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Would you use BioMech’s AccuLock putter?

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What happens when a biomedical company designs a putter “from the body out,” applying years of biomechanics knowledge to the most frustrating component of golf?

Well, this.
Biomech Golf
Would you putt with something that likely looks so vastly different than your existing flatstick? If the answer is “no,” you might very well change your mind after reading this interview with BioMech CEO, Dr. Frank Fornari.

I spoke with Dr. Fornari by phone and asked him how home a biomedical devices company ended up making putters.

Well,  I worked on many different projects studying physiology and motion analysis for a variety of agencies including NASA. Fast-forward about 25 years…we’re looking to develop motion analysis systems to be used for physical therapy, which is one of the things BioMech does. So we have systems that measure motion in real-time…giving you feedback, giving your therapist feedback. I started playing golf after a long time of not doing it…and I started looking at putting. Putting is half your round…it should be the simplest motion we make in golf…and it’s become the most complicated. So we made a model based on the proper physiology and physics of the stroke…and ran a number of mathematical equations, and this is the stick that came out of it. 

B.A. Tell me a bit about the design of the putter

F.F.: This putter is designed from the body out. Biomechanics: you can’t make the mechanics without the biology. You are not Iron Byron…you’re bone, muscle, nerves, neurotransmitters, skin. We started with the premise that golf equipment should be an outgrowth, an augment, and optimize how your body moves. We wanted…the least amount of energy for the most amount of gain.

And from the healthcare perspective, the number one expenditure is cervical and back problems. If you take a look at the spine angle that people putt at, it’s the worst possible position you could be in. If you’re in that position for a long period of time during the round you’re going to have back problems and neck problems. So you can actually practice putting.

Tell me about the underlying science

In all rotational sports, golf, tennis, bowling, there are optimal angles that your body needs to be in. There’s a differential angle between your leading and trailing shoulder. So you’re trailing shoulder, if you think about all those sports, is below your leading shoulder to allow you to rotate back and straight down the line for wherever you want to get that projectile to go. There are also certain muscles that should be used in all these motions.

Basically the musculature of your legs and core were genetically developed to know how hard to turn to generate the proper distance for a projectile, and that goes back to when we had to throw rocks and spears. You don’t throw with just your arm and hand, right? Your arm and hand just connect the projectile to your legs. Your arms and hands are the remnants of antennae…there’s a ton of nerve-endings that tell you what you’re touching, where you’re going, whether something’s hot or cold or sharp, and there’s directionality to that. If I ask you right now, where’s your right thumb? You know where it is, instinctively. You hands and arms have gamma loops. They’re connected to the spacial part of your brain that knows where you are in Cartesian space. There are nerve centers in your hands and arms, so if you get too close to something hot, you generate adrenaline, your hands and arms start to shake and you run away from it.

So, imagine if you’re putting a five-footer for par is analogous to fire. You’re going to get nervous and it’s going to affect your hands and arms. Your legs and core don’t shake, because they don’t have those receptors. So those are some of the reasons that we’ve veered off [from traditional designs] in putting.

I know beyond design, you have some unique ideas about how to setup and putt…

[Traditional instructors] teach you to make your legs stiff as a board, which you don’t ever have any stiffness in any motion in this world. Putting is no different. It’s exhausting. It doesn’t allow you to maintain any balance, when you’re stiff as a flagpole. We’re taught to square our shoulders up, which, once again, you’re going to lock out your trailing shoulder from rotating straight back and then try and move a putter that’s sticking out way ahead of where our eyes are in an arc using your hands and arms. And you can’t judge the speed of that, because once again, you’re not connected to the center where, like, your baseball throw is or your rock throw is. And you’re going to try to put a ball in a hole, where, if you’re off 1/16th of an inch from eight feet, you miss the putt.

So we simply said, let’s develop this stick. It got people in the proper shoulder tilt. This putter is, if you will, an orthotic. You set it down. The lean angle is about 12.5 degrees, which, if you put your hands together in front of you without doing any work, that’s about 12.5 degrees. So you set it down, you wrap yourself around it, right hand low. You hands and arms, with the shaft leaning against the inside of your left arm are now out of the stroke. So that club face is going to be stable. and liberating the shaft from the face of the putter allows your alignment to be better.

