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2021 Callaway X Forged CB, UT, and Apex MB irons launched

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Callaway Golf introduces the new 2021 X Forged CB, UT, and Apex MB irons.

The players iron category is the one where technology isn’t the big-ticket item in the conversation. Tour players and top amateurs alike prefer reliability over distance and forgiveness. Look into a good number of our tour pictures, and you will see countless bags with a one-piece forged cavity or muscleback irons.

Over the past four-to-five years, many OEMs have tried to integrate new tech into those irons (i.e. PXG Gen 3 T, TaylorMade P760, and Titleist AP/T100). All of these are multi-material players irons that were designed for the tour and have performed extremely well for a good number of players (Spieth, Jason Day, Zach Johnson, etc).

So what could make that idea better? The above examples all perform to the highest standard on tour and in the retail space…

Well, according to the team at Callaway, the ability to fine-tune for every player was the best place to start. 2021 callaway x forged irons

More photos and discussion in the forums.

2021 Callaway X Forged CB

2021-callaway-x-forged-cb

The Goal: To build a tour performance iron that offers the reliability of a one-piece forging while adding technology to offer enhanced forgiveness and the ability to fine-tune each player to exact, optimized specifications.

The Tech Story: The new 2021 Callaway X Forged CB is constructed from a forged 1025 carbon steel chassis and incorporates a multi-material weighting system to manipulate head weights without effecting exact CG placement.

2021-callaway-x-forged-cb

Beginning with the body, the housing of the hollow body design has the addition of external tungsten (standard at 17 grams) weighting system that can go up or down in weight depending on the needs of the player. The idea being that now Callaway has the opportunity to fine-tune swing weight without adding weight to the inside of the hosel, which is a common practice. The issue with that is it can adjust the CG of the golf club, resulting in inconsistencies throughout the set.

With head-specific MIM internal weight out towards the toe, Callaway was able to not only ensure the CG is dead nuts where it needs to be, but it also gives engineers the ability to tailor each weight (density and shape) specific to each head. In the past, internal weights were stock across the set, which can alter the consistency of the head. In this case, each head weight is dialed and cut specifically to match each clubhead.

With a hollow body design (although not taking it as far as the players distance category) there is a level of speed mitigation that is needed to help the best players in the world not hit it too far. Yes, that statement is correct. At the tour level, control, workability, and consistency will always hold a much higher priority than distance. With the 17-4 Tour Tuned faceplate, Callaway focused on adding perhaps a very small percentage of speed off the face but more to optimize the occasional mis-hit than anything else.

2021-callaway-x-forged-cb-1

What you have now is a face that will offer maybe two percent more speed off the face and an iron that is five percent more forgiving. In real terms, that’s maybe a couple of yards more distance out of the middle and 4-5 yards more carry on a center heel or toe strike. That’s it. Doesn’t sound like much, but for better players, the combination represents the difference between carrying a bunker or hitting it four feet closer to your intended target.

At the elite level, it’s in that nuance that makes or breaks an iron.

Optics/Feel

The shaping still holds consistent with the 2018 X Forged line—slightly longer blade length than its Apex CB sibling, thin top line, and medium-to-narrow sole. Turf interaction and a softer-than-normal feel were the benchmarks that make the ’18 X Forged popular. However, the 2021 version took it a bit further with a squarer leading edge and a bit more bounce based on Tour feedback. The overall impact experience will be a bit “crisper” based on early testing with Callaway staffer Kevin Kisner.

Tour Response

“Very positive,” according to tour manager Jacob Davidson. “We have multiple staff players testing and/or putting them in play including Na, Kisner, Gooch, Garnett, and a few others.” … “Players are liking the meatier feel at impact and the added forgiveness all while keeping to what they can expect from an X Forged profile.”

