2017 MOST WANTED GAME IMPROVEMENT IRON
Irons

2017 MOST WANTED GAME IMPROVEMENT IRON

2017 MOST WANTED GAME IMPROVEMENT IRON

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OUR JOB IS YOUR GAME

What characteristics define the best performing game-improvement iron?

Is it distance? Accuracy? Control? A little added forgiveness? We’ve found that it’s a combination of all of the above, and the best way to summarize that is through Mark Broadie’s Strokes Gained Methodology. To that end, we’ve changed things up a bit since our Most Wanted Players Iron test. We still leveraged our testing facility in Virginia to deliver the most comprehensive, unbiased Game-Improvement Iron Test in the world, but we’ve improved our metrics. If you’re in the market for new irons in 2017, this is for you.

To determine this year’s rankings, we applied Strokes Gained methodology to long, middle, and short irons. We’ve provided the Strokes Gained values for each iron in our table below. As we have in the past, we have also provided standard launch monitor metrics, along with our Radial Distance and Shot Area calculations.

For more information, view our How We Test page.

TopDown

DEFINING THE GAME IMPROVEMENT CATEGORY

10 of the top game-improvement irons were put to the test.  The clubs tested, while they may seem fit for the higher handicap golfer, offer playability for a wide array of handicaps.  These irons provide added forgiveness while maintaining similar launch characteristics as the non-blade players irons we tested earlier in the year.

The target handicap for this iron category ranges from low single digits to the mid-teens. The designs of these clubs feature a medium-sized head profile and a full cavity to maximize distance and forgiveness across the set.

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ADVANCED GOLF ANALYTICS

Data matters. And when it comes to finding the right equipment, it’s critical. We help solve this by applying the largest connected set of head-to-head data to tackle one of golf’s biggest challenges.

All testing was conducted inside our fully independent test facility located in Virginia. All testers used Bridgestone B330-RX golf balls for consistency and to reduce test variables. All ball data was collected using the world’s most trusted launch monitor, Foresight Sports. All head data was captured using the Foresight’s HMT.

  • SHOTS HIT: 5,812
  • DATA POINTS: 255,728
  • TIME: 60 hours
  • TESTERS: 20
  • HANDICAP RANGE: 0-16
  • AGE RANGE: 23 – 50
  • DRIVER SWING SPEED RANGE: 80 mph – 120 mph
  • IRONS TESTED: Three irons, a short, middle, and long iron from each set

Data. Aggregated. Normalized. Delivered.

For more details, see our How We Test page.

RESULTS AND RANKINGS

Our rankings aren’t determined inside a conference room. We don’t have a panel, and there are no votes. The launch monitor is the one and only judge. For our 2017 Most Wanted Game-Improvement Iron test, we collected a standard set of launch monitor metrics (ball speed, launch angle, spin rates, distance, etc.).

Using that data, we calculated a Strokes Gained average each club. Note that because Strokes Gained values are derived from PGA Tour data, it’s normal and expected that amateur averages will show negative Strokes Gained values. What’s important isn’t the absolute number, but rather how the numbers compare from club to club.

2017 Best Game Improvement Irons

Top3

foresight-bnr

No1

2017 Most Wanted Game Improvement Iron Data

Below you’ll find the data from our 2017 Most Wanted Game Improvement Iron Test. Note that you can use the Iron Model filter to limit the display to specific models.

PLEASE NOTE:

By default, we show the comparative metrics for long irons. To see middle and short irons, use the Iron Type drop down located on the top right of the charts.

Game-Improvement Iron Data (by Club Type)

2017 Most Want Game-Improvement Irons Ranking

ClubSG Long IronSG Mid IronSG Short IronTotal SGTRUERank
Srixon Z565-0.0351-0.06010.0588-0.03641
PING G-0.1015-0.03160.0767-0.05642
Titleist AP1-0.1362-0.01850.0657-0.08913
Cobra F7-0.1080-0.08350.0778-0.11384
Cobra F7 ONE-0.1322-0.08560.0198-0.19805
Mizuno JPX 900 Forged-0.0448-0.1619-0.0246-0.23136
TaylorMade M2-0.1314-0.13130.0060-0.25677
Miura Genesis-0.1403-0.14020.0177-0.26298
Wilson Staff C200-0.1453-0.19420.0663-0.27329
Callaway Steelhead-0.1926-0.0664-0.0240-0.283010

