Dan Murphy Takes Over At Bridgestone
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Dan Murphy Takes Over At Bridgestone

Dan Murphy Takes Over At Bridgestone

Well, that didn’t take long.

Bridgestone Golf announced this week that former Sales and Marketing VP Dan Murphy is rejoining the struggling company as President and CEO, taking over for Angel Ilagan, who left Bridgestone three weeks ago via the dreaded “mutual decision to part ways.” At the time, Bridgestone announced it would begin a search for a new leader, but rumors of Murphy’s return began swirling almost immediately.

During Ilagan’s tenure, Bridgestone dropped from #2 to #4 in golf ball market share as of this past April, behind Titleist, Callaway, and TaylorMade. In the club market, Bridgestone is virtually non-existent.

“I think it is what it is,” Murphy told MyGolfSpy in an extensive one-on-one interview this week. “I’m here for a reason.”

“How did it happen? I’m unraveling that now as I become immersed in the numbers and the situation,” says the affable, easy-going Murphy. “To be frank and to put it into a single sentence, I think we may have lost our way. We may have taken our eye off the things that made us successful in the first place.”

Dan Murphy

Loss of Focus

Specifically, Murphy cites getting away from a core message of differentiation, and all the elements that go into what he believes makes Bridgestone different from Titleist and other brands – particularly in regards to the better player – led to the current situation.

“The better player is important for several reasons,” says Murphy. “We believe in the pyramid of influence, and the better players at the club, we still believe, have influence with recreational players. To some degree, we took our eyes off them.”

“The better player appreciates Bridgestone quality, engineering and performance. We truly believe we have the best golf ball on the market, and the better player has the ability to discern and appreciate those differences.” – Dan Murphy, Bridgestone CEO

During an almost hour-long conversation, Murphy touched on a wide array of topics, including the equipment side of the business, Tiger’s role in marketing and being part of the $36 billion dollar entity that is Bridgestone.

That said, it’s clear Bridgestone’s bread and butter is golf balls, and there’s likely to be one immediate change coming to a retailer or driving range near you.

Bridgestone Tour B Golf Balls - 9-1183

The Return of Ball Fitting

You may have noticed a sharp decline of in-person Bridgestone ball fitting events the last couple of years, at the same time Bridgestone’s ball sales and market share has dropped. That can’t be a coincidence.

“It gave us a point of differentiation from the market leader and was something the better player appreciated,” he says. “They cared enough to immerse themselves into a more scientific, more data-driven selection process for their ball.”

So, will the ball-fitting program make a comeback?

“I think so,” says Murphy. “But probably in a more sophisticated, more scientific and more scalable way. To this day, even though it’s been deemphasized, Bridgestone is still perceived to be a leader in ball-fitting. It makes sense, in a highly competitive market where we don’t have unlimited resources, to have another look at an asset that already exists for us.”

BG-Golf-Fitting

Ball-fitting had its start during Murphy’s first tenure at Bridgestone (2004 – 2015), when Bridgestone reached #2 in ball market share. He says the idea had its genesis in the early 80’s, during the Cola Wars between Coke and Pepsi. It was golf’s version of the Pepsi Challenge.

“Pepsi was Bridgestone and Coke was Titleist, and we compared our ball’s performance versus Titleist,” says Murphy. “We were able to show a difference. Titleist was the market leader, so obviously that was the target, but it became all brands against Bridgestone, and it worked very, very well for us.”

“We don’t all wear size large shirts or size 9 shoes, and we don’t all swing extra-stiff shafts like the pros do, so maybe there’s a difference with a golf ball that’s more engineered for the recreational player or better amateur. There’s a lot of science, a lot of logic and lot of personal benefit there. That’s what made us different from the others – it wasn’t play-what-the-pros play, it’s play what fits your game.” – Dan Murphy, Bridgestone Golf.

