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Which golf club is the most iconic of all time? You decide.
It’s that time of the year again, GolfWRXers. March Madness is upon us. Each year, millions of individuals watch the NCAA basketball tournament and fill out their own bracket (or several), attempting to accurately predict each game’s winners and losers and the upsets that are bound to take place. At GolfWRX, we are no different, and we thoroughly enjoy the madness that ensues during college basketball’s annual tournament.
In fact, we love it so much that we decided to create our own bracket for our community of golf nuts. Our team constructed a bracket of 64 clubs that heavily influenced the game of golf and the equipment that we use today, broken into four categories: drivers, wedges, irons, and putters. When it’s all said and done, there will be only one club left standing as the most iconic golf club of all time. The field of contenders was fierce, and while many might feel snubbed, we narrowed our list down by only considering clubs that are at least 5 years old and not older than 30 years.
Cast your vote below or via Instagram stories and let us know who you think belongs in the next round before the first round advances Saturday morning.
Drivers
#1 Callaway Big Bertha vs #16 Callaway ERC Fusion
DRIVERS
#1 Callaway Big Bertha vs #16 Callaway ERC Fusion
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#8 Ping G400 Max vs #9 Bridgestone J33R
#8 Ping G400 Max vs #9 Bridgestone J33R
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#5 Ping TiSi vs #12 Adams Speedline 9064LS
#5 Ping TiSi vs #12 Adams Speedline 9064L
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#4 Cleveland HiBore vs #13 Cobra L4V
#4 Cleveland HiBore vs #13 Cobra L4V
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#6 TaylorMade R7 Quad vs #11 Nike VR Pro Limited Edition
#6 TaylorMade R7 Quad vs #11 Nike VR Pro Limited Edition
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#3 Titleist 975D vs #14 TaylorMade Rocketballz
#3 Titleist 975D vs #14 TaylorMade Rocketballz
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#7 Titleist 983K vs #10 TaylorMade R1
#7 Titleist 983K vs #10 TaylorMade R1
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#2 TaylorMade Ti Bubble II vs #15 Lynx Boom Boom Parralax
#2 TaylorMade Ti Bubble II vs #15 Lynx Boom Boom Parallax
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
Wedges
#1 Cleveland 588 vs #16 Callaway X Forged 2007
WEDGES
#1 Cleveland 588 vs #16 Callaway X Forged 2007
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#8 Cobra Norman Signature vs #9 Cleveland Tour Action 900
#8 Cobra Norman Signature vs #9 Cleveland Tour Action 900
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#5 Nike VR Forged vs #12 TaylorMade Hi-Toe
#5 Nike VR Forged vs #12 TaylorMade Hi-Toe
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#4 Callaway Hickory Stick vs #13 Bridgestone West Coast Design
#4 Callaway Hickory Stick vs #13 Bridgestone West Coast Design
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#6 Alien Ultimate vs #11 Mizuno MP-R
#6 Alien Ultimate vs #11 Mizuno MP-R
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#3 Ping Eye 2 vs #14 Ram FX Pro Grind
#3 Ping Eye 2 vs #14 Ram FX Pro Grind
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#7 Fourteen RM vs #10 TaylorMade Z TP
#7 Fourteen RM vs #10 TaylorMade Z TP
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#2 Titleist Vokey Spin Milled vs #15 Ping Tour
#2 Titleist Vokey Spin Milled vs #15 Ping Tour
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
Irons
#1 Ping Eye 2 vs #16 TaylorMade Tour Preferred MC 2012
IRONS
#1 Ping Eye 2 vs #16 TaylorMade Tour Preferred MC 2012
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#8 Nike Forged Blades vs #9 Mizuno MP 14
#8 Nike Forged Blades vs #9 Mizuno MP 14
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#5 Tommy Armour 845 Silver Scot vs #12 Cobra King Oversize
#5 Tommy Armour 845 Silver Scot vs #12 Cobra King Oversize
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#4 Ben Hogan Apex vs #13 Cleveland TA3 Form Forged
#4 Ben Hogan Apex vs #13 Cleveland TA3 Form Forged
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#6 Srizon z745 vs #11 PXG 0311
