Titleist shocked its tour pros with this outrageous GT design
Before a club is deemed worthy of earning a spot in the bag, it has to pass the “eye test.” For tour pros, this is a non-negotiable.
If it doesn’t look good in the address position, there’s no need to take a single swing.
While watching pros test out Titleist’s GT drivers and fairway woods for the first time last month at the Memorial Tournament, I noticed every pro conducted the eye test in almost the same manner.
They observe the graphics and weight adjustments in the sole before flipping it over to inspect the crown. Minor changes in shaping can be a turnoff for some pros; the same goes for wholesale changes to the crown color. Consistency is key.
“What I love about Titleist is I always know what I’m getting,” Titleist staffer Peter Malnati told GOLF.com. “There’s no big surprises or changes to the shaping and look that make you scratch your head. They find plenty of ways to improve the performance, but never at the expense of visuals. That’s something I’ve always appreciated.”
titleist gt thermoform crown
Titleist’s Seamless Thermoform Crown is made from a Proprietary Matrix Polymer (PMP) that wraps into the sole, reducing the number of overlap joints. Titleist
If you didn’t know by now, tour pros also hate surprises. This brings us to recent content shoots Titleist conducted in December with its top staffers, including Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, Cameron Young and Max Homa. The goal behind the shoot was to capture the best players in the world getting a glimpse at Titleist’s GT metalwoods for the first time. Organic feedback is important when you’re attempting to let recreational golfers into the mind of a Spieth or Thomas.
Of course, Stephanie Luttrell, Titleist’s director of metalwood development, and J.J. Van Wezenbeeck, Titleist’s director of player promotion, didn’t want to just hand over GT as if it were just another club. There needed to be some buildup.
With Titleist shifting to a new multi-material construction featuring a Seamless Thermoform Crown made from a Proprietary Matrix Polymer (PMP) — yes, it’s a mouthful — Luttrell and Van Wezenbeeck showed each player the different components that made up the body and crown. The problem with presenting in this manner is it leads pros to assume the looks are changing in a big way, as has been the case for other manufacturers who’ve embraced carbon crown constructions.
“We were showing these pieces to Jordan, Justin and Cam, and you could kind of register the look of concern as I’m showing them all of this,” Luttrell said in an interview with GOLF.com at the Titleist Performance Institute in Oceanside, California.
It was at this point that Luttrell and Van Wezenbeeck realized they needed to assuage fears that a visual change was imminent.
“J.J. opened the drawer and pulled [the driver heads] out and they all said, ‘Oh, thank god,’” said Luttrell. “It’s one of those imperceptibles that we try to pay attention to and do well to deliver a driver that provides a lot of confidence in the address position.”