Logic aside, the right ball for each player is a difficult message. Play what the Pros play is an easy message to deliver and an easy message for the average golfer – one who isn’t a voracious blog reader  – to digest and assimilate. The complicated, albeit correct, message is nowhere near as sexy as the simple, albeit wrong, message.

“That’s the Titleist message,” says Murphy. “It’s a very simple and easy message…there’s one ball that’s #1 on Tour – that’s true and factual. But we would take issues with the story that the same ball is right for every player out there. That’s a nice, simple story to tell, but having an array of balls and a message that says there are different kinds of golfer and different kinds of golf balls for a reason, that offers us an opportunity to tell a differentiated story.”

Bridgestone ball fitting 2

By definition, a differentiator has to be, well, different. It also has to be something your competition either can’t, won’t or is unable to do, and you have to be able to express that differentiation – and its benefit – simply and in a manner your customer can understand and act upon.

“If you look at some of the folks (in the ball business), they have a pretty strong vested interest in perpetuating a story,” says Murphy. “We think that offers up some vulnerability. As a trained marketer, I look for chinks in the armor. From a validity standpoint, we think fitting golf balls does indeed benefit individual golfers.

“From a marketing perspective, we never wanted to, nor could we, out-Titleist Titleist by buying more Tour players. That’s not our game. Our game is to talk about individual golfers and benefitting individual players, and making this crazy game a little more fun.”

And speaking of Tour players…

Whither Tiger?

“Tiger’s awesome!” declares Murhpy. “What a great asset to come back to!”

Tiger certainly moves the TV needle, but between his Nike days and so far with Bridgestone, he’s yet to show he can move the ball or equipment needle. Murphy says while Tiger is great at bringing attention to the brand, he may be used differently going forward.

“We have a great Tour team, with Tiger, Freddy Couples, Matt Kuchar, Brent Snedeker,” he says. “I see a compelling story using Tiger in conjunction with our other Tour players as opposed to just on his own. I think the interaction between Tiger and, say, Freddy in some sort of consumer message ad would be compelling content that people would enjoy.”

DUBLIN, OH - MAY 31: Fred Couples and Tiger Woods walk down the fairway on the par 4 1st hole during the second round of the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide Insurance at Muirfield Village Golf Club on May 31, 2013 in Dublin, Ohio. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

Tiger and Ilagan – the man who brought Tiger to Bridgestone – were both vocal advocates of rolling back the golf ball. However, Murphy made it quite clear Bridgestone won’t be re-stirring that particular pot any time soon.

“We have a long history of cooperation with the USGA,” he says. “Their job is to make the rules, our job is to follow the rules. I can’t really speak to what was said before. Our game has some magic to it, and one of those pieces of magic is there’s one set of rules for everybody.”

On The Equipment Side…

There are a lot of words to describe Bridgestone’s golf equipment business over the past 5 years or so, but let’s settle on just one: haphazard. While the messaging may get more focused, don’t expect more resources to be spent on equipment, at least not now.

“With limited resources, we’re a challenger brand in a sea of giants,” says Murphy. “We’re competing against multi-category brands that have much, much deeper budgets. We chose over the years to focus on golf balls for a variety of business reasons. Bridgestone’s number one priority will be to regain the market share it’s lost, and to take more, quite honestly.”

With limited resources, Murphy says there’s a time and a place to fight the equipment battle, and now is apparently neither the time nor the place.

Bridgestone Driving Iron - 4

“If you’re a challenger brand and you have limited resources, you have to be careful about fighting a war on two fronts,” he says. “You have to focus energy, innovation, and resources where you can win the battle. If you spread your troops in too many directions, you weaken your main advance.”

“Our competitors are bigger, have more staff, more money and more ad spend. We know we have the product, but from a business perspective, it’s a matter of where and where do you want to take that fight on. With clubs, it’s go big or go home.”

So when it comes to equipment, will Bridgestone be going big or going home?

