half-wedge. The strike is soft, the feedback is honest, and a thin one tells you about it right away. That's the trade every better player makes, and this wedge is aimed squarely at them.

The loft range runs from 48 all the way to 60 degrees, and the spread tells a story. You get single options at the gap lofts of 48, 50, and 52, then Cobra doubles and triples up at 54, 56, 58, and 60. Those repeats aren't a typo. They're separate grind and bounce combinations at the same loft, so a 56 or a 58 comes in more than one sole configuration depending on how you deliver the club and what turf you play. Progressive lofts also mean the design shifts as loft climbs, keeping gapping tight through the set.

This is not a game-improvement wedge, and it doesn't pretend to be. There's no oversized cavity bailing you out on a fat strike. What you get instead is a compact tour shape, versatile bounce options, and the kind of turf interaction that rewards a golfer who opens the face and hits the shot the lie is asking for.

Cobra King Wedge Wedge: Key Specs

Category
Tour Grind
Loft range
48 to 60 degrees
Loft/grind options
14
Model year
2025
MSRP
$139.99

Available Variants

LoftBounceGrindFinish
48°10°VChrome
50°10°VChrome
52°12°DChrome
52°10°VChrome
54°12°DChrome
56°7°WChrome
56°12°DChrome
56°10°VChrome
58°7°TChrome
58°8°VChrome
58°10°DChrome
60°10°DChrome
60°8°VChrome
60°7°TChrome

Loft and bounce are nominal values. Actual specifications may vary.

Technology

ForgedProgressive Lofts

About the Cobra King Wedge

The Tour Grind sole is the heart of this wedge. Cobra relieves the heel and toe so you can lay the face open for flops and greenside touch shots without the leading edge riding up off the ground. Square it up for a full swing and there's enough bounce to keep the club from digging, which matters most in the 56 and 58 lofts where the majority of your greenside work happens. Because several of those lofts ship in more than one grind, you can fit the sole to your steepness and your course conditions rather than settling for one compromise shape. Forged construction does more than sound good on a spec sheet. The softer feel gives you a clearer sense of where the strike landed on the face, which is exactly the information a skilled player uses to control spin and trajectory. Progressive lofts tie the set together, adjusting the head design as you move up so the gap wedges swing like scoring clubs and the lob wedges behave like precision tools around the green.

Who Should Play the Cobra King Wedge?

  • Low to mid handicappers who make consistent contact and want feedback rather than forgiveness from a wedge
  • Players who open the face for flops, bunker shots, and touch shots and need heel and toe relief to do it cleanly
  • Anyone building a matched wedge setup from a 48 gap wedge through a 60 lob wedge with tight, progressive gapping
  • Golfers who want to fit sole grind and bounce to their turf and swing, since 54, 56, 58, and 60 come in multiple options

Other Years

2019

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are there multiple 56, 58, and 60 degree options in the King Wedge lineup?

Those repeated lofts are different grind and bounce configurations, not duplicates. A 56 or 58 might come in a lower bounce version for firm turf and shallow swingers and a higher bounce version for soft conditions or a steeper attack. Picking the right one is the whole point of the Tour Grind, so it's worth getting fit rather than guessing.

Is the 2025 Cobra King Wedge forged, and does that matter?

Yes, it's forged. For a wedge that mostly comes down to feel and feedback. Forged carbon steel gives you a softer sensation at impact and a clearer read on where the ball struck the face, which helps you control spin and flight on partial shots. It won't add distance, but it makes touch shots easier to judge.

What does Tour Grind mean on this wedge?

Tour Grind refers to the sole shape. Cobra grinds material away from the heel and toe so the leading edge stays close to the ground when you open the face. That gives you versatility for flops, bunker shots, and shots off tight lies, with enough bounce left in the middle to keep the club from digging on square-faced full swings.

What loft should I choose for a gap wedge?

The 48, 50, or 52 degree options work as gap wedges depending on the pitching wedge in your set. If your pitching wedge is around 44 or 45 degrees, a 50 keeps your gapping even. Match the wedge loft to the club above it so you don't leave a hole in your distances through the bag.

Is the King Wedge a good fit for high handicappers?

It can work, but it's built for players who make solid contact. There's no cavity or extra forgiveness bailing out a fat or thin strike, so a high handicapper who struggles with consistent contact may score better with a more forgiving wedge. If your short game is a strength and you want shotmaking versatility, it's a fair choice.

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