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Q&A with Bob Parsons: New PXG golf balls, Gen6 lineup, and his thoughts on LIV Golf

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In case you missed it, PXG officially announced its new family of Gen6 products this week. Prior to the launch, GolfWRX.com’s Andrew Tursky sat down for a one-on-one conversation with Bob Parsons, the founder and CEO of PXG (Parsons Xtreme Golf).

Throughout the interview, Parsons and GolfWRX discussed the new PXG Xtreme golf balls, LIV vs. PGA Tour golf, and the new Gen6 drivers and irons. Enjoy the conversation in its entirety below.

GolfWRX: I wanted to start with the golf balls. There’s been rumors flying around for years about a PXG golf ball in the making. I heard stories years ago of people finding them in the wild…

Bob Parsons: Here’s what we did. The guys had some made up, and I don’t even know where in the hell they got ’em. I think they got them from the Acme golf ball company, and they were blanks so they put our name on it. They were just to screw around with.

I didn’t even know about it until I went down and started hitting putts on the putting green [at Scottsdale National] and all the sudden there’s a PXG golf ball. I was like, ‘We make golf balls?!’ No.

GolfWRX: Is that what sparked your interest in making a golf ball?

Parsons: We’ve been playing around with this since 2015, and we first made a golf ball early on, and it had the brand name Slick on it. It wasn’t a bad ball, but it wasn’t a great ball. For us to put our name on it, it has to be a great ball.

GolfWRX: How did you get to this point. Are you manufacturing your own golf balls, are you outsourcing to a third party? How is that process been for you and what have you learned?

Parsons: We’re having them manufactured. We have a partner in it. It’s excellent.

GolfWRX: Brad (Schweigert) was showing the full robot numbers comparing the PXG golf ball to others on the market, which blew me away. One, because of how poor some of the other companies did, and two, how well PXG did in testing in comparison. What was shown in the robot testing, you know, great spin around the greens, which I saw in my personal testing, as well. Are you happy with the results?

Parsons: Well, the cover is a little thicker than, say, a Titleist. We did that to make it more durable. And then, of course, we like bright white color so it’s easier to spot, and there ya go. You know, Titleist makes a nice golf ball. So do we. When we announced this, we had pretty good inventory, and we sold out in two days.

GolfWRX: Wow, congratulations. That’s a great launch. Is the sale of the golf ball similar with the golf clubs? Is it all direct to consumer? How does that work?

Parsons: Yeah, it’s direct to consumers. We will have golf courses – we have a number of them – put their logos on the balls, and we’ll do that. The economics are a little different, but I would say our big advantage here is that performance is right with the best balls, but $15 less a box…because we sell direct. We don’t sell through Dick’s or PGA Tour Superstore or Vans golf and the like.

GolfWRX: I was curious about the direct to consumer model, in general, just looking back at you guys flipping into that mode. That’s obviously a big decision that you made.

Parsons: We’ve been doing that since the beginning. We have Dick’s coming to us all the time, we have PGA Tour Superstore, just to name two, that would love to carry our products. We just decided not to take a bite out of that, because the one edge that we have is marketing direct. That goes away if we’re with them, then we’re the same store as everybody else. Off the rack shit. That’s not us.

GolfWRX: With the PXG stores, where are you at now in terms of number of locations, and are you still expanding that model?

Parsons: I think now we have 21 stores. We should shortly open one in Cincinnati and another one in Kansas City. We’re looking to open three in California – San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego.

GolfWRX: When PXG started you guys made an absolute explosion because it was so different in so many ways. And I think it’s still so different in so many ways right now, too. How would you describe PXG if you had to say a sentence or two about what PXG is?

Parsons: I would say as far as golf is concerned, we are a research and development experiential company. I believe we deliver an experience, certainly in getting fit for your clubs, that is second to none. And we continue to work on that every year, getting better and better and better. Understanding more and more. When someone leaves with a set of clubs, they’re going to be exactly they need. Quite often, I hear from customers and they say, ‘I just got fit for a set, and this has to be the best experience I’ve had related to golf.’ I love hearing that, because that’s what we’re all about.