“Ahhh, I don’t know. I haven’t started yet,” laughs Murphy. “My official first day is the 25th, so I really need to dig in and understand what the opportunities are for us. We have great product, but can we make it into a viable, successful, profitable business? That’ll be my job.”

$36 Billion…

It’s easy to forget just how big Bridgestone really is. It’s a $36 billion-dollar international giant – the largest rubber and tire manufacturer in the world with global reach and – of key interest to golfers – over 900 engineers working on polymer science.

“That’s a huge difference maker for us from a resource perspective,” says Murphy. “A lot of that technology can be brought to golf balls, and it gives us that technological edge we’ve enjoyed for some time now.”

Bridgestone Tire’s marketing has evolved, going from a lifestyle message to more of a sports-focused vehicle. Bridgestone is a major sponsor of the Olympics and is heavily involved in the NFL, NHL, and others, using sports as a platform to help sell tires. Golf, of course, is part of the branding equation.

Bridgestone Invitational

“WGC-Bridgestone is a good example,” says Murphy. “We couldn’t swing that on our own, but with the help of the tire division we can do things that make us unique, that other golf brands just can’t do.”

“Just think about how many big national or multi-national brands want their brand exposed to golf. The list is endless, just look at the PGA Tour’s sponsor list. Here we have a unique way to reach that demographic and release a very positive brand message for Bridgestone.” – Dan Murphy

That may be at the very heart of what Bridgestone Golf is all about. It’s a mistake to look at Bridgestone Golf in the same way you’d look at almost any other golf company. It’s one part of a gigantic whole and while Murphy’s job is create a positive and profitable financial ROI for corporate, it’s also important to acknowledge the potential branding ROI for the overall corporation, because compared to tires, golf is, well, sexy.

BSG TIGER EDITION LIFESTYLE 3

“Tire gets to enjoy a little bit of that aura; the fun, the glamour and consumer appeal of Tiger at Augusta, or Freddy walking down the fairway in a Bridgestone cap,” says Murphy. “They greatly appreciate that exposure and I can tell you for sure that part of my job is to make sure they know we’re supplying that.

Being a functional and productive cog in the global Bridgestone machine is part of the end game, but in order to do that Bridgestone Golf first has to become a profitable and successful cog all on its own. To achieve that goal, what Murphy craves most is consistency.

“We have to be more consistent in what we’re doing, what we’re talking about and how we’re presenting ourselves to the consumer,” he says. “I would certainly think that’s the reason I’m here, and one of the things I’ll be very careful of – remaining consistent and not confusing the consumer.”

“We’ve always considered our largest competitor to be someone standing on top of the mountain and yelling down to the people this is what you ought to do. We’ve always felt like we were the ones who’d go down to the valley and talk with those people one-to-one and face-to-face, and try to find solutions that will fit their game.”

bridgestone-e6-golf-balls-8

What Does It All Mean?

Seeing as how Murphy hasn’t officially started yet, we can safely say it’s way too early to tell.

Levity aside, we can also safely say leadership matters. We saw how the Mark King leadership group turned TaylorMade from a late 90’s also-ran into a billion-dollar behemoth, and we also saw what happened post-King. Chip Brewer turned a debt-laden and struggling Callaway into golf’s newest billion-dollar brand and clear industry leader. Steady-as-she-goes Titleist has enjoyed long-term steady-as-she-goes leadership under Wally Uihlein and now David Maher.

On a smaller scale, we’ve seen Wilson return to relevance under Tim Clarke’s guidance and, more recently, the top-to-bottom improvement at Srixon/Cleveland/XXIO since Matt Yasumoto took over two years ago. Conversely, that same two-year period saw Bridgestone’s market share and sales plunge dramatically during Angel Ilagan’s tenure.

So yes, the guy in charge matters. By all accounts the hiring of Murphy is seen as a popular move, with one anonymous source telling MyGolfspy Bridgestone’s sales team is “beyond excited.”

Will Murphy and that excitement bring Bridgestone in from the cold? If saying the right things were all that mattered, Bridgestone is already on its way. But saying is one thing; doing is quite another.

