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For golf apparel designer Rick Martin, quality and craftsmanship are always in season

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Rick Martin might be the last of his kind. He and his daughter, Teri Martin Schleifer, design world-class, 100 percent pima cotton golf shirts in a marketplace dominated by synthetically-engineered merchandise. Not a man to mince words, he was once asked to measure himself against his competitors, to which he quipped, “I look at my competition in the eye every morning when I’m shaving.”

If that comes off sounding like an arrogant statement, Martin isn’t likely to care. He’s been habitually doing things his way — what he wholeheartedly believes is the right way —  for almost 40 years. He was the founder and visionary behind Fairway & Greene, an upscale golf apparel brand that re-introduced classically inspired, all-cotton shirts to an industry that was increasingly fixated with cost-cutting measures over quality.

A contentious relationship with his business partners led Martin to choose retirement in 2006. He sat on the sidelines until his non-compete expired and founded his own label in 2011, known simply as Martin.

“I had no intention of coming back into the business. I had taken my chips off the table and was very happy,” says Martin. “But my daughter, Teri, who had been with me in design the whole time at Fairway & Greene, conned me (and I mean this in the nicest way) into coming back and helping her get a new brand started. I said no, absolutely not, and gave her every reason in the world why I didn’t want to get back involved. But she prevailed.”

For Martin, old is new again. His shirt collection draws inspiration from an era when golf club professionals wore exquisitely tailored apparel and plied their trade on the nascent PGA Tour. Martin grew up admiring the cocky coolness and effortless style exhibited by Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Sam Snead and Cary Middlecoff. And while the role of the club pro has changed substantially over the years, Martin continues to design directly for them and their private club members who Martin describes as purveyors of a culture that expects a higher standard of craftsmanship.

Remove a Martin golf shirt from it’s packaging and you’ll be forgiven for mistaking it’s fabric for silk. It has a smooth, lint-free finish and a luster you would never come to expect from cotton. Inferior cotton shirts have a tendency to pill, shrink with repeated washing and fade over time. What makes a Martin shirt a Rolls Royce to another apparel maker’s Toyota is a keen attention to fabric selection and higher manufacturing standards.

“I spent a good deal of time in South America looking at Peruvian pima cotton which I found to be the quintessential golf shirt yarn,” says Martin. “The way we treat it gives it longevity so that shirt is going to stay like that for pretty much as long as you own it.”

The strands of cotton that are used to make the yarn (also known as staples) are of even length and originate from the same place. Many other companies use a less expensive pima yarn that is assembled from a hodgepodge of different factories in various countries which ultimately results in an inconsistent, inferior product.

Once the cotton yarn is selected, it undergoes a treatment process called mercerization that burns off lint and threads as well as the fibre ends, leaving a smooth finish and a great shine.

“It’s an impregnation of the cloth that performs two major functions,” says Martin. “Stability — to prevent shrinkage, and performance — to improve colorfastness.”

Martin uses a proprietary two-step mercerization process when most companies use one. The yarn is initially impregnated with a solution prior to knitting. The second, more expensive and time consuming step involves a machine about 70 yards long that bathes the knitted fabric in a solution to lock in it’s luster, color and resiliency.  To put it simply, “That’s what separates the look we have from other people,” says Martin.

Golf apparel designer, Rick Martin

Golf apparel designer, Rick Martin.

The Martin golf shirt is a luxury, and is most often the case with any luxury product, it isn’t designed to appeal to everyone. Thrift-seeking shoppers can look elsewhere. So can trendsetters. A company that leads with the motto “as timeless as the game” isn’t in lock-step with the rainbow of colors and patterns being worn on the PGA Tour.

For those of us determined to own a Martin golf shirt, finding a retailer can be a challenge; Martin apparel is limitedly distributed to select green grass shops (more commonly referred to as pro shops) across the country.

“We sell to golf professionals and we sell to some resorts that do have golf courses, but that’s as far down the retail chain as we go. We don’t do any internet retail sales,” says Martin. “Once we go outside of the mold of being part of the private club [culture], we become something less special. People will find a way to find someone who can help them buy one.”