#6 Srixon z745 vs #11 PXG 0311
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#3 Titleist DCI 962B vs #14 Mirua MB-001
#3 Titleist DCI 962B vs #14 Miura MB-001
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#7 TaylorMade 300 Forged vs #10 MaxFli Australian Blades
#7 TaylorMade 300 Forged vs #10 MaxFli Australian Blades
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#2 Callaway Big Bertha 1994 vs #15 Yonex ADX Tour Forged
Putters
#1 Ping Anser vs #16 Nike Method
PUTTERS
#1 Ping Anser vs #16 Nike Method
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#8 Ram Zebra vs #9 TaylorMade Ghost
#8 Ram Zebra vs #9 TaylorMade Ghost
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#5 TaylorMade Spider vs #12 Yes! C-Groove
#5 TaylorMade Spider vs #12 Yes! C-Groove
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#4 Scotty Cameron Teryllium vs #13 Bettinardi BB
#4 Scotty Cameron Teryllium vs #13 Bettinardi BB
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#6 Ray Cook Billy Baroo vs #11 Cleveland Ben Crenshaw
#6 Ray Cook Billy Baroo vs #11 Cleveland Ben Crenshaw
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#3 Odyssey 2 Ball vs #14 Ping CRAZ-E
#3 Odyssey 2 Ball vs #14 Ping CRAZ-E
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#7 Odyssey White Hot vs #10 Scotty Cameron Futura
#7 Odyssey White Hot vs #10 Scotty Cameron Futura
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
#2 Wilson 8802 vs #15 MacGregor Response
#2 Wilson 8892 vs #15 MacGregor Response
— GolfWRX (@GolfWRX) March 16, 2023
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Morning 9: Scheffler repeats at Players | Monday PIF meeting | McIlroy takes another shot at Norman
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Tour Rundown: Matching luggage for Scheffler
For those of us from another generation, the disruption of the golf world that we knew well is both exciting and unsettling. The two most potent disruptors are rival golf leagues, not unlike the turmoil seen in the NCAA, and the Anchorman-style gangs of golf reporters. Reconciled to a past era are the dominance of the U.S. PGA Tour and the monthly golf magazines. One element that will not change, at any time in the foreseeable future, however, is the sanctity of the grand slam and golf’s four male major championships. While the LPGA and the PGA Tour Champions have seen a light and added fifth and sixth power titles, the men’s game remains staunchly in the 20th century.
This last topic surges in pertinence each March, just before the playing of The Players Championship. Two camps stake tents and run banners up the poll. One cries out for elevation of the PC to major status, while the other digs a trench around its impregnable quadrilateral. My personal take is this: Every four years since 2016, golf is played at the Olympics. Is Olympic Gold the equivalent of a major title? Yes, it is. It comes around every 1,500 days and brings elite golfers together in competition at the most important athletic event and venue. In my mind, Justin Rose and Xander Schauffele earned major titles in Brazil and Japan, as did Inbee Park and Nelly Korda. As for the Players Championship, why not? The field is stronger by ranking than any major event, and the golf course demands every shot that golfers can create.
The Players Championship is so important to the U.S. PGA Tour that all other tours under its umbrella take the week off. No Korn Ferry, no Tour Champions. The LPGA and the DP World Tour follow suit, which shrinks the amount of watchable golf to two events. On that sour note, let’s run down this week’s play, beginning with the Players Championship and ending with the Asian Tour in Macau.
PGA Tour @ Players Championship: matching luggage for Scheffler
Scottie Scheffler is making a bid to be the player of his generation. From the previous one, a fair number have taken leave from traditional competition. The Johnsons, Koepkas, and Reeds from the 1980s no longer play the events that stand the test of time. The born-in-the-90s generation had its first great champion in Jordan Spieth until he took leave of the senses that brought him to golf’s pinnacle. Spieth’s descent ran opposite Scheffler’s rise.