We tested this. We took about 100 really good golfers putting from 12 feet with their putter and asked them to line up a putt and they were about a cup out on each side. If you look down at traditional putters, the shaft is in the way of 1/3 or 1/4 of it, and the shorter something is, the harder it is to tell if it’s lined up. So, if you had a picture frame at home and it was 20 feet wide, you could really see if it was level. If it was an inch wide, you really couldn’t tell.

This alignment system is a curvilinear line in the middle that makes a T when your eyes are exactly over that line. You want to be looking right down and over the line of the putt. You don’t want to be bent with your eyes and ball in a different spot, because every angle is different based on the putting distance…your brain just doesn’t like that. It likes to look right down the line.

So we’ve got you set up down the line, we’ve got your shoulders in the proper tilt, we’ve got you lined up better. The fulcrum, this is the longest putting stroke in golf because the fulcrum is about a foot above your leading shoulder. So because your eyes are in the same sport over the ball every time, the rest of your body is in the same spot, we just collocated the proper angle of incidence from which to strike the ball. And the ball doesn’t wobble, it doesn’t skid because you’re striking it, literally, at almost the same spot every time.

So from your waist up should be one piece. Much like the rest of the golf swing. Much like shooting a basketball or throwing a baseball. So now you just liberate your knees. Make a small weight shift, moving your entire body with your quads. It’s the same thing your would with an 8-iron bump-and-run or with any other rotational movement, whether it’s bowling or hitting a driver.

Now, you’re using the mass that’s in your body, rather than the 20 or 30 pounds of mass that’s in your putter and arms. So judging the distance, much like throwing a rock, becomes simple.

And the stroke…?

If I gave you a baseball, and I said, “Throw it 30 feet away,” you wouldn’t even think about it. And if I backed up 10 more feet, you’d just turn harder. That’s the same concept.

So you can take the putter back three, four, five inches and just turn a little bit harder, and you’ll dial in the distance. It becomes so simple to do this.

And because the face doesn’t turn, and you’re using the mass of your body, the moment of inertia on this putter is negligible. Whether you hit the ball on the toe or the heel or anywhere, it doesn’t turn the face because the putter is stable against your leading arm.

Because you’re taking a shorter backstroke and coming straight through, you’re not taking a big, long backstroke using your hands and arms trying to decelerate because you’re off balance because your legs are locked down—you either have to slow down or recoil, because if you don’t you’re going to fall forward.

With this putting method, you’re stably shoulder-width, a little open to the hole and the center of your mass never leaves the middle. So you simply load your right side a little, release down the line and accelerate through the putt. And you’re balanced, so a thirty foot putt is just as easy to make as a five-footer.

You’ve mentioned that this putter and component method takes a lot of stress off the back?

The lie angle of this putter is between 13.5 and 15.5 degrees. So you’re spine angle and your cervical position are such that we’ve taken nearly all the stress off your back and neck. I’ve had people with for our five hours on the green putting with these things—with back problems—and they come up to me and say, “My back feels great.”

After a 5, 6, 7, 15, 18 holes, because you’re bent over putting, your back muscles are tired and they’re sore. So what you’ll start to see in almost every golfer’s round, they start to lift up during their regular swing because their backs are sore, so they’re topping the ball, they’re mishitting it. But this putter, it actually keeps your back so healthy, you can stay in that zone where’s you’re striking the ball where you want to because you’re back isn’t fatigued or sore. So it really helps the rest of your golf game as well.

Is this primarily a game-improvement putter?

This putter is for everybody. I’ve had PGA Tour pros use it. Every single person that uses it gets better. Everybody. If you think about this putter being the house, and your other putter being the gambler in Vegas. Over time, this putter will win, because it eliminates, statistically, the bulk of errors that you would have with your putter.

What’s on the horizon for BioMech?