Needless to say, Martin isn’t a person who easily parts with his core values, especially when it comes to having his name sowed into the back of a shirt collar. He founded Fairway & Greene in 1996 out of a desire to combine his love of golf with his talent for designing pure finish cotton shirts. By then, Martin had already been in the apparel business for nearly two decades, both in terms of managing Gant and C. F. Hathaway shirt companies as well as producing woven and knit shirts for Land’s End and Brooks Brothers.

Martin left the major labels behind just as manufacturing standards were on the skids.

“They were more concerned with price than with detail and attitude,” says Martin about Land’s End. “In the early days it was much more of a value-driven, fashion business.”

With Fairway & Greene, Martin had originally planned to go directly to the consumer out of frustrations he was having working with major retail partners, which often undercut their partners by releasing their own in-house brands. Fairway & Greene took to grassroots marketing, putting out a little catalog and using an advertisement in the Wall Street Journal to promote the brand and subsequently build their own mailing list. Their philosophy changed when Tom Nieporte, the then head professional at Winged Foot, suggested that they sell directly to the private country club community.

“My feeling is that the golf shop and the individual club is really the last apparel specialty store on earth,” says Martin. “It’s a retail operation that is being produced and developed for the member of that club and nobody else. So we stopped being a catalog business and went directly to the golf professional. And it stayed that way for as long as I owned it.”

Martin parted ways with Fairway & Greene when the company was acquired by Northbridge Equity Partners, which took the product beyond the golf shop to other retailers and more importantly, introduced synthetics into the apparel line to compete with the growing demand for moisture-wicking, performance apparel.

Martin’s daughter resigned from her post as VP at Fairway & Greene in 2010 and coaxed her father out of retirement. Martin, who was happy to be afforded the time to play more golf, wasn’t sure there was a vendor left in South Korea who was capable of manufacturing a shirt up to his exacting standards.

Martin, who believes that South Korea has the best needle work in the industry, recalls making the trip to meet the owner of the country’s largest finishing house.

“He doesn’t speak a word of English and I don’t speak a word of Korean,” says Martin. “We’re talking to each other through friends and he tells me, ‘I’ve been waiting for you to come back. I am so bored with all this other stuff that we’ve been making and I’m going to help you get this company started.’ This was eight weeks before we were planning to launch [our first] line. Normally it’s a 16-week process to produce your salesmen samples. So he cut that in half for me and produced the finest sample line that I’ve ever seen to that point.”

Part of the Martin Golf Apparel Collection

Part of the Martin Golf Apparel Collection.

Three years later, Martin Golf remains a quintessential boutique firm. Seven sales reps, all former Fairway & Greene employees, handle relationships with golf clubs all around the country. The Martin brand is almost exclusively found in clubs that have storied traditions, or newer clubs that maintain the proper pedigree. Martin has turned down plenty of business opportunities, as is his right, to maintain the values of what he believes is the best mark of the industry.

“The clubs that we don’t sell to are more akin to the retail operations. They’re interested in deals and discounts, and also whatever’s hot,” says Martin. “Our definitions conflict. We don’t discount anything for anybody. Why would I give a discount to your group when I don’t discount to Augusta National, or Pebble Beach or Pine Valley.”

The current Martin Golf apparel line is comprised of five collections: British Regimental, Vineyard, Charcoal Classics, Timeless Elements and Essentials. Each collection is influenced by a color palette derived from Martin’s golfing adventures and from his appreciation of nature. And while it’s obvious his shirts look good, they also perform. Each shirt is long enough to remain tucked into your trousers and features roomier c-sleeve arm holes so that the golfer has freedom of movement when making their backswing. For those of us who are growing fatigued from wearing clothes with billboard-sized branding, you’ll be happy to know that a Martin shirt doesn’t include any visible logos.

Martin remains active as the front-facing component of his apparel brand, but he has ceded the day-to-day operations to his daughter.

“I still help her and look over her shoulder,” says Martin with a wink. “But at the end of the day she’s going to be the one carrying the ball down the road.”

