GET YOUR GAME ON WITH 2022’S PLAYERS IRONS

Trade in Event

Our trade-in event is the perfect time of the year to upgrade and get into the latest a greatest player irons available from a variety of brands! Trade-in Event is going on now until April 27! Trade in your old clubs & put their value plus a 50% Trade-in Bonus towards new clubs! Click here to learn more.

You play to a mid to low handicap, and your friends are always commenting on how well you hit the ball. If you’re that individual, you’ll likely also play irons that reflect your abilities. This year’s player’s irons offer the look and feel of blades and muscle backs, while using the latest tech to offer enhancements and forgiveness.

TaylorMade P790 and P770

TaylorMade’s P790 line was a success hardly anyone saw coming. It was intended to offer the look of a blade with the benefits of a hollow iron. But it captured the imagination of a lot of golfers—Mike Weir plays them, for instance. With that in mind, the company is etching out a new consumer segment with the launch of its P770 series, irons that offer the punch of the P790, but in a smaller form that will appeal to better players. Consider them compact P790s with a thin topline and sole, appealing to the purist who wants the look of a blade, while getting the technology of a hollow iron. TaylorMade has accomplished just that with P770.

Are they for me?

If P790 has appealed to golfers with handicaps of up to 15, the P770 is aimed at the lower-handicap golfer who gravitates to P790, but would actually prefer a smaller form.

ROGUE ST PRO IRONS

Long.

That’s the goal of Callaway’s Rogue ST Pro irons, which uses high-strength steel and Flash Face Cup designed through artificial intelligence to create more ball speed and consistency across the clubface. With added precision tungsten weighting and urethane microspheres.

Are they for me?

Callaway has created a hollow body iron for the golfer who wants the look and feel of a player’s performance iron, but the distance and forgiveness that comes from the Rogue ST line.

MIZUNO PRO 223

Another iron aimed at elite golfers, but this one comes with more tech. In fact, what you’ll find with the 223 is an iron set that brings tech to the concept. It uses a complete new technology platform for the 4 to 7 irons that combines Mizuno’s Chromoly Forging and Flow Micro-Slot, which produces great ball speeds. All of this comes in a head shape that will be looked at approvingly by the best golfers, whether they are trying to win the Club C, or play on tour. With a face that is 2.4 mm thick, you’ll grab distance without sacrificing the look. Think of it this way—Mizuno took the technology of its JPX921 irons, and made them look and play like irons aimed at the best golfers in the world.

Mizuno Pro 223

Are they for me?

Do you love the look of the irons the best in the world play, but want some increased forgiveness and stability? Mizuno Pro 223 still appeals to the best players, but you’ll see these sneak into the bags of tour pros and good amateur players alike.

Srixon ZX5

Combining pioneering ball speed technology with premium forged feel, ZX5 delivers the look of an iron the best players demand, while also providing the technology to make them workable. Oh, and did we note they are stunning to look at? Balanced and thoughtful, these irons are the best of all worlds, offering great distance, forgiveness and terrific feel with a cavity back aesthetic that presents cleanly at address.

Are they for me?

Srixon is known for its irons—just ask Graeme McDowell. The ZX5 offers the right mix of look and playability—exactly what the strong golfers are looking for.

PING I525

There are always sacrifices in searching for distance but not with the PING i525 irons. These irons offers both great distance advances and improved sound and feel. The result is an iron that PING says plays a club longer than the previous generation but sounds and feels like a player’s iron.

“What’s most satisfying in the i525 iron from an engineering standpoint is how our team has been able to maximize the flexing of the metal-wood-style face structure while creating a pleasing sound and feel,” says PING President John Solheim. “As golfers know who’ve played this type of iron design, they often sacrificed some of the feel for more distance. That’s not the case in the i525 as we’re able to provide golfers a solid-feeling iron with the increased ball speed they need to hit longer, higher shots that hit and hold the green.”

Are they for me?

Are you a strong player who has lost a little distance while getting older? Did you fit somewhere between a player’s iron and game improvement? If so, PING’s i525 irons are something you should check out. The mix of distance and feel is ideal for a variety of golfers

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