Scottie Scheffler had won nothing on the PGA Tour until February 13th of 2022. He won on that day in Phoenix, then won three more times by the middle of April. One of those wins was the API at Bay Hill. Last week, Scheffler won for a second time at the Orlando course. Last March, Scheffler won his first Players Championship, by five shots over Tyrrell Hatton. On Sunday, Scheffler dived headfirst into a cauldron of fierce competition. Facing challenges from Olympic champion Schauffele, Open champion Brian Harmon, and U.S. Open champion Wyndham Clark, Scheffler breathed. As the only man to reach 20 under par, he earned a second consecutive title at Sawgrass and reminded us that it has been two years since he won the Masters and that he is on a tear.
It all began at the fourth on Sunday for Scheffler. After pars at the opening three holes, Scheffler’s driving wedge from 92 yards landed 20 feet shy of the hole, took one large bounce, then spun left, trickling into the hole for eagle. He followed that incantation with another birdie, then two pars. The stretch from 8 to 12 was where the champion made a statement. His quartet of birdies over that run, brought him to 19-under par and let the pursuing pack know that even lower than the winning 17 under in 2023 would be necessary.
And the trio was game. Harman and Clark both dipped below 70, to reach 19 under at the final pole. Schauffele could not find a similar gear and closed with 70 — 69 would have earned him a playoff with Scheffler. It was the extra gear, the ability to go low when all things mattered, that eleveated the now two-time champion to the top of the podium. In five of his eight tour wins, Scheffler has posted a sub-70 round on day four, and four of those have been 67 or lower.
With elegant precision, Scheffler applied the final thrust at the par-5 16th. He played safely away from Pete’s Pond on the right, into the left greenside bunker at the back of the putting surface. His bunker shot was thing of exquisite accuracy, trickling to a planned stop about 20 inches from the hole. The birdie concluded matters and rang the sort of bell that Dye courses tend to display.
The greenside bunker is not a problem for the defending champ.
Scottie Scheffler’s birdie at 16 moves him back into a share of the lead @THEPLAYERS. pic.twitter.com/aEi7onLZPE
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) March 17, 2024
Asian Tour @ International Series Macau: Catlin earns playoff victory
There are two sorts of golfers that compete on the Asian Tour, which makes no secret of its alliance with the LIV. The first are the AT stalwarts, the ones who play as golfers have always played, with little guarantee and much pride. The others are the ones who compete on the LIV, eschewing both risk and pride for the guaranteed payday. Their deal costs them world ranking points, so they play in AT events, hoping to qualify for golf’s major events.
This week in Macau, one of those LIV golfers shot 60 on Sunday and did not win the tournament. Hard to believe, you say? Aye, but when another golfer shoots 59 in the third round, follows it up with a 65 on day four, then makes overtime birdie twice at the par-five closer, the razor’s edge of great golf is sharpened. Thus did it happen with American John Catlin and Spaniard David Puig.
It was Catlin who signed for 59, and it took a twisting, eagle putt at the last to enshrine the first-ever, sub-60 on the Asian Tour. It was Puig who closed the gap on Sunday with a 60 of his own, which featured a bogey at the lengthy fifth hole, but was followed by seven birdies and an eagle over the next 13 holes. Catlin had a six-feet putt for the regulation win, but missed. In extra time, Puig nearly holed for eagle at 18, then tapped in for birdie. Catlin’s second danced along the OOB perimeter, before ending on an access road. His drop and pitch left him another six feet to remain alive, and this time, he converted.
At the second go-round of the par-5 finisher, Puig found the green in two, but took three putts from nearly 50 feet. Catlin confronted another challenging pitch for his third, and once again, his wedge game won the day. He tapped in for birdie and the win.
5??9?? ? @JohnCatlin59 eagles the 18th to shoot the first 59 on the Asian Tour ?? #whereitsAT #ThisISEverything #InternationalSeries @intseriesgolf pic.twitter.com/RV9gYy1SIp
— Asian Tour (@asiantourgolf) March 16, 2024
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Morning 9: Rory, Xander, Clark share Players lead | Rory on controversial drop | AK misses Macau cut
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Tony Maroni
Mar 17, 2023 at 8:33 am
Where is the Taylormade 2016 M2?
Tom
Mar 17, 2023 at 5:50 am
Anyway to vote if we don’t have instagram?
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