$500 Per Iron! Would You Pay It?

The PXG guy that wishes he’d spent MORE money ?

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I wouldn’t but I would like to read some reviews on them by an objective source. Anyone who paid $500 per club would certainly give them a good review in order to justify the purchase.

Isn’t that what PXG and Homna go for, or close to it? I can’t imagine there being a huge technology difference but more-so an appeal to people with too much money.

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PXG yes, they sell based on technology. For the Honma Beres series, it is just purely about Asian business men flexing on their playing partners about how much money they have. From what I’ve heard there really isn’t a performance difference between the different star levels, but just the fact that you can drop $30k+ on a set with 24k gold accents and other rare metals means you can look down on the peons who can only afford a 3 star at $10k.

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That would be an awful lot of greens fees, range balls and lessons I’d rather spend it on! I would think mostly pros would spend that much.

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That price tag is way out of my range. I gulped a couple of weeks ago when I got fit for a new set of Mavrik irons for $900. I guess there are those that would spend that much for clubs, but they don’t play at my club.

FYI - TXG posted a review of them today.

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For me… spending $500 on lessons is getting me a helluva lot further along in my golf game :golf::golfing_man:

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And there’s the Mic drop.

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That’s the interesting thing about golfers though… how many people do you know who are actually putting in real effort to get better?

At my home course, I know two guys who are putting in some amount of effort to improve and one of them mostly just bangs range balls and watches YouTube videos.

From there, I have a couple of buddies who take the occasional lesson when their swings start going off the rails…

Most of the people I know aren’t trying to learn new shots, change their approach to the course or dramatically improve on anything…

Some of them might try to buy a game though!

I do think golf is interesting in how people approach it… I think the vast majority just silo out golf as something they don’t have enough time to get better at and are happy to play their regular game and hopeful to plinko into a good score.

Obviously those of us here have a different mentality!

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Yeah that seems to happen a lot. Look at the constant messages of all the equipment ads… “longer”, “straighter”, “faster”, “make all your putts”, etc etc…

Maybe golf instructors and coaches should do more advertising :wink:

I’ll chime on this very quickly. There is no reason any golfer needs to spend $500 on an iron. Case closed :joy:

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If you count my fitness coach and my golf coach, I am spending $550 a month to improve my game to make the goal I have set for myself. I spend at least three hours a day messing with my putting and short game, as I feel this is the most important part of golf. I have been playing just over 4 years. I went from a 27 handicap down to as low as a 9.9 (11.1 currently) before we really started messing with my swing. Golf is an expensive sport, especially if you want to compete at the highest level, but it makes no sense for me to spend 12 months worth of lessons to fill my bag with clubs. Time, effort, discipline, and a lot of tears.

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Highly recommend the sieckmann book your short game solutions for some wedge advice…

I’ve started to put his stuff into play on the course and it’s good for me… I’ve always had a decent wedge game but what I like most about his technique is it’s consistent and minimizes misses.

I have implemented his power techniques yet as I’m still not swinging full shots.

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I actually invested in a swing coach this year instead of just getting lessons. I can track my progress, he knows when I’m phoning it in ( “finish your swing please”), and he isn’t fixing my swing, he’s improving/ tweaking my natural swing.
We work on components, and I have to demonstrate competency before moving on to the next phase. I have homework to complete, and I share my round information with him.
I call him The Golf Whisperer.

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That’s awesome! I’ve been working with more of a coach… it’s a different relationship built more around mental approach and swing theory.

I think having someone who is invested in your improvement is a huge benefit to developing as a golfer… definitely a better investment than $500 irons!

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this is great! and the best kind of “investment” you can make in your game. Equipment has its role in your performance, but it’s more of a refinement. Doing the right kind of work on your swing will yield much more than spending a lot fo money on golf clubs.

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I still think this is a brilliant move by Titleist. They get to do R&D, and they get to defray some of the costs of R&D by selling prototypes to people who want to buy that kind of thing.

Is it worth it to me? Not a chance. But if Titleist can sell 'em, more power to Titleist.

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I like to tell the women I play with when I bomb my driver that I have a very expensive swing, and I’d pay twice that without hesitation.

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Just crazy to think about!

I love my P790’s…

There is no way a $500 club is better!

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