GolfWRX: Are you guys expanding the engineering team? I know Brad and Mike (Nicolette) had mentioned introducing more people to the media. Have they been around the whole time? 

Parsons: Yeah, they have. You know, I like our research and development team right where it is by providing the top guys with the support they need, and bringing young guys up through the ranks, and teaching them our business. Developing a golf club, there’s a lot you have to know. Last thing I wanted is to have guys working in that area, especially in positions of responsibility, where they haven’t yet acquired the knowledge they need to really do what needs to be done at the senior level. I think the big goal always, always, always is to deliver the best product. And now what we’re looking to do – we changed things because the economy is changing. We’re looking to deliver the very best product, the same quality…the reason this golf ball moved the way it did is because our customer base knows that if we put our name on something, it’s going to be good. We just have to make sure that we always honor that, and make sure we always deliver what we say we’re going to. When they step up to something we’re selling, they’re going to be glad they did. I’m just excited to be in the business, I love it.

GolfWRX: When you look at golf right now, especially the professional game, you have the LIV tour side, you have the PGA Tour side. Obviously you sponsor some golfers on the PGA Tour, so you’re involved in the pro golf circuits. How has the introduction of LIV changed your view of professional golf, whether it’s valuing the sponsorship of professional golfers…

Parsons: Well, it’s changed not at all. I believe LIV is going to be a flash in the pan. The Saudi Investment Fund has got a reputation when it gets involved, and when something doesn’t seem to be working out, they pull the cord and walk away in an instant. I know that, but the thing that’s more important, I think back to 9/11, and I can’t bring myself to be involved with it. A large part of our customers are military, law enforcement, fire fighters, EMTs, and most of those people, more than anything, they’re patriots. I think if I did [anything with LIV] I’d let them down. I wouldn’t do that.

GolfWRX: I know PXG offers discounts to military, and people in the service; what would you say are your proudest ways that you give back through the sport of golf?

Parsons: Well, I love the fact that we do it. We also do it financially. We support the Semper Fi fund – or thefund.org – which is for injured military, all services, we give them $10 million a year. We name our products, we give them military names. We are very much a military based company. The fact that I was in the Marine Corps and carried a rifle in the Vietnam War, had half my ass blown off, you know. I’m with the boys.

GolfWRX: A lighter question: Gen5 versus Gen6. What were some of the challenges and do you think it’s a successful family of products that you’re proud of this time around?

Parsons: One hundred percent. I think first of all the Gen6 driver is now the best driver ever made. I don’t think anything out performs it in terms of dispersion, distance, all of those other factors. I think if you want something you’re going to hit long and down the middle, it’s the Gen6 driver. It’s something we’re very proud of. The irons, you’ve hit ’em, so you know. They’re so soft when you hit them. Warm butter on a soft biscuit, brother. We already had the thinnest face in golf, but the Gen6 face is thinner. It helps with feel, distance, dispersion, forgiveness. I mean, I rest my case.

GolfWRX: I was particularly impressed with the driver. You guys have knocked a lot of spin off – that’s probably been the one drawback over the years. In recent years, that’s kind of been corrected. But this driver is helpful for the high speed guys looking to knock spin off. 

Parsons: Yeah, but you know, low speed guys like it, too.

GolfWRX:  Fair enough! Well, congratulations on a great lineup, and thank you for the time. 

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He played on the Hawaii Pacific University Men's Golf team and earned a Masters degree in Communications. He also played college golf at Rutgers University, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism.

7 Comments

7 Comments

  1. John D

    Mar 24, 2023 at 9:54 pm

    Love him or not, Bob Parsons is an innovator and a patriot that disrupts an industry in badly need of disruption!

    • Clownpost

      Mar 25, 2023 at 9:23 pm

      So LIV isn’t a disrupter? LOL they should work together then!

      • Tyler durden

        Mar 27, 2023 at 10:19 pm

        This clown didn’t bother to read the article. Bob would NEVER work with LIV

  2. Chuck

    Mar 24, 2023 at 3:05 pm

    Wow! This was NOT what I was expecting in this interview!

