If you follow golf at all, you have probably seen the ProSENDR on the range at a Tour event. Rory McIlroy, Cameron Smith, Phil Mickelson, Justin Thomas, and Will Zalatoris have all been spotted using it, and the brand has built real credibility fast. The ProSENDR is the brainchild of GOLF Top 100 Teachers Sean Foley and David Woods, the same duo behind the PlaneMate, and it became one of the fastest-growing training aids in the game after launching in 2023. Now they are back with the ProSENDR Widener, a new tool that takes the lineup in a different direction.
Where the original ProSENDR focuses on trail wrist conditions and hand position, the Widener is about the bigger picture. It trains width, rotation, and impact structure, three fundamentals that separate amateurs from professionals. Think swing shape and delivery, not just what your wrists are doing at the top.
What It Does
The Widener is built to groove optimal swing positions through feel and repetition. It is simple to use and integrates into any practice routine without a learning curve. The ten things it specifically addresses:
1. T-Spine Rotation – Unlocks a powerful shoulder turn independent of the hips, the foundation for both distance and accuracy.
2. Arm Width and Arc – Trains a wider swing arc for more yardage and better control of your low point.
3. Setup Mechanics – Establishes a structured, professional setup that sets the tone for every swing.
4. Takeaway Position (P2) – Reinforces the early swing move that dictates consistency and path.
5. Arm Elevation Through Rotation – Builds a smoother, more efficient swing sequence.
6. Backswing Elbow Collapse – Maintains structure and width deep into the backswing, a key to consistent contact.
7. Chicken Wing – Promotes extension through impact for crisper, more powerful strikes.
8. Covering the Ball at Impact – Improves compression and strike quality to eliminate thin and fat shots.
9. Precision Inside 125 Yards – This is where scores actually drop, and where the Widener is most effective.
10. Synergy with the Original ProSENDR – Pairs with the wrist cradle for a complete training system.
How It Works
The Widener trains motor feel and neural feedback so your body learns the correct positions naturally. The goal is that what you build with the tool sticks after it comes off. That transfer is the real test of any training aid, and it is where most of them fail. The approach here is not about forcing you into a position. It is about teaching your body what right feels like until you can find it on your own.
Who Should Use It
The Widener is aimed at golfers who are losing distance or consistency because of a narrow, collapsed swing. The elbow folder, the chicken-winger, the player who compresses it fine on the range and flips it on the course. Early user feedback has been strong even from low single-digit handicappers, with players noting better compression and ball-striking quality after just a couple of weeks with it. Foley and Woods also note that it is particularly effective for golfers working on their game inside 125 yards, where small mechanical improvements have an outsized effect on scoring.
It pairs with the original ProSENDR wrist cradle for a complete training system, so if you already own the original, the Widener is a natural add-on. New to the brand, it works on its own as well.
Price and Availability
The ProSENDR Widener retails for $179.99, currently on sale from $199.99, and is available directly at prosendrgolf.com. The original ProSENDR wrist cradle runs $149.99 if you want to build out the full system.
The credibility behind this product is real. Foley spent years declining training aid partnerships until he found something he actually believed in. The Widener is the next tool to carry that endorsement, and the track record so far holds up.