As we prognosticators like to say: time will tell.

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John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

John is an aging, yet avid golfer, writer, 6-point-something handicapper living back home in New England after a 22-year exile in Minnesota. He loves telling stories, writing about golf and golf travel, and enjoys classic golf equipment. “The only thing a golfer needs is more daylight.” - BenHogan

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      Tom Kurtz

      6 years ago

      As today is Mr Murphy’s first day on the job, he might want to become more familiar with his stable of players. Love Freddy, Tiger, Kuch and Sneds, but he might want to ponder the possibilities of Bryson. As he is #5 in FedEx Cup points, and has branded himself as a scientist and scrutinized every aspect of his game and equipment to only chose what is right for him, it seems to have a strong parallel to the return of the Bridgestone Challenge and playing what is right for you to have the greatest level of suggest. Yes, he is a bit polarizing in his approach, but you could say the same for the 4 he cites as his faces for the brand. Just a thought.

      Reply

      Bill G.

      6 years ago

      Well said about Bryson.

      Reply

      JB

      6 years ago

      Man, I was really hoping to hear Murphy drop a pun by saying “We may have taken our eye off the ball”

      Because that is what they did!!!

      Reply

      sam

      6 years ago

      I was one who played Brimstone, but the ball quality changed,so now buy new up and coming brands, VICE, SNELL, ONECORE SEED, EG,EG
      I fell into the trap yesterday and bought a box of Bridgestone rx on special.. First hit left a mark! So Mr Murphy, you have a lot to fix.. Price, Quality, Durability, .. Sometimes less is More!.

      Reply

      sirhc

      6 years ago

      I agree w/ most here; absence of live fittings seemed to dim interest in Bridgestone. The Bridgestone Challenge offered the chance to hit real (not limited flight range) balls on a launch monitor and know your real swing speed, backspin, etc. And, get an education along w/ free balls!
      Have used Precept /Bridgestone balls since the late 90s. Occasionally strayed to Pro V1 / V1x.

      I say keep making a great product, restart live fittings, and maybe roll the price back to the low $40 range/dozen for Tour B.

      Reply

      Mark

      6 years ago

      My suggestion for Bridgestone is to lose the model numbers for their different golf balls. Did I like the R, RX, SX, or RSX? Come on! If there is that big of a difference give them their own names.

      Reply

      Tom Shepperd

      6 years ago

      Really enjoyed the article. I’m a 9 handicapper and never experienced a ball fitting. Sounds like something I need to do. I’m seeing offers of up to 2 dozen golf balls for the cost of shipping by some companies such as Warrior to obtain more product awareness. So, MyGolfSpy, when will we see the Bridgestone fittings?

      Reply

      Rod

      6 years ago

      Also, Bridgestone balls get damaged real fast.

      Reply

      Rod

      6 years ago

      Come out with a good ball at a great price! BOOM simple

      Kirkland balls. Bridgestone did you learn anything from it?

      Reply

      scott

      6 years ago

      I play Pro V and other spin balls but I’ve never bought a new Pro V or any golf ball I just find them because most high handicap play pay big buck balls just to lose two sleeve a round or more . If you can’t break 70 the ball won’t help you it’s your swing. I find just about as many Bridgestone RX 330 balls as I do ProV’s but in the last two years Callaway Supersoft Crome Soft are now the one lost ball at Kings Creek .

      Reply

      Milo

      6 years ago

      Great Read,
      Bridgestone lost what got them where they were.
      Murphy, should be able to turn them around.
      I see some discounts to get the sales up quick, and look forward to watching them get back to #2

      Reply

      David Bassett

      6 years ago

      Excellent reporting and writing, John. You asked all the right questions and translated the answers so they make sense. I’ve been a Titleist guy since the early ’60s when I’d find them with “smiles” but still play them because they were THE ball: your piece made me hope that Bridgestone is able to regain their mojo. I might give them a try.