    Frankly, I had prejudged that PXG would view its target demographic (conservative but still GenX, Trump-liking, macho, anti-establishment) as being closely aligned with LIV. I still think that, honestly. But what an honest-direct, no-holds-barred answer by Bob Parsons!

    I’m not tempted by any of his equipment, and I always want to have a “mute’ button handy when PXG commercials come on during golf tournament telecasts. But props to Bob for this straight-shooting interview. Give the man his due. I like this. I’m looking at PXG a little differently thanks to this.

  3. Pingback: New PXG golf balls, Gen6 lineup and his thoughts on LIV Golf - GolfWRX - Paper Writer

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Whats in the Bag

Patrick Reed WITB 2024 (May)

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Driver: Ping G400 (8.5 degrees)
Shaft: Aldila Rogue Silver 125 MSI 70 Tour X

3-wood: Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Triple Diamond (15 degrees)
Shaft: Aldila Rogue Silver 125MSI 80 Tour X

Hybrid: Callaway Apex Pro (18 degrees)
Shaft: Aldila RIP Phenom Hybrid 100 TX

Irons: Titleist 716 TMB (2), Grindworks PR-202 (4), Grindworks PR-101A (5-PW)
Shafts:  True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100

Wedges: Cleveland RTX ZipCore (50-10 Mid), Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (56-08M @55), SM10 (60-04T)
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400

Putter: Odyssey White Hot RX Pt Customs No. 2

Ball: Titleist Pro V1

Grips: Golf Pride MCC

More photos of Patrick Reed’s WITB in the forums.

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Equipment

John Daly’s $750 custom irons and 10 must-see gear photos from the 2024 PGA Championship

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Welcome to the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Kentucky.

In the last two PGA Championships held at Valhalla, Tiger Woods won in 2000 – when he famously pointed his golf ball into the hole during the historic duel with Bob May – and Rory McIlroy won the 2014 event, basically in the dark on the final hole.

The point is, history shows that Valhalla tends to produce top-tier champions and plenty of drama.

This week at the 2024 PGA Championship, GolfWRX got its first up-close look at what some of the LIV Tour players have in their bags in 2024. We also caught back up with a few PGA Championship legends, such as Rich Beem and John Daly, and we dove into the bags of PGA Sectional qualifiers, too.

In total, we captured 47 different photo galleries this week, including 32 individual What’s In The Bag (WITB) forum threads. Click here to see all of our photos from the event, or continue reading to see my 10 equipment highlights from Valhalla.

1) Brooks Koepka’s new putter

Koepka was previously using a Scotty Cameron T5.5 putter with a slant neck, which he used to win at the beginning of the month in Singapore on the LIV tour. This week, however, he tried a T5.5 with a plumbers neck instead of the slant neck, and it’s immediately going in the bag. According to Scotty Cameron Tour rep Drew Page, Koepka already loved the head, and now finds the plumbers neck a bit more familiar to the blade-style putters he’s used throughout most of his career.

See Koepka’s full WITB here 

2) The lead tape king returns, with putting goggles

Phil Mickelson has always been one of the GOATs when it comes to lead tape usage, so it was no surprise to see his 64-degree custom Callaway wedge slathered with slabs of lead tape on the back.

The big surprise was that lefty was spotted using ProAim putting training goggles on Wednesday during his warm-up session.

The ProAim goggles are helpful to find center lines and ensure proper alignment to the target.

See Phil Mickelson’s full WITB from the 2024 PGA Championship

3) Dobyns’ old-school gamer setup

Speaking of lead tape, check out Matt Dobyn’s old Titleist 718 T-MB irons, which are so loaded with lead tape that the club is nearly unrecognizable.

Respect.

The head professional at Meadow Brook Club is making his sixth start in a PGA Championship, and he’s using a throwback Callaway GBB Epic driver with MOI-boosting lead tape and adjustable weight placements.

As GolfWRX Forum user “InTheBag” pointed out in our Matt Dobyns’ WITB thread, he has the type of setup that makes you want to hide your wallet: “I don’t know Mr. Dobyns, but one look at that bag tells me he can take your money,” writes InTheBag.