2021 Callaway X Forged Forged CB specs

External weighting options for fitters and builders only: Light 12 G, standar 17 G, heavy 22 G 

Loft/Lie/Offset

  • 3: 20/60/.135
  • 4: 23/60.5/.130
  • 5: 26/61/.125
  • 6: 29/61.5/.115
  • 7: 33/62/.110
  • 8: 37/62.5/.105
  • 9: 41/63/.095
  • PW: 45/63.5/.090
  • W: 50/63.5/.085

Stock steel shafts: Project X IO

  • R (105G) S (110G) X (115G)

Stock graphite shafts: Mitsubishi MMT 

  • R (85G) S (95G) X (105G, Custom Only)

Grips: Golf Pride Z

Pricing/Availability

  • $200/club
  • Pre-sale: 10/22
  • Retail: 10/29

More photos and discussion in the forums.

2021 Callaway Apex MB

2021-callaway-apex-mb-irons-1

The Goal: Tunability in a muscle back iron. The best players in the world require precision all while maintaining consistency set to set. Callaway wanted to offer this at the highest level.

The Story: The new 2021 Callaway Apex MB is forged from 1025 carbon steel with a classic shape that is similar to the 2018 but with a slightly narrower sole and less offset. 20V grooves ensure optimal spin control in and out of the rough. The chrome-plated 2018 version now has been “brushed” to reduce glare, which is becoming a more popular option.

2021-callaway-apex-mb-irons-1

External tungsten weighting (standard at eight grams) in a muscle back iron isn’t the newest idea ever, but with new technology and a better understanding of precise CG locations, Callaway wanted now to be able to maintain the exact DNA of players set regardless of a grip change, shaft change, etc.

Sounds like a trivial reason to base a new iron on, but in the case of the PGA Tour, it’s not trivial at all. Under normal circumstances, when a player loves a set but wants to make a tweak here or there, it can alter CG and swing weight rather quickly. For example, if a player makes a change into a new grip, it most often leads to a swing weight change resulting in the tour reps either having to add weight to the hosel to match swing weight, add lead tape (awesome) or build a brand new set.

The new Callaway Apex MB gives builders and players the ability to simply use the removable back weight to get the spec back to square skipping common steps and ensuring consistency.

2021-callaway-apex-mb-irons-1

Optics

From a shaping perspective, the new 2021 Callaway Apex MB has a few tweaks from its predecessor—slight offset reduction, brushed satin finish, a slight reduction in the top line, modified height in the toe, and the obvious weighting port in the back.

As mentioned in my article about the TaylorMade P7MB, it’s never the goal to completely reimagine a muscle back iron rather maintain predictability, add small tweaks for optics and turf interaction all while maybe adding in 1 or 2 percent of forgiveness, launch, or speed. That’s it.

2021-callaway-apex-mb-irons-1

Tour Response: Since the early prototype was released in late 2019 to a small number of players, the curiosity around the new 2021 Callaway Apex MB has been active. Players were excited to get their hands on them, and since seeding began, players have been switching them in rather quickly. If anything players are loving the fact that the DNA of a Callaway blade is there as well as in some cases increased launch and a bit more forgiveness.

Young Callaway staffer Akshay Bhatia had this to say

“The shaping and feel of these new irons are unbelievable. Center strikes are exactly what you want to feel and I’m loving how they get through the turf. They are simply the best feeling irons I have ever put in the bag.” 

2021-callaway-apex-mb-irons-1

2021 Callaway Apex MB specs

External weighting options for fitters and builders only (light 4G, standard 8G, heavy 8G)

Loft/Lie/Offset

  • 3: 20.5/60/.115
  • 4: 23/60.5/.110
  • 5: 26/61/.105
  • 6: 30/61.5/.095
  • 7: 34/62/.090
  • 8: 38/62.5/.080
  • 9: 42/63/.070
  • PW: 46/63.25/.065
  • W: 50/63.5/.055

Stock steel shaft: Project X IO

  • R (105G) S (110G) X (115G)

Stock graphite shaft: Mitsubishi MMT 

  • R (85G) S (95G) X (105G, Custom Only)

Grips: Golf Pride Z

Pricing/Availability

  • $185/steel, $200/graphite
  • Pre-sale: 10/22
  • Retail 10/29

More photos and discussion in the forums.

2021 Callaway X Forged Forged UT

The Goal: To pack all of Callaway’s key technology into one “players” utility iron.

