Published on: 08-Jul-2026
Most golfers who develop nagging pain blame their swing mechanics, their age, or the number of rounds they crammed into the week. The clubs in their bag rarely get a second look. However, equipment that mismatches your biomechanics forces small physical compensations on every single swing. These repetitive adjustments are exactly where many chronic golf injuries begin.
Why Your Equipment is a Silent Injury Factor
The golf swing is an asymmetrical, explosive, and highly repetitive movement. This combination is why the lumbar spine (lower back) absorbs the heaviest toll. Biomechanical data published in The Spine Journal reveals that a standard golf swing drives a compressive force of approximately 1,370 pounds through an amateur golfer’s lower back, rising to nearly 1,700 pounds for professionals.
When you play with equipment that is too heavy, stiff, or poorly proportioned, your body subconsciously adapts to make contact with the ball. You might modify your spinal posture, over-activate your wrists, or tighten your grip. While these quick fixes can save the shot, they transfer intense kinetic shock to joints and tendons unequipped to handle them.
Club Length and Lie Angle: The Blueprint of Posture
Club length and lie angle (the angle between the shaft and the ground when the club head sits flat) directly dictate your posture at address.
- Clubs that are too long or upright: Force a cramped, overly vertical setup. This setup frequently triggers “early extension”—a fault where the hips thrust toward the ball during the downswing, flattening the spine and hyperextending the lower back.
- Clubs that are too short or flat: Force the golfer to hunch over the ball. This rounds the thoracic spine (upper back), overstretching the posterior muscles and straining the neck and shoulders.
Prioritizing a static and dynamic fitting to establish correct specifications ensures that your posture remains neutral, protecting the spinal column through the rotation.
Sourcing clubs built to the correct spec, whether new or pre-owned, through a fitter or specialist like Next2NewGolf, matters more than chasing the newest release, since the goal is hardware that fits your body rather than a body that contorts to fit the hardware.
Grip Size: Preventing Wrist and Elbow Strain
Grip size gets less attention than length or shaft, but it has a direct line to your hands, wrists, and elbows, the parts of the body most exposed to golf’s repetitive load. A grip that is too thin encourages you to squeeze harder to keep the club stable, and that extra squeeze fires the forearm muscles more than necessary on every swing. A grip that is too thick restricts your hand action and can force the wrists and forearms to work against the club.
The forearm connection is well documented. A prospective study using surface electromyography on 30 amateur and professional golfers found that an ergonomic grip reduced activity in key forearm muscles, including the extensor carpi radialis brevis and flexor carpi ulnaris, across phases of the swing. The researchers pointed to that reduction as a possible protective factor against overuse tendinopathies such as medial and lateral epicondylitis.
Medial epicondylitis is better known as golfer’s elbow, and the name is not a coincidence. Repeated high grip force through an ill-fitting handle is one of the ways golfers end up with pain on the inside of the elbow. Matching grip size to your hand and your natural grip pressure lowers that background strain without costing you anything in the swing. Grip diameter can also be adjusted with the number of wraps under the grip or with a larger core, so this modification is one of the cheapest fit fixes available.
Shaft Flex: Managing Impact Shock
Shaft flex describes how much a club bends under load. Selecting a shaft that is too stiff for your actual swing speed prevents the club from loading and releasing efficiently.
When a shaft fails to flex properly, the kinetic energy from ball impact is not absorbed by the club; instead, a harsh vibration travels straight up the shaft into the hands, wrists, and elbows. Research evaluating shaft stiffness highlights that improper flex alters wrist kinematics (movement patterns) at impact, exposing the joints to sharp, unexpected peaks of deceleration load.
4 Principles for an Ergonomic Set
- Prioritize Biomechanical Over Wall-Chart Fittings: Ensure your fitter measures live swing speed and dynamic posture rather than relying purely on static height charts.
- Reassess Specs with Physical Changes: As core flexibility, injury history, or swing speeds change over time, modify shaft weights and flexes to match.
- Avoid Replicating Professional Configurations: Elite player specifications are built for unique, highly conditioned athletic profiles that do not align with the mechanics of a recreational player.
- Treat Fit as Preventative Medicine: View equipment optimization not as a performance luxury, but as a mandatory step to mitigate injury risk and prolong your playing years.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Can the wrong golf clubs cause injury?
Yes. Clubs that don’t match your body and swing force physical compensations — like altered posture or grip tension — on every swing, and repeated compensations are a common root cause of chronic golf injuries.
2. How much force does a golf swing put on the lower back?
Research published in The Spine Journal found a standard swing generates roughly 1,370 pounds of compressive force on an amateur’s lower back, and nearly 1,700 pounds for professional golfers.
3. How does club length affect injury risk?
Clubs that are too long or upright can cause early extension, thrusting the hips toward the ball and hyperextending the lower back. Clubs that are too short or flat cause hunching, which strains the upper back, neck, and shoulders.
4. Can grip size cause elbow pain?
Yes. A grip that’s too small forces over-squeezing and forearm overuse; one that’s too large restricts wrist release, also straining the forearm. Both patterns are linked to conditions like tennis elbow and golfer’s elbow.
5. What does shaft flex have to do with wrist injuries?
A shaft that’s too stiff for your swing speed can’t absorb impact energy properly, sending vibration and shock directly into the wrists and elbows, which alters wrist movement patterns and raises injury risk.
6. Should I use the same club specs as a pro golfer?
No. Professional specs are built for elite, highly conditioned athletes and typically don’t suit the swing speed, flexibility, or mechanics of a recreational golfer.
7. How often should I get refitted for clubs?
Whenever your flexibility, swing speed, or injury history changes meaningfully — fit isn’t a one-time decision, since your body and swing evolve over time.
References
Gluck, G. S., et al. (2008). The lumbar spine and low back pain in golf: a literature review of swing biomechanics and injury prevention. The Spine Journal, 8(5), 778-788.
Bochnia, J. M., et al. (2024). An Ergonomic Golf Grip Leads to Lower Forearm Muscle Activity: A Prospective Case Series of 30 Right-Handed Amateur and Professional Golfers. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders / University Hospital Münster.
The post How Your Golf Equipment Affects Injury Risk: Club Fit, Grip Size, and Shaft Flex Explained appeared first on Sports Medicine Weekly By Dr. Brian Cole.