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Driver Ping G30 Hybrids PXG 0317
3/4 IRON PXG 0311XF 5-GW Srixon Z 565
SW PXG 0317 LW PXG 0311
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      Gerald Teigrob

      5 years ago

      Having recently added the F7 4 iron and gap wedge to my arsenal…my caveat when looking at the results here is that players like us looking for game improvement irons need to focus on what fits our game. Srixon will never be everything that it promises to be to my thinking, so I will be a satisfied customer of the Cobra brand. I don’t see myself playing the CG/MB blades as long as the GI irons do the trick. Hope you enjoy your Srixon GI irons while I enjoy my Bio Cell and F7 irons. Play what fits your game…that’s why Cobra is it for me!

      Reply

      Shamus

      5 years ago

      The 2017 F7 one SW is nearly impossible to find. Any suggestions?

      Reply

      Gerry T

      4 years ago

      Not sure ,but I would think eBay or check golf stores for demo sales.

      Brian Martin

      6 years ago

      While waiting for my delayed Callaway CF-16’s to arrive my local golf shop gave me a set of the 565’s to play. I reluctantly took them and figured it was better than not playing for 2 weeks as they had already sold my trade-ins.

      I have to say that while I only played 5 rounds with them, the 565’s were exceptional. Consistent, very good feel, good yardage gaps – a very reliable set. While I do like the Callaways, especially since I took so much time to have them fitted and set up for me, admittedly I am looking for a used set of 565’s to buy as a back-up/travel set – they’re just that good.

      Reply

      Gary

      6 years ago

      565’s are pretty nice clubs, I just got a set recently, but am still getting used to them.
      Not sure the leading edge bounce is a great thing for me, but that will take longer to determine.
      Thanks for the Unbiased Review MGS.

      Reply

      Brandon B

      6 years ago

      MYGOLFSPY, can you compare the Z565’s as this years winners against the 2018 clubs? I’m really interested to see how they hold up to the likes of Wilson C300’s, TM P790’s, etc.

      Love your site and your unbiased reviews. Keep up the good work.

      Reply

      Gary

      6 years ago

      Eliminating the long iron data which nobody plays anymore, the Callaway Steelhead wins when combining the mid and short iron test results. The focus on hybrids replacing long irons makes the mid and long iron data crucial in making a decision on the purchase of irons.

      Reply

      Carl Melillo

      6 years ago

      This analysis is to be commended for providing differentiation by
      1) long, medium and short irons
      2) expansive set of key data points
      which other comparative reviews minimize or just give rankings.

      Interesting to note: the difference between first place and last place in terms of the key data points measured is still acceptable in a players reality. For instance on distance and accuracy: total carry distance, distance from center and distance from the pin… there is approximately a swing of 4 yards plus or minus separating 1st place from last place.

      Reply

      Louis Pounds

      7 years ago

      Thank you MGS!! I am a novice golfer and recently sold sets of clubs and bought the Srixon 565s, the shaft used is the Nippon modus 3 105. These clubs are amazing! Thank you, thank you, thank you! These are better than the xr os I sold to get these. I wish I had a place to try the driver to as perhaps I can sell my TM M1 (original) and get the Srixon driver to match.

      Reply

      Jon

      7 years ago

      After I read this review a few weeks back I thought I would go in a hit the Ping G’s. In my mind they are the best in this test. I only game short and mid irons and the Srixon with better long irons doesn’t do it for me.

      I figured if the Ping G’s were the best for short and mid irons in this test the Ping G400’s had to be better. I really wanted to buy new irons.

      So last week I went out and tested the Ping G400’s when they were released. The ad hype says they are one club longer and two clubs higher. The issue is longer than what and higher than what?

      I am currently gaming 2006 Taylormade R7XD’s. So I went on a launch monitor and compared my 7 iron to a Ping G400 7 iron. Thinking great this is going to be super. My clubs are 11 years old the Ping G400s are going to smoke them.

      Well the Ping G400 was about 3 yards longer and 1 yard higher. Not one club longer and two clubs higher as advertised. I think that the reason the Pings beat mine as I was not quite warmed up when I hit my clubs.

      Just for good measure I hit Callaway Steelheads and the Cobra F7.

      All sets including mine were hardly any different. The one difference that I could measure was the spin rate on my clubs was consistently higher and it looked like the decent angle on the other clubs was steeper. They all rolled out about the same.