      Reply

      Greg P

      6 years ago

      Tough market, now. MGS has done a great job educating the consumer on product differentiation, making it a more price sensitive market. Lots of good stuff out there and most of us are now realizing that you don’t have to pay $50 a dozen to get great performance.

      I love B’stone Tour B’s, particularly at some of the discounted sale prices. Awesome ball. Just hope that those discounts don’t disappear.

      Reply

      mackdaddy

      6 years ago

      Bridgestone makes great balls. I love the B330rx and played it for years. I switched to the Chrome Soft when they were $5 less per dozen. Now they have joined Bridgestone at $45 and I just switched to Srixon Q Star Tour for $20 per dozen. The Wilson Duo U is also exceptional but tough to find here in the states. Bridgestone needs to realize that at $10 less than Titleist Pro V1 they get my money but two many other low compression premium balls are out there in the $30 range now. They need to embrace the Snell and Vice online ordering model buy 5 or 6 dozen balls and pay $30. I bought 5 dozen Q Star tour on golfballs.com for just $20 per dozen.

      Reply

      shadow

      6 years ago

      All good balls but it’s the same in Asia, cant get Q Star Tour, Wilson Duo U and now bridgestone virtually impossible, came across by chance 3 boxes of B330RXS in a department store in Bangkok last year and snapped them up!

      Reply

      TOPPAKRAT

      6 years ago

      John,
      Thanks for the great article. I agree that Bridgestone has lost their way. I thought the strong fitting program they developed really launched Bridgestone but like so many others have stated it seems to have just vanished. With so many new challengers in the market today like Vice, Snell etc. it’s even more important for Bridgestone to find a way to set themselves apart from the ever increasing competitors.

      If Bridgestone really wanted to make a statement I would hope they would try the following:
      #1 The ball fitting program should be revamped and in a hurry!
      #2 Comparisons should be made to all the major competitors. Not just Titleist but add Callaway, Taylor Made, Vice and Snell to the mix or any other. Don’t just say you are better let Bridgestone prove it against any other competitor in the market.

      If I went to one of these fittings and Bridgestone out performed my current ball (Snell) I would be a fool not to purchase the Bridgestone.
      In short put up or shut up!

      Reply

      Brad Smith

      6 years ago

      I’ve played their urethane covered balls on and off for about 10 years. That is, up until they changed their logo on the ball to that UGLY “B”. I know it has nothing to do with performance, but I hate the way it looks so much I’ve stopped playing their ball and now play other urethane cover balls. And to me, it doesn’t matter which. They all perform the same for me. I’m the performance variable, not the ball. No point looking down at something ugly that doesn’t give a performance advantage.

      Reply

      Max Parris

      6 years ago

      I have been doing some research on golf balls and especially the dimple
      design. Loft and drag were the main consideration. I had played with the E6 and found the ball to be good for distance. The ball had dimples
      in the dimples with the outer dimples wider and shallower causing the
      ball to have less drag and more lift. I bought a dozen of the new Bridgestone e6 speed and found they have changed the dimples on the new balls. No interdimples. I feel the balls have distance in the ball. I would like to go in a different direction. How to sell golf balls.
      I ran a grocery store for many years. One of the promotions I ran was something called lost leaders. I would buy turnip greens at the market, turn around and sell them for less that I paid. No strings attached. I would buy cases of sugar, turn around and sell five pound bags of sugar less that I paid. Later in my busness life I opened a boarding kennel for dogs and cats. I cut my prices so I was way under all the other kennels in town. We bathed all the dogs at no charge and sprayed the dogs with a dog spray to make the dogs smell nice when they left the kenel. What in the hell does this have to do with Bridgesone golf balls and why Bridgestone has fallen to number four.
      I play a lot of golf and here is something I have found. Some of the player that are in the single digit average are playing with some of the new golf balls that are on the market.
      This is just an idea to think about for Bridgestone. First, put the golf balls on sale that the average golfers use and I mean a BIG DISCOUNT. A lost leader. Second get out with the average golfers and handout golf balls. Third more ball fitting. Give out more golf balls.
      At my golf course there is a lowball during the week. We start out at 9:30 a.m. Have someone there handing out golf balls. How much do 40 golf balls cost Bridgestone. Just some ideas that have worked for me in the past might be just what Bridgestone needs to kickstart the
      golfball industry.