Putter heads only come in about three flavors: blade, hybrid, and mallet. We have three putter heads coming out this year. We have an adjustable grip that allows you to change the length of the putter. We have some new shafts. Very sophisticated carbon fiber shafts with some differential stiffness in them based on how you putt the golf ball. So it becomes a putting system. Instead of spending hundreds and hundred of dollars for three putters, you could spend four or five hundred dollars for this system and have three putters, three possible shaft combinations, and it’s adjustable.

And maybe by the end of the year, we’ll have the first prototype wedge coming out with the same technology and angles as this so you don’t blade or skull or shank a chip shot again. If you’re a high-handicap golfer, you’re hitting one or two greens per round and you’re spending a lot of time around the greens chipping. These wedges make a lot easier for you to get the ball not only on the green but closer to the hole.

Everything we do is data-driven. We use the scientific method. We try to disprove any hypothesis that we have. It’s all about the data, including what the putters look like. The optimal goal is to build in the aesthetics as well as the functionality.

This year we’re rolling out a motion analysis system for putting. It’s going to be on the market hopefully in two to three months. It’s really a medical tool that we morphed into a way to teach you to chip and putt.

If I told you that one tenth of all golfers can take a golf lesson. We don’t think that’s the way it should be. For a small monthly subscription, less than a sleeve of golf balls, you can have these sensors…in real time…a band attached to your wrist…high-energy bluetooth…it tells you, in real time, what you’re doing wrong. And it can send that back to your teaching pro. And it’ll generate a report from some of the world’s best teaching pros.

It’s a hard game. It’s hard enough as it is. If you don’t have that teaching pro, it’s next to impossible. And you can generate this data 24/7, instead of having to go to a facility and be on a machine for 15 minutes and then go away.

What has the reception been like since the AccuLock Ace came on the market?

Last year, when we came on Tour, the announcers were like, “That’s a weird-looking stick.” But this year it’s like, “That’s really high-tech looking!” So we’re winning the battle slowly (laughing).

Technology drives tradition. We’re not using persimmon woods or wooden shafts anymore. So when better technology becomes available, it just becomes what’s traditional. If it’s good, and it works, and the science backs it up, it will become what people use. People will migrate to the optimal outcome all the time. You know, if there are five hospitals and four of them have high mortality rates, they’ll go to the fifth one.

At BioMech, because we’re all data driven and have a much better understanding of how the body works than most companies, we feel that this [putter] just makes sense for people. And if they use it, they’ll see that their putting will improve. Not only will you make more putts, but the quality of your misses will be much, much better, which is, at the end of the day, just as important. I’d rather have tap-ins than three and four-footers. Then I’m happy playing the game. I’m not depressed on the next hole, and the game becomes fun again.

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GolfWRX Editor-in-Chief

30 Comments

30 Comments

  1. Dave Ryley

    Jul 18, 2016 at 1:20 pm

    Old concept from the “Perfect Putter” company , was in Ft. Pierce, Fl…sold out to Oddysey for their patent on “back-shafted” putters. I had a longer version that tucked under your left arm-pit (for a righty). Loved it… Of course that is now illegal, so I cut it down to 37″, it is very similar to this one. Cobra also made a similar model.

  2. Chopper

    Jul 1, 2016 at 2:11 pm

    I have this putter along with the Kuchar and the Oddesey 7 arm locks. This putter lines up very nicely, it has excellent feel, and puts a great roll on the ball. However, the lie angle is where they missed the mark. I was always a broomsticker so I am used to the 79 degree lie, but it just doesn’t work with the arm lock. If I could find a way to take about 5 degrees of lie I think it would be great.

  3. Brian

    Jun 27, 2016 at 6:41 pm

    I was one of the first people to purchase and own one when they first came out. It simply wasn’t for me. I called the company, and I was told no returns. Fair enough, policy is policy. Like most of on here, a gave a description in the forums. It was not positive/negative, it was a simple review of my thoughts and how the putter reacted in my hands. Two days later, the company emailed me, took the putter back, and asked that I delete my post in the forum.

    Not saying that the putter is good or bad, as what works for some may not work for others. But in my experience, it was the worst feeling putter I have ever picked up.