      I was so disappointed I really wanted new irons, but the difference, if you can call it that, simply doesn’t warrant the $700+ cost.

      So when they say the Ping G400’s are a club longer and two clubs higher, what do they compare these things to when they write this advertising copy? 1969 Spalding’s?

      Reply

      Rusty Hosel

      7 years ago

      THANKS for your candid report.

      Reply

      Ol'pal Gary

      6 years ago

      Jon, the TaylorMade R7 XD is a set of irons that many don’t know about.
      If possible you should keep them , even as just an extra set.
      I have a set that i’ll part with, when i’m either dead or crippled.

      Reply

      Julian Saluk

      7 years ago

      Inquired before as to the loft angles of the irons. Different angles affect the flight of the ball. A 5 iron of one manufacture could be a 6 of another.

      Reply

      leftybradd

      7 years ago

      I play Mizuno MP-54 (I’m a lefty), tried the Srixons at club champion and was blown away how good they felt. Only iron IMO that feels as good as a Mizuno. I don’t like the JPX-900 forged, something about seeing the bottom of the club behind the head at address. I’m seriously considering the Srixons in the near future.

      Reply

      Matt

      7 years ago

      It’s interesting to see how low the Steelhead finished down the list. In the hundreds of fittings I’ve done this year my customers have chosen the Callaway 2-1 over the next closest iron. The numbers are definitely good with the Steelhead, but marketing just plays too large a part in what people decide on. When I look objectively and suggest Srixon or the Mizuno irons people always have hesitation regardless of performance. The mental aspect of the folks deciding on what irons to play and the confidence they have in their decision goes a long way as to how they will hit the clubs as well because you know the first bad shot with the 565 and they will question their fitter, the manufacturer and the clubs themselves. No question how good those 565 irons are, but it has been a struggle to have people understand what is best for them might not be what the magazines/tv suggest.

      Reply

      MyGolfSpy

      7 years ago

      Performance > Marketing

      Reply

      Brian

      6 years ago

      What iron is considered short, medium and long? Is long 3,4,5 & medium 6,7,8 short 9, PW, AW

      Brett

      6 years ago

      Matt,

      We use Trackman for our fittings and have had a lot of success with the Srixon line (irons) with very little hesitation. Do you use a launch monitor in your fittings? Most of our clients don’t care about the brand as long as Trackman is validating what they see and feel on the range.

      Reply

      Kevin Montgomery

      7 years ago

      I’m new to MGS but appreciate the reviews. I have a question about your Strokes Gained score. The winner has the smallest negative number meaning positive numbers are good and negative numbers are bad. Does this mean that for “GI” clubs every long and medium club (and for the Mizuno and Callaway every club) actually makes you play worse? What baseline are these clubs losing strokes to?

      Reply

      Andrew Pochos

      7 years ago

      I hit both the 565’s, G and Steelhead xr’s on a launch monitor. The 565’s felt great but the Steelhead had the better numbers in terms of distance and dispersion.

      Reply

      Greg Watson

      7 years ago

      Would lover to see you guys go back and show player irons in this format.

      Reply

      Stephen Kelly

      7 years ago

      just moved from mizuno to srixon z565 irons. I’m not surprised they finished 1st. Best Irons I’ve hit to date

      Reply

      John Wofford

      7 years ago

      I highly, HIGHLY doubt any of the major OEM’S WOULD EVEN OFFER A KICKBACK. With a reasonable degree of certainty I don’t believe MGS would accept any. I have actually demo’s the top 4 and my result were about the same. Their were things about each mfg that I liked.
      I’d urge any skeptics to try and “disprove these results. I’m sure you will find they are spot on. And yes! Srixon makes a great driver too. The tour pro’s take money. That was actually a pretty uncool thing to say.

      Reply

      Gav Lar

      7 years ago

      Great answer Tony, I’m not sure what these conspiracy theorists gain by making statements like this, MGS has always been impartial in my opinion, and proven by its choices over the years and certainly helps thousands of golfers by providing real analysis and data on expensive golf choices we want to make and don’t have the time or money to do so. I know you have certainly helped me and my golf club decisions over the years. Please carry on doing what you are doing and provide the testing and data and also to shout out individuals who appear to have their own agendas and theories for whatever reason.

      Reply

      Stevegp

      7 years ago

      Thanks for the great review. I found it interesting and helpful.

