Swing Score

Driving Range assigns each swing an overall Swing Score from 1 to 100. The score combines up to eight component metrics. Each component is scored on its own scale, then merged using the weights below.

Missing components

If your watch cannot supply a metric (for example, some sensors or sampling limits), that component is omitted from the calculation. Its weight is redistributed proportionally across the remaining components, so the overall score still reflects 100% of what is available to measure.

Generous scoring

The scoring model uses broad “good enough” zones so you can earn full or near-full credit on a component without chasing perfection. The goal is practical feedback during practice, not punishing tiny deviations.

Score levels

Named levels group the overall 1–100 score. Each level summarizes what the combined metrics are telling you.

TOUR

85–100. All measured components are in excellent shape for this swing.

SCRATCH

70–84. Strong swing with only minor imperfections.

AMATEUR

55–69. Some rushing or moderate jerkiness; room to smooth out timing and motion.

BEGINNER

40–54. Several areas need attention before the swing feels repeatable.

ROUGH

1–39. Focus on fundamentals and simpler, controlled motions.

How to use the score

  • Track an average over 10 or more swings in a session. Single swings vary; trends matter more than one outlier.
  • Watch for drops as a session goes on. Falling scores can line up with fatigue or loss of focus.
  • Find your weakest component in the breakdown. Improving the lowest-scoring metric often lifts the overall score the fastest.
  • Stability counts. Consistent scores across many swings usually mean a more reliable motion than one lucky high number.