When asked to assess why there aren’t many other contemporaries in the apparel business, Martin gave a surprisingly simple answer.

“I’ve always considered myself someone who cares about quality, and quality can be had in many different kinds of products”, says Martin. “The one I’ve chosen is one of the hardest to produce and that’s why there’s so few people in it. I’m not a lone wolf in the business, but I am one when it comes to being dedicated to quality.”

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Rusty Cage is a contributing writer for GolfWRX, one of the leading publications online for news, information and resources for the connected golfer. His articles have covered a broad spectrum of topics - equipment and apparel reviews, interviews with industry leaders, analysis of the pro game, and everything in between. Rusty's path into golf has been an unusual one. He took up the game in his late thirties, as suggested by his wife, who thought it might be a good way for her husband to grow closer to her father. The plan worked out a little too well. As his attraction to the game grew, so did his desire to take up writing again after what amounted to 15-year hiatus from sports journalism dating back to college. In spite of spending over a dozen years working in the technology sector as a backend programmer in New York City, Rusty saw an opportunity with GolfWRX and ran with it. A graduate from Boston University with a Bachelor's in journalism, Rusty's long term aspirations are to become one of the game's leading writers, rising to the standard set by modern-day legends like George Peper, Mark Frost and Dan Jenkins. GolfWRX Writer of the Month: August 2014 Fairway Executive Podcast Interview http://golfindustrytrainingassociation.com/17-rusty-cage-golf-writer (During this interview I discuss how golf industry professionals can leverage emerging technologies to connect with their audience.)

6 Comments

6 Comments

  1. Pingback: Craftsmanship Is Always In Season For Rick Martin | Rusty Cage | Writer and Golfer

  2. Rico

    Oct 7, 2013 at 7:47 pm

    It’s good to see a company that puts out fine pima cotton shirts like these. I’m tired of going to a store and having to choose a shirt from the My Pretty Pony Rainbow Brite color collection that’s made of plastic.

  3. Zak Kozuchowski

    Oct 5, 2013 at 3:08 pm

    Really guys? One of our writers tells the story of an apparel brand few golfers have ever heard of and you respond like this? Doesn’t seem right to me.

    – Zak

  4. Bill

    Oct 5, 2013 at 12:54 pm

    Did Golfwrx receive a free case of shirts for this advertorial? Who cares about a product that 99% of your users can’t buy and once again is made in SE Asia.

  5. Jack

    Oct 4, 2013 at 9:52 pm

    Wow this is a straight press release. No review or anything or opinion from GolfWRX staff.

  6. Mike

    Oct 4, 2013 at 5:41 pm

    Too exclusive hense not appearing to real golfers. And why are those shirts not made in US or Europe? Don’t try to sell me this stuff as pure luxury and produce it with cheap labor.

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Whats in the Bag

Kris Kim WITB 2024 (May)

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Driver: TaylorMade Qi10 (9 degrees @7)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Tensei 1K White 60 TX

3-wood: TaylorMade Qi10 Tour (15 degrees @13.5)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana WB 73 TX

Irons: TaylorMade P770 (2, 4), TaylorMade P7MB (5-PW)
Shafts: Mitsubishi Tensei 1K White 80 TX (2), Nippon N.S. Pro Modus3 Tour 120 X

Wedges: TaylorMade MG4 (50-09SB, 56-12SB, 60-11TW)
Shafts: Nippon N.S. Pro Modus3 WV 125

Putter: TaylorMade Spider Tour

Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet Cord

Check out more in-hand photos of Kris Kim’s equipment here.

 

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Equipment

Welcome to the family: TaylorMade launches PUDI and PDHY utility irons

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TaylorMade is continuing its UDI/DHY series with the successor to the Stealth UDI and DHY utility irons: PUDI and PDHY (which the company styles as P·UDI and P·DHY). TaylorMade is folding the designs in with its P Series of irons.