  4. Steve S

    Jun 27, 2016 at 4:50 pm

    If this thing helps, I don’t care how I look. Moe Norman had a funny looking swing and hit the ball dead straight anytime he wanted. Furyck has a goofy swing and Arnie’s was pretty ugly. Who cares as long as you finish with the lowest score….

  5. golf nuts

    Jun 27, 2016 at 3:42 am

    funny buggers golfers,as long as its shiny and bears a name brand,its gotta be better and most of the time its not,they hate change.I for one would at least give it a go.Not much has changed in the last 40 years,for all the hype.

  6. The dude

    Jun 26, 2016 at 3:36 pm

    OK I admit, I used my life savings to invest in this company and all I’ve got to date is a sample putter and a golf shirt.

  7. Obee

    Jun 26, 2016 at 10:22 am

    I tried one. It’s definitely the worst of the arm-lock putters. Far too upright and far too unnatural and contrived of a set-up position. The arm-lock method is definitely legit, but this putter misses the mark for sure.

    • Obee

      Jun 27, 2016 at 5:20 pm

      Have you putted with an arm-lock putter? Both the Bettinardi and the Odyssey are solid options for anyone looking for a little help with the yipperoos. Two pros at my club use an arm lock and I think you will see more and more going to it in the future. Certainly not a majority of golfers, but I think you will see the concept catch on a bit more than it has so far. But I could be wrong.

  8. ooffa

    Jun 26, 2016 at 6:47 am

    wow, all of the science and thought that went into this putter is impressive. With all of that research and technology they have managed to come up with this ugly piece of crap. All that has been proven is that you CAN put too much thought into a project.

    • The dude

      Jun 26, 2016 at 11:38 am

      ,…begs the question…have you tried it?…this site is FULL of knuckleheads that are more concerned about how it looks it their bag…as appose to what it produces for your score…..I have no investment, this little thing works!!!

    • Devyn

      Jun 26, 2016 at 1:08 pm

      All that you’ve proven is you’re ignorant enough to judge a product without having tried it.

  9. theaveragepunter

    Jun 26, 2016 at 3:37 am

    Golfers = the last snake oil customers. A Solid technique, the right mindset and any old putter will make you a good putter. Your welcome.

    • The dude

      Jun 26, 2016 at 9:01 am

      You statement is flawed….first, most golfers need to be given a technique that will change the behavior (poor putting)….secondly….uhhhh…no secondly….that’s it :)….

  10. The dude

    Jun 25, 2016 at 11:42 pm

    I use it…all I can say…I said the same thing you girls are remarking about….then I gave it a real try…..I enjoy putting again!!!..i.e…I’m making A LOT more putts

  11. Joe

    Jun 25, 2016 at 7:29 pm

    U-G-L-Y, with a capitol UG.

    No I would not use it.

  12. Dave

    Jun 25, 2016 at 6:43 pm

    Even if I one putted every green I couldn’t put that in my bag.

    • The dude

      Jun 25, 2016 at 11:44 pm

      #howdumbareyou

    • Devyn

      Jun 26, 2016 at 1:05 pm

      Just more confirmation that many golfers #1 fear is how they look in front of other people. So ironic, for a game that is nothing more than the golfer versus the course

  13. Stu

    Jun 25, 2016 at 4:31 pm

    Of course I would try it. Put in the PGA stores so I can feel it.

  14. Bert

    Jun 25, 2016 at 3:35 pm

    Nope wouldn’t even try it, for me, and that’s me, nothing can match my Ping Anser 2 Nickel Putter.

    • The dude

      Jun 25, 2016 at 11:48 pm

      Yeah…..id keep buying $500 drivers if I were you……that 20 handicap will surely improve!….enjoy mediocrity:)

      • DaCrusher

        Jun 30, 2016 at 8:44 am

        Haha! And YOUR a plus-2 handicap I take it by the cockiness of your responses?

  15. 4pillars

    Jun 25, 2016 at 2:44 pm

    So to sum up its a funny looking an arm lock putter.

    Is it stroke balanced?

  16. JR

    Jun 25, 2016 at 1:14 pm

    looks like a gimmick and pc. of junk!!