The Tech Story: The new 2021 Callaway X Forged UT was designed to offer better players all of the game improvement tech Callaway offers and pack it into a utility iron that flows nicely from the top of the bag into the rest of the set. The 1025 carbon steel hollow body design has the same external and internal weighting features as the CB as well as incorporating Callaway’s patented Flash Face Technology for high launch and ball speeds across the face.

For tour players, this is the section of the iron set where versatility is very welcome. Whether it’s hitting a low fairway finder or hitting it straight up in the air, the Callaway X Forged UT gives them every option all while not creating any drama and optically working into the rest of the set. It’s not uncommon for Callaway staffers to put the UT in play in the 2, 3, and 4-iron, so having the ability to tune them to fit each player’s goal is a huge part of this. Some players use a UT as a bridge from irons to woods, and some use them as legitimate replacements for longer irons to add forgiveness and provide some launch and steeper landing angles.

With the 2021 Callaway X Forged UT, Callaway techs can dial in the UT without altering the CG at all, which is the benchmark of launch, tunability, and consistency.

Optics: The 2018 X Forged UT had a shape that the Tour staff adored, so no major changes—the goal here was to keep the look familiar and add the new Callaway tech to dial players in.

Specs: Length/Lie/Offset

External weighting options for fitters and builders only (Light 12G, STD 17G, Heavy 22G)

  • 18: 39.5/60/.090
  • 21: 39/60.5/.085
  • 24: 38.5/61/.080

Stock steel shaft: Project X U

  • R (105G) S (110G) X (110G, Custom Only)

Stock graphite shaft: Project X Hzurdus Smoke HY

  • R (80G) S (81G) X (81G, Custom Only)

Grips: Golf Pride Z

Pricing/Availability

  • $250/club
  • Retail: 10/29

Overall remarks

I think what Callaway is doing here is very wise more than anything. Being able to nail a very specific spec for better players is important. The company has always made a sharp-looking players iron and they didn’t try something starkly different here, beyond the added tech.

This is an emotional category based on trust. Callaway knows this and responded with a way for the custom team to ensure even more trust for the player regardless of any alterations one would make (shafts, grips etc). How many times have you had a set of awesome irons that you needed to reshaft and the new combo loses that bit of magic? With the new Callaway X Forged CB and Apex MB you can have your cake and eat it too. I like it.

More photos and discussion in the forums.

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  1. Pingback: Best irons in golf of 2023: Best blades - Fly Pin High

  2. Pingback: Best irons in golf of 2022: Best blades – GolfWRX

  3. Sanjay Goopta

    Oct 14, 2020 at 4:17 pm

    I liked Gemco?Target’s Northwestern brand better!

  4. Eldrick

    Oct 14, 2020 at 3:24 am

    Roger Cleveland and Phil must have helped on these. A full set of high toes. Keeping spin off the singers and stunners will be awesome. I give it two thumbs up, and two visor tips, then two more thumbs up.

  5. TonyK

    Oct 13, 2020 at 9:28 pm

    MB looks like a one-eyed monster.
    CB looks like an uglier version of MP59.

  6. Stanley

    Oct 13, 2020 at 6:40 pm

    They look awesome. Clever design

  7. dat

    Oct 13, 2020 at 5:10 pm

    Gross design, PXG-esque and not in a good way.

  8. gwelfgulfer

    Oct 13, 2020 at 4:25 pm

    I know it’s more about performance and look at address, but I don’t like the looks.

  9. Jason

    Oct 13, 2020 at 12:28 pm

    I hit the CB and the MB this morning and they feel as good as anything I have ever hit before.

    Both are very playable, but have a divinely shaped “topline.”

    Well done Callaway

  10. Michael Constantine

    Oct 13, 2020 at 11:38 am

    Epic fail.

  11. Milo

    Oct 13, 2020 at 10:53 am

    Those muscle backs are devine!

  12. Mick

    Oct 13, 2020 at 10:35 am

    YUK !