Spot on.

4) John Daly’s custom Sub70 irons and wedges

We first saw John Daly using $750 direct-to-consumer Sub70 659-CB irons and TAIII wedges at the 2023 PNC Championship, and he still has them in the bag, but he’s since stepped up the customization on the Sub70 clubs.

Does Daly ever NOT keep things entertaining?

 

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A post shared by GolfWRX (@golfwrx)

A true showman.

See Daly’s full WITB

5) DJ’s custom putter

Dustin Johnson has always been one to test multiple putters week-to-week, and he has a keen eye for different alignment lines and crowns. This week, he’s opting for a completely gray TaylorMade Spider Tour “T3.0” prototype with a short slant neck.

See the rest of DJ’s WITB from the week here

6) Patrick Reed still rocking GrindWorks irons

Patrick Reed knows his stuff when it comes to equipment, and he’s a prolific tester. Still, however, the GrindWorks PR-101A irons are squarely in the bag after his departure to the LIV tour.

The most notable new addition to Reed’s bag is this Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Triple Diamond 3-wood.

Click here to see Reed’s full WITB from this week

7) Beem’s Scratch set

Rich Beem, who won the 2002 PGA Championship at Hazeltine National, came to the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla with a bag full of Scratch Golf irons, which are loaded with lead tape and equipped with some of the coolest custom ferrules in professional golf.

See Rich Beem’s full WITB here

8) Jon Rahm’s 10-iron

Before going to LIV, Rahm was using a Callaway Apex TCB pitching wedge.

Now, he’s using a Callaway Apex TCB “10 iron.”

He’s also since upgraded to three Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke metalwoods, and fresh stampings on his Jaws Raw wedges. Click here to see Rahm’s full WITB from the 2024 PGA Championship.

9) “Why so serious?”

Tyrrell Hatton, another LIV player in the 2024 PGA Championship field, channels his inner Joker to ask everyone, “Why so serious?

See Hatton’s full WITB here

10) Block’s “Proto” iron, from address

As you probably know by now, Block switched out of his old TaylorMade Tour Preferred MC 2014 irons, and into a full set of TaylorMade’s new “Proto” irons. We’ve already seen the Proto 4-iron in the bags of Rory McIlroy and Collin Morikawa, but this is our first look at the higher-lofted irons in the set.

Here’s a look at the 7-iron from address:

See what GolfWRX members are saying about the Proto irons in our Forums

And, with that, we say goodbye to Louisville, and the second major championship of the 2024 season. We’ll see you next week at the 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas after a champion has been crowned.

Until then, don’t forget to check out all of our photos from this week at the 2024 PGA Championship!

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Whats in the Bag

Club Junkie WITB, league night week 5: Another L.A.B. putter arises

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We will be one quarter of the way through Thursday night men’s league season after this week. BK played much better last week, so he is hoping to continue that success and post another good score.

Here are the 14 clubs that will hopefully win him some skins!

Driver: PXG 0311 Black Ops (9 degrees, neutral setting)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Blue 6 X (2024)

3-wood: Cobra Dark Speed LS Titanium (14.5 degrees, set +1)
Shaft: Graphite Design Tour AD IZ-7x

Fairway: Callaway Apex UW (19 degrees)
Shaft: Fujikura ATMOS Tour Spec Blue 8 X

Hybrid: PXG 0311 Black Ops 4h (22 degrees, Flat Setting)
Shaft: KBS Tour Graphite Hybrid Prototype 85 S

Irons: TaylorMade P770 Phantom Black (5-PW)
Shaft: KBS Tour 120 Stiff

Wedge: PXG Sugar Daddy II (50-13 BP)
Shaft: Nippon Modus3 Tour 120 Stiff

Wedge: PXG Sugar Daddy II (56-13 BP)
Shaft: Nippon Modus3 Tour 120 Stiff

Wedge: PXG Sugar Daddy II (60-13 BP)
Shaft: Nippon Modus3 Tour 120 Stiff

Putter: L.A.B. Mezz.1 Max
Shaft: Accra x L.A.B. White

Ball: Titleist ProV1 Enhanced Alignment

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