  17. Scooter McGavin

    Jun 25, 2016 at 11:11 am

    I died of old age before I could finish this article. Posting comment from the grave…

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Equipment

Masters gear roundup: Limited-edition bags, balls, and more

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The Masters in itself is a huge tradition in the world of golf, but it also brings its own traditions with it. One of the big ones for us golf equipment fans is the limited edition gear that is influenced by the season’s first major championship.

Around tournament time, companies big and small offer bags, balls, and accessories that are designed with the colors and history of the Masters Tournament.

Here is some of the gear that we will see this weekend out on the lush, green grass of Augusta.

Callaway

The land Augusta National sits on was once a nursery. Callaway looks to be celebrating that history this year. Colorful flowers are used all over the side panels on the staff bag and on top of the headcovers. Callaway also did some limited edition Chrome Tour golf balls with azalea patterns.

Mizuno

There might not be a green bag here for Mizuno, but they know how to celebrate the Masters! This year, Mizuno is offering Mizuno Pro 241 “Azalea” irons to a limited number of lucky customers. A new green iridescent finish is applied to the heads and some beautiful colored ferrules bring some floral color to the irons. If you are lucky enough to grab a set, you will be impressed by the green display box the irons come in as well!

TaylorMade

This year’s staff bag goes a little heavier on a metallic green color to pay homage to the first major of the year. If you look closely at the details, you will notice shiny gold accent pieces, a small Amen Corner, and an inner lining with Georgia peaches. The headcovers are made from matching metallic green fabric and feature “88th” embroidery for the number of Masters tournaments that have been played. TaylorMade’s TP5x Pix golf balls come in a case that looks, and feels, like a peach!

Srixon

Srixon’s bag for the 2024 Masters goes heavy on green and white with a more simple and classic design on the outside. When you unzip the pockets you will treated to a hidden inner lining that has Georgia’s state fruit, the peach, printed all over. Heck, Srixon even included the pit! Headcovers are matching white and green but have a look that reminds you of the iconic Masters scoreboard.

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Whats in the Bag

WITB Time Machine: Tiger Woods’ winning WITB, 2019 Masters

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At the 2019 Masters, Tiger Woods famously ended an 11-year major championship drought. When Francesco Molinari faltered during the final round, Woods pounced. With a Sunday 70, he captured his fifth green jacket and 15th major championship.

Check out what Tiger had in the bag below.

Driver: TaylorMade M5 (9 degrees)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana D+ White 60 TX

3-wood: TaylorMade M5 (13 degrees)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana D+ White 70 TX

5-wood: TaylorMade M3 (19 degrees)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana D+ White 80 TX

Irons: TaylorMade P7TW (3-PW)
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100

Wedges: TaylorMade Milled Grind Raw (56, 60)
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400

Putter: Scotty Cameron Newport 2 GSS

Ball: Bridgestone TourB XS

Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet Cord

 

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Equipment

Best irons in golf of 2024: Pure enjoyment

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In our effort to assemble the 2024 best irons, we have again compiled an expert panel of fitters to help you find out which of the 2024 irons is best for your game.

Ultimately the best way to find your personal best iron set is to work with a professional fitter using a launch monitor. The difficult part is a lot of people don’t have easy access to fitters, launch monitors, and club builders — so at GolfWRX, we have done a lot of the work for you.

We are in the era of not just maximizing distance but also minimizing the penalty of common misses for each player — this applies to irons just as much as it does with any other club in the bag. And of course, proper set makeup and gapping is essential. This is why, now more than ever, custom fitting is essential to help you see results on every swing you make.

We want to give you the tools and information to go out and find what works best for you by offering recommendations for your individual iron set wants and needs with insight and feedback from the people who work every single day to help golfers get peak performance out of their equipment.

Best irons of 2024: The process

The best fitters in the world see all the options available in the marketplace, analyze their performance traits, and pull from that internal database of knowledge and experience like a supercomputer when they are working with a golfer.

It’s essentially a huge decision tree derived from experience and boiled down to a starting point of options—and it has nothing to do with a handicap!

Modern iron sets are designed into player categories that overlap the outdated “what’s your handicap?” model, and at GolfWRX we believe it was important to go beyond handicap and ask specific questions about the most crucial performance elements fitters are looking at.

