Skip to main content

Wilson

Wilson Staff Model Wedge Wedge

Tour Grind202346°-60°

Wilson doesn't shout about its wedges the way the bigger brands do, and the Staff Model Wedge is proof they don't need to. This is a forged, tour-shaped wedge built for players who want feel and control over gimmicks. If you grew up idolizing clean blade profiles and thin toplines, this one looks right the second you set it behind the ball.

The 2023 Staff Model covers a wide loft spread, from 46 all the way up to 60 degrees, so you can build a full short-game set out of a single model instead of mixing a pitching wedge from your iron set with lob wedges from somewhere else. Every head uses the same tour grind, which keeps the sole behavior consistent as you move down through your bag. That predictability matters more than most golfers realize. When your 52 and your 58 react the same way through the turf, you stop guessing.

This is a better-player's wedge, and it makes no apology for it. The forging gives you that soft, buttery response on flighted pitches and half shots, and the shaping rewards golfers who like to open the face and hit different trajectories. It won't hold your hand on chunky contact the way a wider, cavity-backed wedge might. That's the trade you make for feel and versatility.

Wilson Staff Model Wedge Wedge: Key Specs

Category
Tour Grind
Loft range
46 to 60 degrees
Loft/grind options
7
Model year
2023
MSRP
$129.99

Available Variants

LoftBounceGrindFinish
46°8°AChrome
50°8°AChrome
52°8°AChrome
54°10°AChrome
56°10°AChrome
58°8°AChrome
60°8°AChrome

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

Technology

Forged

About the Wilson Staff Model Wedge

The head is forged, which is where the soft feel comes from. Forged carbon steel wedges give you more feedback through your hands than cast heads, so you can tell the difference between a shot struck flush and one caught slightly thin. The profile is compact with a straight leading edge and a thin topline, the kind of look tour players ask for and that sits cleanly behind the ball at address. Every loft in the lineup, 46, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, and 60, uses the same tour grind. It's a versatile mid-sole shape with enough relief to open the face for flop shots and greenside touch, but not so much bounce that it slides through firm turf uncontrollably. Think of it as an all-conditions grind rather than a specialist. It works for a sweeper and a moderate digger, and it handles medium to firm ground better than soft, fluffy lies where more bounce would help.

Who Should Play the Wilson Staff Model Wedge?

  • Mid to low handicappers who want one forged wedge model across the whole short-game set, from a 46-degree gap wedge to a 60-degree lob.
  • Players who shape shots and open the face around the green and value feedback over forgiveness.
  • Anyone who prefers a clean, compact tour blade look and typically plays firm to medium turf conditions.

Other Years

2020

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Wilson Staff Model Wedge forged?

Yes. The head is forged carbon steel, which is what gives it the soft feel and the clear feedback on partial and flighted shots. That forging is a big part of why better players like it.

What lofts does the Staff Model Wedge come in?

It's offered in 46, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58, and 60 degrees. That range lets you set up your gapping from a gap wedge role all the way to a lob wedge using one model, so your sole behavior stays consistent through the set.

What grind does the Staff Model Wedge use?

Every loft uses the same tour grind. It's a versatile mid-sole shape with heel and toe relief so you can open the face, and it performs best on medium to firm turf. There isn't a menu of grind options here, which keeps things simple but means less flexibility if you have a very specific bounce need.

Is this wedge good for high handicappers?

It can work, but it's aimed at better players. The compact head and forged feel reward solid contact and don't offer much help on mishits. If you're still working on consistent strikes, a wider sole with more forgiveness would be easier to play.

How should I gap these wedges in my bag?

With this loft range you can run tight four-degree gaps, like 46, 50, 54, 58, or add the 52, 56, and 60 for even tighter spacing. Match the top loft to your pitching wedge so you don't leave a hole between your irons and your first wedge.

Ratings & Reviews

No ratings yet. Sign in to rate this club.

More Wilson Wedges

Find the right loft for your bag

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

Open Gap Finder →