      Reply

      McaseyM

      7 years ago

      Not suprised by the awesome showing by Srixon, they were the best feeling a most consistent for me when I demoed them in April. I really like the idea of the on length and am happy to see Cobra doing well too. Well done MGS, thanks for all of your hard work… love the IG note to Chad

      Can’t wait for fairway wood results

      Reply

      Craig Roddam

      7 years ago

      There is a good reason why this is my new set this year. Srixon makes awesome clubs

      Reply

      Craig Roddam

      7 years ago

      I was already wearing Sketchers and playing Srixon I-701 tours with Cleveland wedges. I was that the PGA show this year and met our local Srixon rep. Hit their woods and decided I would buy everything new and go with all Srixon/Cleveland. Sketcher golf shoes are the most comfortable I have ever worn. ?

      Reply

      Johnny Cowboy

      7 years ago

      Sketchers? WHAT ARE THOSE!?

      John O’Neill

      7 years ago

      I am a 52 year old + handicap. I refused to leave my mizuno mp 32’s until I got the 7 series Srixons this spring I already switched to the 565s they are so incredible.

      Reply

      Alan Smith

      7 years ago

      I wonder. Would the ultimate game improvement clubs be a mixed bag of Srixon z565, (long irons) Titliest API (mid irons) and Cobra F7 (short irons)?

      Reply

      Grant

      7 years ago

      Mixing brands like that would probably throw you out too much. You would have swing weight and feeling issues between the three.

      People mix the 765s and 565s they are both made from the same steel so would be closer to the feel/weight of each other.

      Reply

      Gerry T

      4 years ago

      In this case I would go with the Cobra F7s. I would mix and match with my Cobra F6 irons and Bio Cell irons.

      Reply

      Tim Young

      7 years ago

      I recently got a Srixon driver. Best driver I’ve ever hit.

      Reply

      Jason Brandel

      7 years ago

      LOVE my 565’s!!!

      Reply

      MyGolf Spy

      7 years ago

      Like a good number of our readers, we originally thought that robots offered the best way to test clubs for performance. Repeatability, consistency…it obviously sounds logical. So, in the early days of our testing program, we looked into robot testing. Much to our surprise, there was universal, I’m talking 100% agreement among the numerous R&D guys that we spoke with, that for performance testing, humans are the way to go.

      We actually an article about it: http://mygolfspy.com/golf-club-testing-results-you-can-trust/

      When you talk the R&D guys what you find is that they rely much more heavily on human testing than robot testing to gauge performance. It’s a bit of a simplification, but robots are primarily design tools. Of course, robots can also be useful when you want to make a performance claim based on specific criteria. For example, you may know that your driver out performs your competitor’s at 100 MPH swing speed and face contact 3mm above center. So what if your product comes up short under most any other condition; you configure your robot to replicate YOUR ideal conditions, and then boom…you have valid data to make a claim that may not hold up in the real world.

      I also like to point people to a test Edwin Watts did several years ago in an attempt to help golfers find the best drivers. They did standard 9-point robot testing. Their top picks based on the robot data weren’t among the leaders in anybody’s test that year. In fact, the robot selected what we would classify as below average drivers.

      There’s some complexity and nuance to it, but the really simple explanation is that a golf club attached to a robot doesn’t behave the same way it does in human hands.

      The funny thing, apart from the precision that goes into aligning a club in a robot arm, from a time and effort standpoint, our testing has grown to the point where using a robot would save time, but again, the experts we’ve spoken with have told us it’s not the right way to do it. – TC

      Reply

      Johnny Cowboy

      7 years ago

      Love my AP1 gamers!

      Reply

      Donald McKnight

      7 years ago

      I can believe these results and all the work that went into this that supports it. When I bought my irons three years ago I did not even try Srixon. I didn’t even know they made clubs until I went to a golf store in Japan and saw how awesome they looked. My friends there all play them and love them. In 3 or 4 years when I don’t like my G30s I will absolutely give these a try and refer to this site to help. Thanks.

      Reply

      Ian Splisgardt

      7 years ago

      Srixon has only been selling clubs in the us for a little over 2 years. They’re about to explode

      Reply

      Donald McKnight

      7 years ago

      Well they are nice.

