Winter has quietly but quickly reshaped how golfers train, especially if you’re in the Northeast like us. Indoor leagues, simulator sessions, heated ranges, and home setups now allow players to swing year-round. Golf no longer disappears when temperatures drop, it just moves inside. And, you may think you are staying sharp because of it, yet something subtle has slipped into winter practice and it’s affecting golfers everywhere.
Walk into almost any indoor facility and you will see golfers swinging in casual sneakers. Thick running shoes and lifestyle trainers; think HOKA or On Running or any other "sneaker" you may wear to run to the grocery store. Cushioned athletic footwear built for comfort may feel familiar, but over time, they also reshape how the body organizes itself through the swing.
Modern sneakers are built with a thicker insole. That’s the bit that is soft and cushiony right above the bottom of your shoe. And it is totally a win for keeping you comfortable day-to-day, but it is seriously messing up your golf swing. Wearing these to practice indoors lifts you higher off the ground and softens stability underfoot. That elevation changes posture, alters balance, and reduces the feedback the body relies on to control movement. As weeks pass, setup begins to shift. Pressure transfer begins to change.
The swing adapts to a platform that never existed on the course. And congrats. Come spring-time, you’ll be slicing and shanking because of it.
How Casual Sneakers Quietly Change Your Setup

Angle of attack is one of the most important numbers in golf. It describes whether the club is traveling downward, level, or upward at impact. A few degrees one way or the other can mean the difference between compressed iron shots and thin misses, or between a high-launching driver and one that floats with no speed.
We all know how golf is a game of inches and one small setup change can create big swing consequences.
What you might not know is that modern sneakers change angle of attack before the club ever moves. Thick midsoles lift your body higher off the ground, altering posture and changing how you sit into your stance. Your angle of attack becomes steeper and you’ll feel your strike location move and your compression become harder to repeat.
On indoor mats and firm turf, that elevation is magnified. And if your body senses instability and begins compensating to stay balanced, it could settle into a habit, slowly rewriting movement patterns that once felt automatic.
Angle of attack no longer matches what the body trained all winter. Solid contact disappears and distance fluctuates. Confidence might even take a hit.
None of this happens overnight. It builds quietly, one indoor session at a time.
Why SPEED3™ SL Is the No-Brainer
If you already wear SQAIRZ on the course, this part’s easy. Practice in the same platform you play in.
SPEED3™ SL is the spikeless counterpart to your spiked SQAIRZ. Built for simulators, mats, and indoor turf, it keeps your posture and ground connection familiar while conditions change around you.
Stay closer to the ground.
Low profile keeps your stance athletic. Knee flex stays natural. Setup feels right.

Give your feet room to work.
The roomier toe box lets your base settle under load. Balance tightens up on mats and turf.

Create traction that moves with you.
Spikeless traction supports rotation, not just grip. Load, turn, and brace without fighting the ground.

Lock in stability from the inside.
The included Blumaka® anti-slip footbed keeps energy from leaking. Pressure stays clean swing after swing.

Train longer without breaking down.
Lightweight build helps posture and mechanics hold up through long sessions.

Everything works together so indoor reps feel like real golf.
A Better Way to Train Indoors
SPEED3™ SL gives golfers a way to train indoors without sacrificing posture or swing consistency. It keeps the body aligned with how golf is actually played so practice translates directly onto the course.
If you’re putting in the reps, they might as well count.