TaylorMade outlined the process of developing its new utilities this way. The company started with the data on utility iron usage. Not surprisingly, better players — i.e. those who generate more clubhead speed and strike the ball more precisely — were found to gravitate toward the UDI model. DHY usage, however, covered a wider swath than the company might have expected with six-to-18 handicappers found to be bagging the club.

TaylorMade also found that the majority of golfers playing UDI or DHY utilities were playing P Series irons at the top of their iron configurations.

Can you see where this is going?

Matt Bovee, Director of Product Creation, Iron and Wedge at TaylorMade: “As we look to the future, beyond the tech and the design language, we are excited about repositioning our utility irons into the P·Series family. P·UDI is an easy pair for players that currently play P·Series product and P·DHY is an extremely forgiving option for players of all skill levels. It is a natural fit to give these players the performance in this category that they are looking for.”

 

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TaylorMade PUDI

TaylorMade PUDI technology cutaway (via TaylorMade)

Crafted with tour player input, TaylorMade sought to develop a confidence-inspiring utility iron that blends with the rest of the P Series irons. Also of note: Interestingly, the PUDI has a more compact head than the P790.

In comparison to past UDI products, the PUDI has a more traditional iron shape, slimmer toplines, and less offset with a little of the backbar visible at address.

TaylorMade PDHY

TaylorMade PDHY tech cutaway (via TaylorMade).

Larger in profile than the PUDI, the PDHY seeks to position center of gravity (CG) lower in the club for ease of launch. The toe height is larger and the profile is larger at address — roughly five millimeters longer than PUDI — the sole of the club is wider for improved forgiveness.

Club Junkie’s take

Golfers who feel like they are missing something at the top of the bag could find the PUDI or PDHY a great option. The look of the PUDI should fit the most discerning eye with a more compact look, less offset, and a thinner topline. If you want a little more confidence looking down the P-DHY will be slightly larger while still being a good-looking utility iron.

For being small packages both models pack a pretty good punch with fast ball speeds, even off-center. The feel is soft and you get a solid feel of the ball compressing off the face when you strike it well. Your ears are greeted with a nice heavy thud as the ball and club come together. The PDHY will launch a little higher for players who need it while the PUDI offers a more penetrating ball flight. Both utility irons could be the cure for an open spot in the top end of the bag.

PUDI, PDHY, or Rescue?

TaylorMade offers the following notes to assist golfers in filling out their bags:

  • PUDI has mid-CG right behind the center face to create a more penetrating mid-to-low ball flight
  • PDHY has a lower center of gravity to produce an easier-to-launch mid-to-high ball flight.
  • Both PUDI and PDHY are lower-flying than the company’s hybrid/Rescue clubs.
  • PUDI is more forgiving than P790.
  • PDHY is the most forgiving iron in the entire TaylorMade iron family

Pricing, specs, and availability

Price: $249.99

At retail: Now

Stock shafts: UST Mamiya’s Recoil DART (105 X, 90 S and 75 R – only in PDHY)

Stock grip: Golf Pride’s ZGrip (black/grey)

PUDI lofts: 2-17°, 3-20°, 4-22° in both left and right-handed

PDHY lofts: 2-18°, 3-20° and 4-22° in both left and right-handed

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Coolest thing for sale in the GolfWRX Classifieds (5/3/24): Scotty Cameron Champions Choice 2.5+ putter

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At GolfWRX, we are a community of like-minded individuals that all experience and express our enjoyment of the game in many ways.

It’s that sense of community that drives day-to-day interactions in the forums on topics that range from best driver to what marker you use to mark your ball. It even allows us to share another thing we all love – buying and selling equipment.

Currently, in our GolfWRX buy/sell/trade (BST) forum, there is a listing for a Scotty Cameron Champions Choice 2.5+ putter

From the seller: (@wwcl): “Has been gamed as pics show. 33.5 includes original h/c and grip. $575 includes shipping and PP fees.”

To check out the full listing in our BST forum, head through the link: Scotty Cameron Champions Choice 2.5+ putter

This is the most impressive current listing from the GolfWRX BST, and if you are curious about the rules to participate in the BST Forum you can check them out here: GolfWRX BST Rules

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