      Reply

      scott

      6 years ago

      I just don’t get how this would help Bridgestone bottom line by selling there balls at a lose so they can sell even more balls at a lose a very unusual business plan . I have to ask do you work for Callaway or Titleist.

      Reply

      Mark In LOL

      6 years ago

      There is an old saying in retail, “You sell at a loss, but make up for it in volume”.

      Max Parris

      6 years ago

      Scott, Thanks for reading my post. No, I do not work for any golf company. If you go to a store, any store you will find you will go in the front door and then the store is set up so you have to go in the direction the store is set up to sell you something you did not really want to buy. There will be a big sign with SALE, or DISCOUNT. There will be items that are sold at below cost. Grocery stores are set up so you have to pass by all the high profit items you do did not come in to buy. If you notice the items you came to the store to buy are on the lower shelf. The other items are on your right and at eye level.
      I do not care what golf ball the pros play. I am not in their league.
      Where am I you ask? I am out on the golf course with all the other golfers hacking around trying to put the little ball in the hole. I will be willing to bet you that if a rep. from Bridgestone showed up at my golf course with a bucket of golf ball and said “come and get them guys” no charge just take the balls and play a round with them guys would be standing in line for free golf balls. If you look at the post from Mark in lol that backs up what I am saying.

      Berniez40

      6 years ago

      I would love to see Bridgestone make a comeback. I’ve been an on again off again fan since the days of the first generation Precept Lady, a ball that arguably started the “Long and Soft Mantra” that has taken over the golf ball market for almost two decades now.
      I used to like to play their clubs here in the states when you could get the Tour Stage Woods in this country.(That would be the Bridgestone Japanese Moniker.”). When they started marketing clubs under the Bridgestone name in this country, they split off into The Bridgestone Clubs for better players and Precept for the rest of us strategy. That rather costly mindset didn’t even work for the more deep pocketed Fortune Brands who used Titleist and Cobra in a similar fashion.
      The original E-5 and E-6 marketing campaigns were shear genius, but I guess the ivory tower boys and bean counters found that to be too costly. I’ve seen them hit a dud or two here and there, and as mentioned, suddenly the marketing became haphazard. If they could bring that focus back, I would love to get back on that bandwagon.
      Unfortunately, as pointed out by another comment, the new E6 Soft is sort of a dud. It’s a ball I really wanted to like as my stash of Nike Hyperflights is slowly going away. I played the original E6 exclusively for several seasons so I figured I’d try the newbie out. I did a side by side with the new E-6 Soft my last round, and the old Nike Hyperflight from 2015 was just as long, and a little easier to shape.
      I wish them well, but they do need to get it together on the ball front. As I said earlier, the original E6 was the wolder ball for weekend warriors, and it had an ad campaign that was equally quirky and innovative That kind of magic won’t come cheap.

      Reply

      Jnradio

      6 years ago

      I don’t think the Feherty connection helped them any…. Hard to be taken seriously when your pitchman in on TV taking shots to the nuts on a weekly basis…

      Reply

      Rick Colt

      6 years ago

      Good article. I hope that Murphy can turn the ship around with some creative marketing. I’ve played Bridgestone balls for years and they are a quality product. The in-person ball fittings were helpful in putting into the right product.

      Reply

      Dave

      6 years ago

      I can’t imagine raising the price for premium balls has helped Bridgestone (or Callaway & TM for that matter). When those balls were $40 and Titleist was $48 it was harder to justify spending the money for ProV1. Now that the cost difference is only $3 per box I think it is a lot easier for many cost-conscious golfers to justify buying Titleist (the truly cost-conscious are buying Kirkland, Vice or Snell now).