      Reply

      Mikedb26

      7 years ago

      Wish I could have had the opportunity to hit Srixon irons when I was in the market for new ones. Hit all, or most of, the others and the Mizuno JPX900 Forged were the ones for me. Even tried PXG, and nothing felt as good at the 900’s. Wanted the forgiveness of GI, with the looks of a players iron, was tired of the shovel like looks of some of these. Extremely happy with my purchase, imho, nothing feels like Mizuno, handicap has dropped to 5.3 (GHIN), although practice has some to do with it. Confidence is key, look good, feel good, sound good, going to play better most of the time. A buddy has the Callaway Steelhead’s, hit those on course but just can’t get over the looks at address, felt great though. Couldn’t go wrong with anything on this list, it’s all about what suits your eye, but still wish the Srixon was available at the time. I could have waited, but wanted my old irons gone immediately, and fell in love with the Mizuno’s.

      It is strange that all the sudden, Srixon’s are the “club to have”, but after reading a previous driver test, I tried the Srixon Z765, and to me, the hype IS real. Went to our local golf shop, Golf Gallery in Melbourne, Florida, and had the Z565 & Z765 in hand with 3 extra shafts to try for the weekend. After testing extensively, ended up with the Z765, 10.5*, Miyazaki XS shaft, and my 2017 M1 is on the board for sale at my home course. As for why the Srixon tour guys are not playing that driver, no clue what so ever. Matsuyama is playing a Srixon driver, but I think it’s a Japan only model, Srixon ZR-30. Although some sites say he’s playing a Callaway driver, I paused the DVR and it was Srixon, at the US Open I think it was.

      With all that being said, just like to thank MGS for their reviews and comparisons, worked out for me, and sure it would for others as well. Just have to have the time to try what you like and test it properly.

      Reply

      MyGolfSpy

      7 years ago

      Thanks for putting your trust in MGS Mike!

      Reply

      Golfer

      7 years ago

      I noticed in the photos that the g was a yellow dot, were all the irons fit first, or were they all just stock sets?

      Dave S

      7 years ago

      Just bought the z545s and I’m not surprised there new version rated so high. They’re the best combination of aesthetics and performance I’ve seen. Look awesome in the bag; cavity really works to provide forgiveness; v-sole tech is real; and they are forged so they feel great. Minimal offset for a GI iron too, which is exactly what I was looking for. Srixon’s on fire right now!

      Reply

      Drew

      7 years ago

      I got fitted and hit many clubs but decided to go with the Ping Gs. Good review.

      Reply

      Jim

      7 years ago

      Another terrific review by MGS (really setting the bar high against the others). However I am confused by one point. If you are testing GI irons then weighting the long iron effectiveness is really not applicable as most people will swap them out or a hybrid in this class (I certainly did). The most important factors would seem to be the short and mid iron effectiveness and the Ping seems to be more consistent overall. I’m sure the Srixon is a terrific iron but as a Ping G player it sure seems that the G was more consistent overall. But it did finish 2nd afterall and the new version G400 is supposed to be even better. I’d say Ping is on a roll of late and making much better looking clubs than in the past as well. Good review and you certainly picked the best looking irons of the bunch in my opinion too.

      Reply

      Jon

      7 years ago

      Jim

      Astute observation. I was just about to hammer out the same point when your post came up.

      When I buy my next set of irons, they will likely be game improvement irons. I won’t go longer than a 6 iron which I assume would be a mid iron. Don’t know as I can’t see those definitions in the information provided. Instead of long irons I will go for hybrids or hybrids and a crossover.

      So looking at the GIs that have the best results for short and mid irons it really looks like Ping is the winner hands down.

      Reply

      MyGolf Spy

      7 years ago

      Nope, just the data and performance they produce for golfers.

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      7 years ago

      Looks like we transposed some numbers going from the data to the graphics. We’ve fixed that. We’ve also added a chart showing just the SG rankings by iron type, along with the total Strokes Gained value and the rankings for each iron in the test.

      Reply

      Ron

      7 years ago

      I am surprised that the Steelheads ranked so low. I find to be longer and more consistent that the Ping and M2, the options I considered and tested. I agree with the comment about the Apex irons and the choice between these twoCallaway irons was a very close one.

      Reply

      Rod

      7 years ago

      Wait for it … your post will be deleted in 3,2…..

      This is my 4th post about it and 3 previous were deleted!