These are the best iron categories we have developed to help you determine which category is most important for your swing and game.

Best irons of 2024: The categories

2024 Best irons: Pure enjoyment

We continue to see an overlap in the way fitters in this category define the top irons. The most playable irons are the most likely to be higher launching, and shots that fly higher make the game more enjoyable for everyone. This reiterates our belief that your iron selection should not be defined by your handicap but instead by what gives you the best opportunity to play your best — and most enjoyable — golf.

Ping G430

Their story: Billed as Ping’s “longest iron ever,” the G430 irons combine a lower CG with stronger, custom- engineered lofts and a thinner face that delivers up to two more mph of ball speed, per the company. At the heart of the new addition is the PurFlex cavity badge, an innovation that features seven flex zones that allow more free bending in design to increase ball speed across the face. In combination with a lower CG, the badge aims to contribute to a solid feel and pleasing impact sound.

Fitter comments:

  • “The best G.I. iron on the market. Easy to hit and launch while making great ball speed for distance.”
  • “The best iron in the game improvement category. High launch and packed with forgiveness on those off-center hits. It’s one of the easiest irons to hit. So easy to hit and look at for the average golfer.”
  • “Yeah, I mean, that’s definitely a go-to and in the matrix for sure. I mean, it’s just super easy to hit, super forgiving. They don’t mess that iron up.”
  • “Ping does a great job of building golf clubs. Their design is fantastic and it’s not for everybody, you know, it’s not the lowest-spinning club…but it sure is one of the most forgiving golf clubs and most consistent golf clubs. Ping G430 in that category of club, you can have something that a good player who needs a little help maybe can use because it’s consistent across the face, and you can’t do that with some of the other clubs because they’re not as consistent across the face for the ball speeds. It is a monster for us.”
  • “The best iron in the game improvement category. It’s one of the easiest irons to hit.”

For more photos/info, read our launch piece.

TaylorMade P790

Their story: Engineers utilized the variables of tungsten weighting, SpeedFoam Air, and internal mass — with an assist from AI — to precisely give golfers what they need in each iron. For example, launch and forgiveness in the long irons. More specifically, TaylorMade is using what the company calls FLTD CG (flighted CG) to strategically position CG throughout the set (lower in the long irons, higher in the short irons). CG is positioned almost a millimeter lower in the long irons compared to previous generations. In the shorter irons, the higher CG positions allowed engineers to dial in spin and promote accuracy.

Fitter comments:

  • “Best combination of everything. The amalgamation of all irons on the market blended into one mathematically perfect design.”
  • “I think people recognize the name. It’s a very popular club. It stands up to every model in a category.”
  • “That’s the staple in the players distance category. It’s year-in, year-out. It’s tough to beat TaylorMade — they don’t go wrong with that iron, for sure. They make little refinements, but it’s almost like, yeah, just keep making little refinements. Don’t kind of mess that up just because the, I mean, it, it fits such a wide range of players and it’s just such a good iron that fits a wide, wide range of handicaps.”
  • “I think where TaylorMade kind of struggled over the past is getting that spin on the golf club, and I think each generation it just keeps getting better. I think they did an awesome job.”
  • “If it’s not our best-selling iron in the fitting center, it’s always like number two. It’s such a great, great performer across the board. And yeah, it just keeps getting better every year. It’s really awesome; crazy distance on that thing too.”

For more photos/info, read our launch piece.

Srixon ZX5 Mk II

Their story: MainFrame v2 was developed with an Automated Intelligence process, flex-maximizing variable thickness pattern of grooves, channels, and cavities carefully milled into the backside of Z ZX5 iron faces for high ball speeds. Not only does MainFrame boost COR, but it also repositions mass away from the face and into the toe and sole for a lower CG for easier launch, more consistency, and forgiveness.

