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Cut made to make the top 15

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Cut made to make the final 10

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Club Glider - Best of PGA Show 2008 - Sports Illustrated

Posted on 02/07/2008

Best of the PGA Show

 


Published: January 20, 2008
http://www.golf.com/golf/

You only need one question to make it through the annual PGA Merchandise Show — what's new?

The big story was the new wave of adjustable and interchangeable shafts, which you read about here a week ago. You may be surprised by the item that I rank as the second-biggest innovation — a practice mat.

Maybe I've hit too many balls off worn, thin mats only to wake up the next day with aching elbows, but The Golf Mat ($229, thegolfmat.net) qualifies as a quantum leap in the artificial golf turf business. The mat has a "patented high tech composite spring embedded below the fairway-length turf," according to the company. The important part for the golfer? It feels springy and has a substantial amount of give. I was able to hit knock-down wedge shots on it with no problem. No skulled shots off a hard surface, no shooting pain up my wrist. Even players who take big, deep divots will have no problem on this mat. Vijay Singh, the ultimate practicing pro, endorses it and is a devoted client, which says a lot. I'll immediately begin lobbying my local golf dome to install them.

If you're getting a mat for a home range, you'll need netting, and you might also want to check out PureContact, a monitor that uses radar to measure ball velocity, carry and distance. It makes hitting balls into a net more interesting and a lot more useful.

Here's an incomplete list of other eye-catching items from Orlando ...

Easy Going: Sun Mountain has made a business of making golf easier for the walking player. Two new twists for '08 are the Zero G bag and the Club Glider. The Zero G is a revised version of the Hug, a bag with a waist clamp designed to take most of the weight off the shoulders. The Zero G is the same concept, executed better. Instead of a clamp, the Zero G ($239) has a belt with a Velcro fastening in front. You may have seen the Club Glider ($299) on the Golf Channel. It was a finalist in the network's golf invention contest. This travel cover has wheels on the bottom, but also a wheeled strut that lowers from a recessed area in the base. This lets the Club Glider stand up at a 45-degree angle and roll more easily. It also has a heavily padded upper half.



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