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Whats in the Bag

Kevin Tway WITB 2024 (May)

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Driver: Ping G430 LST (10.5 degrees)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 6 X

3-wood: TaylorMade Stealth 2 (15 degrees)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana D+ 80 TX

5-wood: TaylorMade Stealth 2 (18 degrees)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana D+ 90 TX

Irons: Wilson Staff Utility (2), Titleist T100 (4-9)
Shafts: Mitsubishi MMT 100 TX (2), True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 (4-9)

Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM10 (48-10F @47, 52-12F @51, 56-14F), SM7 (60-10S)
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 (48-56), True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 (60)

Putter: Scotty Cameron T-5 Proto
Grip: Scotty Cameron Black Baby T

Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet Plus4

More photos of Kevin Tway’s WITB in the forums.

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Equipment

Did Rory McIlroy inspire Shane Lowry’s putter switch?

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Editor’s note: This is an excerpt from a piece our Andrew Tursky originally wrote for PGATour.com’s Equipment Report. Head over there for the full article.

The timing of Lowry’s putter changeup was curious: Was he just using a Spider putter because he was paired with McIlroy, who’s been using a Spider Tour X head throughout 2024? Was Lowry just being festive because it’s the Zurich Classic, and he wanted to match his teammate? Did McIlroy let Lowry try his putter, and he liked it so much he actually switched into it?

Well, as it turns out, McIlroy’s only influence was inspiring Lowry to make more putts.

When asked if McIlroy had an influence on the putter switch, Lowry had this to say: “No, it’s actually a different putter than what he uses. Maybe there was more pressure there because I needed to hole some more putts if we wanted to win,” he said with a laugh.

To Lowry’s point, McIlroy plays the Tour X model, whereas Lowry switched into the Tour Z model, which has a sleeker shape in comparison, and the two sole weights of the club are more towards the face.

Lowry’s Spider Tour Z has a white True Path Alignment channel on the crown of his putter, which is reminiscent of Lowry’s former 2-ball designs, thus helping to provide a comfort factor despite the departure from his norm. Instead of a double-bend hosel, which Lowry used in his 2-ball putters, his new Spider Tour Z is designed with a short slant neck.

“I’ve been struggling on the greens, and I just needed something with a fresh look,” Lowry told GolfWRX.com on Wednesday at the 2024 Wells Fargo Championship. “It has a different neck on it, as well, so it moves a bit differently, but it’s similar. It has a white line on the back of it [like my 2-ball], and it’s a mallet style. So it’s not too drastic of a change.

“I just picked it up on the putting green and I liked the look of it, so I was like, ‘Let’s give it a go.’”

Read the rest of the piece over at PGATour.com.

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Webb Simpson equipment Q&A: Titleist’s new 2-wood, 680 blade irons, and switching to a broomstick Jailbird

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With seven career wins on the PGA Tour, including a U.S. Open victory, Webb Simpson is a certified veteran on the course. But he’s also a certified veteran in the equipment world, too. He’s a gearhead who truly knows his stuff, and he’s even worked closely with Titleist on making his own custom 682.WS irons.

On Wednesday at the 2024 Wells Fargo Championship, I caught up with Simpson to hear about his experience with Titleist’s new prototype 2-wood, how Titleist’s 680 Forged irons from 2003 ended up back in his bag, and why he’s switching into an Odyssey Ai-One Jailbird Cruiser broomstick putter this week for the first time.

Click here to read our full story about Simpson’s putter switch on PGATOUR.com’s Equipment Report, or continue reading below for my full Q&A with Simpson at Quail Hollow Club on Wednesday.

See Webb Simpson’s full WITB from the 2024 Wells Fargo Championship here

GolfWRX: It seems like you’ve been a little all over the place with your irons in the past six months or so, and now going back to the 680’s. Is that just a comfort thing? What’s been going on with the irons?