      Reply

      Chad

      7 years ago

      So Srixon won the Most Wanted Driver also? Srixon Tour Players don’t even play their Drivers!! Power to the people unless there’s a kickback? Just seems fishy, now we have data backing up theuir false claim.. Their Data at that.. MyGolfSpy is the #1 Golf site for info hands down please don’t be a sell out like the others

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      7 years ago

      Chad – with all due respect, which is none, you don’t know what you’re talking about. Yes, Srixon finished first in two tests this year. They may finish first in more, or they might finish dead last…we’ll have to see what the data shows us. What I can tell you with certainty is that nobody involved in conducting this test cares one way or the other where Srixon or anyone else finishes in any given test. That said, your barely veiled accusations are nonsense. Do you realize that an iron test takes a solid month to conduct? So we’re going to spend a month testing clubs, wasting the time of 20 golfers, and then just fudge a whole bunch of data because of Chad’s fantasy kickback?

      Yeah…no. Way too much effort involved in the test. Way too much time working directly with the OEMs to develop test protocols and methodologies. Way too much time working with our outside stats consultant to implement our outlier detection system. Way too much time invested in finding a way to use SG methodology in an iron test (and a lot more time to actually make it happen). It’s an insane amount of work that’s only possible because a small team of people working long hours.

      So as to the evidence you hinted at…
      We had two issues earlier today – We had several readers asking about rankings when the actual issue was that some didn’t read the text explaining that long, mid, and short irons are shown separately (because combining those averages would be silly). We also had a transposition error in our Top 3 charts – not that you asked, but the big table is largely automated from Excel while the graphics are manually created. We had a transposition error, which we didn’t immediately catch. It took a while to distinguish between what was our mistake (graphics) and what was stuff people didn’t read (select iron type), once we did, we fixed it. Note that the data in the table remains absolutely as it was when we published.

      To help reduce confusion further, I also added a chart with just the Strokes Gained values for each iron, the Total SG for each model, and the ranking. Hopefully, this will simplify things a bit for everyone, but as far as any accusations of kickbacks, and things like that…it’s total nonsense.

      As I told another commenter with a similar line of BS recently…guys come and go out of this industry all the time, and they all tell their stories, and yet nearly a decade into MGS there hasn’t been a single person to come forward to say, “I worked for big OEM, and we paid MGS”, and that’s because, to this day, we have yet to take so much as dollar from the large golf companies. If that’s still not clear, let me be absolute; Srixon hasn’t paid us so much as a penny…EVER. Incidentally, that’s also true for – moving down the list – PING, Titleist, Cobra, Mizuno, TaylorMade, Miura, Wilson, and Callaway.

      HKR

      7 years ago

      The trouble withe the internet is that there are too many haters out there. The data speaks for itself. It’s interesting that Srixon has won two Best Buy awards from MGS but to suggest that this must be fixed is bizarre. The data is too complex and involves too many people testing to fiddle in the way some suggest. I think MGS is bound to get things wrong sometimes (humans always do) but the test of its honesty is whether it sets things right and owns up about it. Some might say that deleting critical posts and not acting quickly are not impressive. I’d say when things go wrong people don’t always get it right. Given that this is a very helpful FREE resource, I’d say give MGS the benefit of the doubt given their service to golfers across the world. Separately, it’s a shame that some clubs aren’t on here: I use the Callaway Apex CF16 which is so much better than the Steelhead. I also think the PXG claims should be held to account. So well done Srixon on getting things right. I tried this club and didn’t get on with it. But I’m not surprised to see it doing so well. And well done Ping for once again being right up there. If only your clubs could be less chunky… And I’m very surprised that Mizuno didn’t do better. Perhaps the results of tests like this will be better clubs by all manufacturers in the future. Fingers crossed.

      Devin

      7 years ago

      Though I dont agree with ‘Chad’, I found it funny that MGS spent the time to oust you on IG. Sensitive much?

      Jon

      7 years ago

      What does tour players not playing a company’s drivers have to do with their irons? There are plenty of players using Mizuno irons that don’t play the company’s drivers. Please enlighten me.

      VMAZZ

      7 years ago

      No Callaway Apex?? Hands down the best GI iron I have ever played and I’ve tried most of them!

      Reply

      Ashley

      7 years ago

      I agree, I swung these last week on the sim in the store, much better feel and results than steelhead, ping G, wilson. The other club I tried thats listed is the JPX900, which felt and performed well also, just not quite as well as the Apex, I was very impressed with them. Agree they should’ve been included.