      For me personally I played Bridgestone for a couple of years, but the introduction of Chrome Soft got me to switch. Callaway was longer off the tee with similar performance around the greens for the same price point, so the decision to switch was easy.

      Two years ago I found Bridgestone balls on the course all the time and very few Callaway. Now it is the exact opposite (still find tons of Titleist of course, and some TM too – even find the occasional Vice or Snell).

      Reply

      Kenny B

      6 years ago

      I understand that Bridgestone is very small in the equipment market and clubs can’t be in all the shops, but under Ilagan’s tenure, they also pulled out of their Testdrive program where we could try clubs for 30 days and only pay shipping to do so. You are either in the shops with every one else or you market to the public with a testing program; the other option is get out of the equipment business altogether. No one buys clubs without swing them.

      I was fortunate to find a shop that carried Bridgestone, and play the JGR driver and JGR hybrid forged irons. Great clubs, but I never would have bought them without swinging them first. As for the balls… I have never found a Bridgestone ball that I liked, and I went through their fitting years ago.

      Reply

      joseph aubrey

      6 years ago

      I’ve played a lot of Bridgestone B330 models and I gotta say, for the price point, I’m not sure the Bridgestone balls outperform Vice by enough to justify the additional cost. Why would I pay $15-20 more per dozen when the Vice balls play just as well? My average score ranges from 78-82, and I hit my driver 275-285. The Vice is just as long, and just as responsive around the green. Until this new cat at Bridgestone can figure out that riddle, I’m cool with Vice Pro Soft all day. I don’t envy him and his new role. Seems like an impossible feat tbh…

      Reply

      BR

      6 years ago

      I hope Bridgestone regains market share with its golf balls. True quality and performance with my experiences (RXS, E6 models). Really think the ball fitting/challenge at demo day events is the way to win over more golfers. Regarding clubs, well most of the recent Bridgestone models that I have seen looked good but did not clearly standout in any one area to make me consider switching brands or adding a specialty club or two. Love the Bridgestone B muscle back look, would love to see their wedges gain traction within the market.

      Reply

      Vince Schiavo

      6 years ago

      Well-written article, John – great job!

      Reply

      Mark in LOL

      6 years ago

      I hope they will keep “Made In USA”!

      Reply

      Nocklaus

      6 years ago

      Excuse me, but how can a Japanese company ever be “made in USA”?

      Reply

      Mark In LOL

      6 years ago

      Look on a Bridgestone box. It says “Made In USA”. It doesn’t matter who owns the business, only where the product is made. American company Apple can’t put “Made in USA” on its phones, because they aren’t. Similarly, golf companies like Titlest, Calloway, and Taylor-Made can’t put that logo on their boxes. I don’t care who owns Bridgestone, they make their golf balls here which puts Americans to work.

      John Barba

      6 years ago

      Bridgestone has a very impressive and expansive golf ball manufacturing facility in Convington, Georgia. they make all of their Tour B series balls there, and have extensive test labs and R&D facilities there.

      mark

      6 years ago

      Acutally, Titleist and Callaway balls are made in America.

      Mark In LOL

      6 years ago

      I don’t remember seeing “Made In USA” on their boxes. But maybe they’ve changed.

      Tony Gadhvi

      6 years ago

      Mr Murphy/ Mr Barba , Hi Sirs.
      Please note for average players or 14 handicap that is a large percentage of the golfers E6 was a very good ball and was longer but the tour B330 RXS felt hard to compress and gave much less distance needs to be made much softer or else only a few long hitting pros can play it.
      New E6 Soft goes longer only for a three to five holes in a round and then looses a lot of distance -poor quality or there must be something wrong in the core design.
      Hope Bridgestone will rectify it, seems they were trying to make money by making average players play more new balls in one round!

      Reply

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