Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Company that makes Patrick Reed’s mystery irons officially revealed

Company that makes Patrick Reed’s mystery irons officially revealed

Editor’s note: The quotes in this story were acquired via email and have been edited for grammar due to Japanese-to-English translations. At the 2019 Hero World Challenge, Patrick Reed unveiled a mysterious set of self-named irons, but he remained oddly tight-lipped about who designed them. He told PGATOUR.com that he worked with “a companyâ€� for 12-14 months on the custom-made irons, but that he “can’t say yetâ€� what company it was. Kiyonari Niimi, the CEO of Grindworks Co. in Japan, has confirmed to PGATOUR.com that his company designed and made Patrick Reed’s irons. While Niimi says the Grindworks company is “small and unknown,â€� he says, “we are the strongest team for club making.â€� The Grindworks team is comprised of Niimi, Kenji Kobayashi and Tario Cham. Niimi himself is a 40-year golf industry veteran who was admitted into the International Club Makers Guild (ICG) Hall of Fame as a designer and fitter in 2014, according to the company. He is also acting as the Head of Product Development and Global Sales for Grindworks. One of his partners, Kobayashi, was previously the President of Endo Manufacturing Company – a legendary Japanese golf club forging house — and he has been designing and manufacturing forged golf clubs for over 40 years, according to Grindworks. Kobayashi was also the founder of Epon Golf, a Japanese golf club company that has a cult-like following across the world. Grindworks says Kobayashi is known in Japan’s golf industry as the “father of Forged Titanium drivers,â€� and he now works for Grindworks as the Lead Technical Advisor. Cham, another partner in the company, is an 11-year industry veteran, according to Grindworks, who has worked with “top industry Japanese golf brands and industry experts,â€� and he is now tasked with developing technologies and manufacturing processes as the Lead Designer for Grindworks products. As discussed in PGATOUR.COM’s initial article on Reed’s mystery irons, the USGA Conforming List noted that Reed’s irons were manufactured by Emery Japan Co. Niimi clarified that confusion by saying that Emery Japan Co. was a previous company name for the new Grindworks Co., and that the USGA and R&A websites use the Emery name for approval of its products because the USGA and R&A “still have not changed the name of our account.â€� While the Grindworks company has a number of different products available on its website, Niimi says Reed’s irons were a completely original design because of Reed’s needs. “About one year ago, Patrick contacted me asking to try one of our products, but I preferred to offer him an original designed iron set. His iron lie angle is very flat, which would change the total design concept of the iron if we bent an existing head 4 degrees more flat!â€� Niimi told PGATOUR.COM. “He also wanted a head with CG (center of gravity) at the exact center of the head for every iron. It was a hard job, hence we have to spend a lot of time and make a lot of prototypes.â€� Reed previously told PGATOUR.COM that due to the CG placement on the new irons, “the ball does what it’s supposed to do.â€� Niimi said that he doesn’t know how Reed actually found out about the Grindworks company. Patrick contacted me through email,â€� Niimi explained. “I don’t know how he could find me. Kobayashi and I were working with many USA brands and OEMs once ago — before China took our place — such as Ben Hogan, Titleist, Callaway, Cleveland etc.â€� While Grindworks may be relatively small and unknown, Niimi and Kobayshi have had their hands in designing and forging popular golf clubs for top U.S. brands for years. Now, with the help of Reed’s custom set, it’s likely that golf equipment fans will start to recognize the Grindworks name, too. As Reed told PGATOUR.COM at the Hero World Challenge, he will reveal more about the irons on Jan 1. We will be sure to keep you updated on any new information once it’s made available.

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50 years later, Sifford’s cigar-less victory still resonates in L.A.50 years later, Sifford’s cigar-less victory still resonates in L.A.

Charlie Sifford was a bit out of sorts when he teed it up in the first round of in the 1969 Los Angeles Open. He had been battling the flu. Or maybe it was just a bad, bad cold. Whatever had him under the weather, though, Sifford’s lungs rebelled, and he couldn’t bear to light up one of his trademark stogies. “I hate playing golf without a cigar,â€� Sifford later recalled in his autobiography, “Just Let Me Play.â€� “I get nervous and uncomfortable without that stogie in my mouth. “But every time I tried to smoke one that week, I started coughing my head off.â€� The break in his 25-year tobacco habit didn’t seem to bother Sifford that week 50 years ago as he played in the tournament now known as the Genesis Open. He opened with a 63 at Rancho Park that included a six-hole stretch on the back nine that Sifford played in 7 under, giving him a three-stroke lead. “It was one of those magic rounds where it all comes together, and you start thinking about shooting at the pin on every single hole,â€� Sifford wrote in 1992. The then-42-year-old Sifford, the first African-American to play on the PGA TOUR, led by two after shooting even par in the second round, then three again heading into the final 18 holes after another 71. He was paired with South African Harold Henning in the last round. Sifford had quite the partisan cheering section that day. A native North Carolinian who learned the game by caddying for 60 cents a day in Charlotte, he made his home in Los Angeles at the time. His wife Rose and their two sons, Craig, a toddler, and Charles Jr., a student at Cal State Long Beach, were also in the gallery. “There’s nothing like being ahead on the last day in your hometown,â€� Sifford wrote. 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He wrote in his autobiography that his heart was beating so loudly he thought he’d drown out the cheers of the partisan crowd. “This time I didn’t cry when they handed me that big, oversized check for TV,â€� Sifford wrote. “I laughed. Rose was at my side and she laughed, too. It was one of the best times I’ve ever had.â€� Sifford celebrated that night at Willie Davis’s Center Field Lounge. Among the attendees were other African-American golfers who were looking for places to play, men like Lee Elder, Rafe Botts, Pete Brown and Bill Spiller. A month later, the golfing pioneer was honored with a parade in L.A.’s Watts neighborhood on Feb. 3, which had been proclaimed as Charlie Sifford Day. There was a party that evening at a nightclub called the Black Fox. “It’s just so wonderful to think that a black man can take a golf club and be so famous,â€� he told the crowd at the nightclub. “I just wish I could call back 10 years.â€� A decade earlier, of course, he would have been in his prime. 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How to watch Cadence Bank Houston Open, Round 4: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV timesHow to watch Cadence Bank Houston Open, Round 4: Featured Groups, live scores, tee times, TV times

Round 4 of the Cadence Bank Houston Open takes place Saturday at Memorial Park Golf Course. Tony Finau leads by four at 15-under par heading into the final round. Leaderboard Tee times HOW TO FOLLOW: Television: Sunday, 1 p.m.-4 p.m. ET. (Golf Channel) Radio: Sunday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. ET. (PGA TOUR Radio on SiriusXM and PGATOUR.com/liveaudio) MUST READS Finau powers through conditions to maintain lead in Houston Local kid Travis Vick shoots 68 at Cadence Bank Houston Open Air Force grad Westmoreland comes full circle in Houston

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Tiger Woods, the grinder is still quite a talent. Woods was perilously close to falling out of the year’s final major after a horrific first two holes, but he would rebound with four birdies to fire a respectable even-par 70 on Day 1 at the PGA Championship. When he reached the clubhouse at Bellerive, Woods was five back and in a tie for 28th. He will certainly take that considering how much worse this could’ve been. If there’s a blueprint for how not to start a major championship, Woods provided it with an opening triple bogey from the middle of the fairway at this year’s U.S. Open. LIVE LEADERBOARD: Check up on the latest scores He did a good job trying to emulate that at the PGA Championship.

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