      Reply

      Sproutland

      7 years ago

      Where is the Outlier Rate? I don’t see it in Tableau for the Game Improvement or the Players category Irons.

      Could you also make a Tableau chart of irons from both categories so that you can compare the two Cobra One Length offerings for example?

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      7 years ago

      We can’t really make reasonable comparisons across different tests. There’s only partial overlap between testing pools as the majority of testers for a given iron test will fall within the target handicap range for the category.

      Reply

      Aaron Thompson

      7 years ago

      Pxg likely didn’t provide clubs for testing.

      So they must not have been that confident against the much much cheaper competition.

      If you’ve got data, share away!

      Reply

      Robert Canady

      7 years ago

      Another in-depth unbiased testing done by MGS…Well done!

      Reply

      alan

      7 years ago

      Excellent work!
      The engineering and design efforts now going into irons is evident.
      Easier to hit, longer, more forgiving, and more consistent.
      Hey, the game can almost be fun!!!

      Reply

      Mtisdale

      7 years ago

      Love this stuff! I would love to see this a most wanted wedges addition..
      I was looking at the Truerank #’s and the Ping G was 2nd, 2nd and 3rd while the Srixon was 1st, 3rd and 5th in the charts and it doesn’t match up to what the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place results say.. not sure if something got switch by accident?

      Have a double check. Thanks guys!

      Reply

      DL

      7 years ago

      Yes, I think there has been a mistake somewhere here, I’m not sure why they are deleting messages about it. We’re simply trying to point out a problem with the charts and scoring which is very obvious (as 10 people have pointed out so far).

      Reply

      Berniz40

      7 years ago

      I’m not surprised at all. I switched to the Srixon z 355 Irons two years ago. They are the only set of irons that have actually been a major factor in reducing my handicap by a few strokes. The feel is good too. Blindfolded you just might mistake the for forged, and unlike other Game Improvement Irons, they’ll tell you what your miss hit was…but without “The Infamous Hogan Sting.”

      Reply

      Carolina Golfer 2

      7 years ago

      Thanks for this. Being an owner of the 545 and the AP1, I can fully agree with the findings. I only hit the PING G at a demo, but from the results of that only, I can certainly see how it ranked up there.

      we appreciate all the long hard work that MGS does to bring us unbiased and data backed results.

      Keep doing what you do

      Reply

      saveva

      7 years ago

      I guess it’s a good thing I don’t see the Callaway Apex CF 16 or the PXG 0311 irons since I currently game the Apex and am tempted by the 0311.

      Reply

      Robert

      7 years ago

      I’d be interested to see how Mizuno’s JPX 900 Hot Metal would have performed in this test. While many may categorize it as “Super Game Improvement”, I’d argue that the HMs fit more into these group of irons rather than the JPX 900 Forged.

      Reply

      Bradley T Johnston

      7 years ago

      Srixon is just kicking ass

      Reply

      Gerry T

      4 years ago

      Not mine…i’*m all about Cobra…just picked up some F6 irons and looking to add the F7s to my golf bag. Not a big Srixon fan except fir their golf balls.

      Reply

      Clay

      7 years ago

      I think you need to recheck your numbers, when I look at your chart ping is #1, Srixon #2 and Cobra F7 #3

      Reply

      MyGolfSpy

      7 years ago

      The “Iron Type” you have selected might be looking at SHORT, MID or LONG iron.

      Reply

      Rodrigo

      7 years ago

      I dont know why my post was deleted.
      But it’s also what I’m seeing.

      The tableau data is different to the awards data. Or what im doing wrong?

      ole gray

      7 years ago

      First of all thanks for all the hard work you guys put in to share this info. I was impressed with the beauty of the Srixon Z565’s and now this test has confirmed the muscle goes with the beauty which makes these irons very desirable!

      Reply

      MyGolfSpy

      7 years ago

      Just doin’ our job ;)

      Thanks for being such a loyal reader and trusting MGS Ole!

      Reply

      Dennis McNamara

      6 years ago

      Excellent test that made good sense to me. I have hit many of the clubs tested and the Srixon results were not surprising. The amazing thing is how few big box shops offer the Srixon irons!. The 565 are easy to hit, forgiving and long. By the way, now is a good time to buy them since they just introduces the 585’s. regards, Dennis

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