Aug 30th, 2016 Article
Titleist Cameron & Crown Putters
The perfect putter if you're short or have got long arms. Say hello to the new Cameron & Crown series.
The perfect putter if you're short or have got long arms. Say hello to the new Cameron & Crown series.
Blue is the colour, but it's golf that's the game. Check out Luke Donald's new Mizuno T7 boron forged wedges.
So what did Henrik Stenson use this week to shoot that final round 63 around Royal Troon at The Open? We’ve had a look in depth at what Callaway drivers him and Phil Mickelson used to tear up Troon plus the rest of their bags.
Yonex are launching this gorgeous bladed iron, that can still offer some forgivness. Check out the N1–MB.
We go through the archives to show you some of the truly game changing TaylorMade irons. Plus you can win a set of the latest custom fit PSi or M2 irons.
Odyssey have ripped up the rule book with their latest Toe Up putters. Here's something completely different..
Check out the new hi tech, groovy, and consistant Nike Method Origin Putter, as used by Rory McIlroy on tour!
Why wouldn't you use a mallet putter? They are bigger, more forgiving and easier to line up. It's no wonder so many tour players have switched to them in recent years. Here we check out six of the best for the upcoming season.
We want to hit the ball further in 2016. We're not sure we're ready to start working out though, so we thought we'd see which driver might help us hit longer drives this year. There are limitations in place on driver design by the R&A and USGA, but the manufactuers won't stop striving to produce drivers that hit the ball consistantly further.
Already in play on tour, this time round Nike have only felt the need to produce one fairway wood. Let’s call this model the Little Blue Meanie!
It’s the Sunday driver, where we find you a driver that you may never have heard of but that won't stop it from being a fairway finding beast. This week it's Honma's TW727 Driver range, it's not one driver, but four!!!
Week in week out the majority of tour players putt with some variation of the classic Ping Anser putter. While the model has been refined in many small ways over the years, they are all modelled of Karsten Solheim's breakthrough 1966 Anser design.