Webb Simpson: Titleist has been so great at working with me, and R&D, on trying to get an iron that kind of modernizes the 680. And so the 682.WS took the T100 grooves, but kinda took the look and the bulk and the build of the 680’s into one club. They’re beautiful, and awesome looking. I just never hit them that well for a consistent period of time. It was probably me, but then I went to T100’s and loved them. I loved the spin, the trajectory, the yardage, but again, I never went on good runs. Going through the ground, I couldn’t feel the club as well as with the blade. So last week, I’m like, ‘Alright. I’m gonna go back more for…comfort, and see if I can get on a nice little run of ball striking.’

So that’s why I went back.

 

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OK, that makes sense. I know you had done some 2-wood testing recently. Is that in the bag right now?

It’s like day-by-day. I used it at Hilton Head every day. Valero, I used it one round. And this week, me and my caddie will do the book every morning, and if it’s a day where we think we need it, we’ll just put it in and take the 3-wood out. I love it because it’s a super simple swap. Like, it doesn’t really change much.

Yeah, can you tell me about that club? I mean, we don’t really know anything about it yet. You know? I haven’t hit it or anything, obviously.

It has grooves like a 3-wood. Spin is perfect. And it’s honestly, like, everything is in the middle of a 3-wood and driver number. Trajectory, spin, carry, all of it. So, a Hilton Head golf course is almost too easy to talk about because, you know, there, so many holes are driver 3-wood.

Valero, our thinking was we had two par-5’s into the wind, and we knew that it would take two great shots to get there in two. So instead of hitting driver-driver, we just put it in. And I used it on those holes.

Hilton was a little easier because it was off-the-tee kind of questions. But Colonial will be a golf course where, you know, there’s a lot of driver or 3-woods. It’s kind of like a backup putter or driver for me now. I’ll bring it to every tournament.

So it’s, like, in your locker right now, probably?

Well, it would be. It’s in my house [because Webb lives near by Quail Hollow Club, and is a member at the course.] It’s in the garage.

Oh, yeah, that’s right. Do you know what holes you might use it out here if it goes in play? 

Potentially 15, depending on the wind. Second shot on 10. Could be 14 off the tee. The chances here are pretty low (that he’ll use the 2-wood). But, like, Greensboro would be an awesome club all day. I’m trying to think of any other golf courses.

There’s plenty that it’ll be a nice weapon to have.

It’s interesting, the wave of 2-woods and mini drivers. Like, it’s just really taken off on Tour, and all the companies have seemed to embrace it.

Yeah. The thing I had to learn, it took me, like, at least a week to learn about it is you gotta tee it up lower than you think. I kept teeing it up too high. You need it low, like barely higher than a 3-wood. And that was where I got optimal spin and carry. If you tee it up too high, you just don’t get as much spin and lose distance, I don’t know if that’s just a mini driver thing.

And you obviously have a Jailbird putter this week. What spurred that on?

Inconsistent putting. I’m stubborn in a lot of ways when it comes to my equipment, but I have to be open minded – I just hadn’t putted consistently well in a while. And I’m like, ‘Man, I feel my ball-striking coming along. Like I feel better; for real, better.’

If I can just get something in my hands that I’m consistent with. Being on Tour, you see it every year, guys get on little runs. I can put together four to five tournaments where I’m all the sudden back in the majors, or in the FedExCup Playoffs. You can turn things around quick out here. I’m like, ‘Man, whatever’s going to get me there, great.’

My caddie, David Cook, caddied for Akshay at the Houston Open and he putted beautifully. Then, I watched Akshay on TV at Valero, and he putted beautifully. And, I’m like, ‘I’m just going to try it.’

I’ve never tried it for more than a putt or two, and I just ordered what Akshay uses. It was pretty awkward at first, but the more I used it, the more I’m like, ‘Man, it’s pretty easy.’ And a buddy of mine who’s a rep out here, John Tyler Griffin, he helped me with some setup stuff. And he said at Hilton Head, he wasn’t putting well, then tried it, and now he makes everything. He was very confident. So I’m like, ‘Alright, I’ll try it.’”

And you’re going with it this week?

Hundred percent.

Alright, I love it. Thank you, I always love talking gear with you. Play well this week. 

Thanks, man.

See Webb Simpson’s full WITB from the 2024 Wells Fargo Championship here

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