Fitter comments: 

  • “I’m a big believer in the V-Sole. For high-speed guys who want a little forgiveness and are steep, it just doesn’t stick in the ground. Super soft and high launching. Not a ton of offset. It’s also been a good fit for moderate-to-high handicappers.”
  • “So I would say it, it kind of stands out in its category because it does launch higher than its competitors. It also sits in between some of the models, like, it doesn’t directly compete with a hollow cavity and it doesn’t compete with, like the Cobra King Tour. Like, it’s a degree stronger. For a forged iron, it performs great for us. The only problem is that it is a little bit light in a swing weight, so we have to be careful of who we fit.”
  • “It’s definitely one of our more popular irons for sure. You know, you get a guy who wants to play something small but still wants something more forgiving, and they don’t want kind of that full hollow body iron. I mean, that’s definitely one of our best sellers for sure. We’re seeing that a lot of combos — that’s a one iron that you can definitely combo with the ZX7 for sure.”
  • “I think a lot of guys like the concept of the V-Sole with them…If you’re talking an overall package, you know, for the guy that is looking for something clean. That’s a spectacular golf club. Good looks and good feel and great, you know, great performance, and it fits a lot of categories.”
  • “I think the one struggle a lot of companies have with that category is getting something to spin, so to try and give like guys so they don’t get those knuckleball shots or that fly out of the rough that goes 20 yards longer. I kind of think that that’s what I think makes that item so good is you get some spin on it, and I think it, it looks and feels good enough that like it, a guy that’s a mid-single digit can play it and be like, yeah, that’s good enough for me. But it’s also forgiving enough that a guy that’s in that kind of 12-to-15 kind of category if he wants to reach a little bit and play something that might look a little bit better. It just fits such a huge, huge range of players. I think it’s just awesome.”

For more photos/info, read our launch piece.

Mizuno JPX923 Hot Metal

Their story: “With the JPX923 Hot Metal, Mizuno introduces “4355 nickel chromoly,” which is 35 percent stronger than the original Hot Metal material and allows for an eight-percent thinner clubface. Cup face construction works in tandem with a deep center of gravity for high launch with stopping power. Mizuno developed Hot Metal Pro, Hot Metal and Hot Metal HL (High Launch) from 175,000 real golf swings recorded via Mizuno’s Swing DNA system.”

Fitter comments:

  • “These are great for a player who flips at the ball but also needs some help and forgiveness. The strong lofts help reduce a player’s launch and spin.”
  • “Great forgiveness with the feel that Mizuno is known for.”
  • “Great looking and great feeling irons.”
  • “If I had a player come in, that’s just your, you know, your average golfer. It’s one that is like, “Hey, this is, this is one to try.” This is gonna produce a lot of ball speed and is super forgiving. You can combo it really well. Mizuno does a great job where you can do combo sets just with lofts.”
  • “It’s very good. It’s one of the most popular. Always in the mix of game improvement irons when people come in and they want to hit something that’s forgiving and that also still feels less clicky.”

For more photos/info, read our launch piece.

Titleist T200

Their story:  If there were gripes about the previous generation of T200 irons, it was probably because of feel and sound at impact. Titleist heard your feedback on the previous T200 irons, and it listened. The new 2023 T200 irons have a reengineered chassis to create a stiffer structure and create a more stable feeling and muted sound. They also refined the Max Impact Technology within the head to sit closer to the L-face, further solidifying the feel.

Fitter comments: 

  • “Best overall for us. Great looks, workability. Plenty of forgiveness.”
  • “I like the great look of these and they are easy to play for the average golfer.”
  • “That’s a big combo iron for sure, especially, but it’s also, you know, in that player distance category, it’s one of the higher launching ones, and it’s gonna spin a little bit more. I would say some of those irons in that category they launch, you know, they’ve launched a little bit lower and they don’t spin, which it is great for some players, but also some still want to play a smaller package.”
  • “I think it was definitely a big jump from the previous one. Yeah, I mean, one thing I’ve noticed is compared to some of the other irons, even kind of equal loft, it tends to get a little bit more height on it.”
  • “It’s great for one of those guys that if I get in there that’s kind of hitting a little low. It’s one to kind of throw in my hands…you’re seeing that initial launch kind of pick up a little bit compared to some of the other ones.”

For more photos/info, read our launch piece.

Best irons of 2024: Meet the fitters

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