Skip to main content

Titleist

Titleist Vokey SM10 Wedge

Tour Grind2026

The T Grind is the wedge Bob Vokey's tour staff reach for when the turf gets firm and the shots get creative. On the SM10, it's the lowest-bounce, most heavily relieved option in the lineup, a narrow crescent sole that lets a good player lay the face wide open without the leading edge ever sitting up off the ground. If you've watched a tour pro flop a ball off a tight lie and stop it on a dime, there's a decent chance a T Grind was doing the work.

This is not a beginner's wedge, and Titleist doesn't market it that way. The T Grind takes the heel, toe, and trailing edge off the sole so the club sits low and glides through firm ground, which is exactly what you want if you sweep the ball and take a shallow divot. Anyone who digs, plays soft turf, or needs the sole to bail them out on fat contact will fight this thing. It rewards clean strikes and precise angle of attack, nothing else.

The SM10 platform underneath is the strongest Vokey has built. A forward and progressive center of gravity tightens flight and improves feel, the Spin Milled grooves are cut and heat-treated for durability, and the grind menu covers everything from the wide-sole K to this, the surgical T. Get fit for the T Grind if you belong on it, and it's one of the most versatile short-game tools in golf.

Titleist Vokey SM10 Wedge: Key Specs

Category
Tour Grind
Model year
2026

Available Variants

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

About the Titleist Vokey SM10

The T Grind is defined by what Vokey removes rather than what he adds. The sole is ground narrow with significant camber from heel to toe and a shaved trailing edge, so effective bounce stays very low, around 4 degrees, even when you square it up. Open the face and that number climbs, which is the whole point: the sole exposes just enough bounce to skid instead of dig once you rotate it. It's a firm-condition, tight-lie grind first and foremost. SM10 pairs that sole with a progressive CG that sits higher in the lofted wedges and lower in the pitching options, so trajectory and spin stay consistent across the set. The grooves are cut to the maximum allowable dimensions for each loft, then given a proprietary heat treatment on the striking surface to hold spin longer as they wear. Available in Tour Chrome, Nickel, and the raw Jet Black finish, the T Grind is offered in the higher-loft sand and lob wedges where shotmaking matters most.

Who Should Play the Titleist Vokey SM10?

  • Better players with a shallow angle of attack who sweep the ball and take thin divots
  • Golfers who play firm turf, tight lies, and fast conditions where a wide sole bounces off the ground
  • Shotmakers who open the face constantly and want the leading edge to stay low through the shot
  • Low handicappers and tour-level players comfortable controlling bounce with their hands, not the sole

Other Years

2024

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the T Grind on the Vokey SM10 best for?

Firm turf, tight lies, and open-face shots around the green. It's the lowest-bounce grind in the SM10 lineup, with the heel, toe, and trailing edge relieved so a skilled player can lay the face wide open and still keep the leading edge tight to the ground. Think flop shots off hardpan, tucked pins on fast greens, and bunkers with firm, shallow sand.

How much bounce does the SM10 T Grind have?

Effective bounce sits around 4 degrees when the face is square, one of the lowest in the Vokey range. Because so much of the sole is ground away, opening the face adds bounce progressively, so you can dial in the amount you want by how far you rotate the club. Squared up, it's a low-bounce wedge through and through.

Is the T Grind too much wedge for a mid handicapper?

For most mid handicappers, yes. The T Grind assumes a clean, shallow strike and offers very little forgiveness on fat contact because there's so little sole to skid off the turf. If you dig, play soft ground, or aren't confident manipulating the face, the S, M, or K grind will serve you far better. The T is built for precise ball strikers.

What lofts is the SM10 T Grind available in?

Titleist offers the T Grind in the higher lofts where open-face shotmaking matters most, typically the 58 and 60 degree lob wedges and 54 and 56 degree sand wedges. It's not offered in the pitching and gap wedge lofts, since those play squarer and benefit from more bounce. Vokey's fitting chart maps each loft to the grinds that suit it.

How is the T Grind different from the M Grind in the SM10?

Both are versatile, open-face grinds, but the T is more extreme. The M Grind has a crescent sole with moderate low bounce that works across a range of conditions, while the T takes even more material off the heel and trailing edge for the firmest turf and the most aggressive face rotation. If the M feels close but you want lower still, the T is the next step down.

Ratings & Reviews

No ratings yet. Sign in to rate this club.

More Titleist Wedges

Find the right loft for your bag

Use the gap finder to see which loft combination fits your current set.

Open Gap Finder →