The Galway Bay Story: One Man’s Crusade Against Rain
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The Galway Bay Story: One Man’s Crusade Against Rain

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The Galway Bay Story: One Man’s Crusade Against Rain

Remember the Snuggie? It’s a freaking blanket with sleeves, but would it surprise you to learn the guy who invented the Snuggie sold over 200 million dollars’ worth?

Yep, there’s a fine line between innovative entrepreneur and crackpot inventor.

Today’s story is about a really innovative entrepreneur: a rain gear manufacturer who doesn’t want to be pigeonholed as a manufacturer of rain gear. Terry Prillaman founded Galway Bay apparel nearly 10 years ago with zero experience in the golf apparel business, armed only with a personal aversion to rain, sweat, and dropping his pants on the golf course – plus the testicular fortitude to believe he could come up with something better.

No Experience Required

Before 2009, Terry Prillaman’s only connection to golf apparel was wearing it.

“I manage people’s retirement plans,” he tells MyGolfSpy. “I started Galway Bay because nobody made a pair of slacks that would keep me warm and dry.”

We’ve all played golf in the rain and cold. And we’ve all come to accept the limitations of cold and wet weather gear: restricted movement, ill-fitting and uncomfortable. And, since we look silly golfing in the rain anyway, we don’t really care what it looks like. All we want is to stay reasonably warm and dry.

“I’m in Atlanta, we play golf year-round,” says Prillaman. “But today, it’s 38 degrees, and it might drizzle, so you could play. But you’d have to put on some long underwear, some warm pants and then some rain pants.”

“I’d go over to the golf course looking like I gained 30 pounds. You could hear me from a block away as I shooshed in with my pants dragging on the ground and I’m like, ‘I hate this.’ But that’s it, that’s what you do.”

That’s Atlanta. In the North, golf season can start in early March and run into late November. You’ll be wearing long johns and the warmest pants you can find for those early and late season rounds. If it’s at all drizzly, you’ll also have to pull on a pair of bulky rain pants.

“The simple question is why would you wear two pairs of pants in the rain when one pair will do the trick, and fit you properly?”

What Prillaman has done with Galway Bay is perhaps the very definition of niche product development: slacks you can wear in the rain, cold (without long johns) or in fair weather, and that wouldn’t look out of place on Casual Friday. And not for nothing, Galway Bay’s pants and jackets finished tied for first in MyGolfSpy’s 2018 Best Rain Gear shootout.

That’s quite an accomplishment for a 9-year-old company whose roots can be traced to Oscar Robertson, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and an entrepreneur’s insatiable curiosity.

Big O and The Mounties

“I’ve always paid attention to clothing, even as a kid,” says Prillaman. “Back then, everybody wore canvas Converse sneakers. When I saw Oscar Robertson wearing some leather basketball shoes, I went off the deep end trying to find out where I could get some.”

That same curiosity prompted Prillaman to seek out better rain gear.

“I never really thought about it until the winter of ’09, when I’d go play golf every weekend,” he says. “I’d have to wear all this stuff. So I started Googling for waterproof pants that were slacks that would also keep you warm, and there was nothing, and I mean nowhere. Not here, not overseas, not anywhere.”

It was at that moment Prillaman heard the sweet sound of opportunity’s knock.

“I started researching fabrics, and finally found a company in Canada that made fabric used for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. I thought, okay, that’s what I want.”

Next came the first run of 1000 pairs of what were essentially waterproof slacks from a company no one had ever heard of. Now the challenge was to move them.

“I did a booth at the PGA Merchandise Show, and that was worthless,” he says. “But I did meet a guy that had a Sirius XM radio show. He had me on, and that just lit it up. I sold 800 pairs in about 4 months.”

Galway Bay’s offerings have evolved since those early days, with jackets, vests and half-sleeve tops since added, but always with the notion that it can’t be a me-too product.

“If I made over-pants and made them out of Gore-Tex, it’d be fine, but it’d be the same thing every other high-end company’s got,” he says. “Why would you buy mine when you could buy the same thing from a company you know about?”

“I have to think differently. I know people don’t like having to wear two or three pairs of pants just to play golf, so what if I make something that’s one pair, easy to wear and actually custom-hem them? They look good, you put ‘em on, and you’re good to go.”

The Anti-Swamp Ass/Anti-Perversion Crusade

The difference between waterproof and water resistant is simple: waterproof means you won’t get wet at all, and water resistant means you won’t get wet right away.

Waterproof means all seams are sealed, and there’s a membrane in the fabric – usually a laminated polyester, sometimes Gore-Tex – that keeps water from penetrating. There’s also a topical chemical applied to the fabric to make water bead up so the fabric won’t soak it in and get heavy. Depending on how often you play in relatively serious rain, the question is: how waterproof does a garment need to be?

“If I make it to withstand four hours of solid rain, I have to shrink the pores in the membrane so small that I’ve just created a sweatsuit,” says Prillaman. “No water gets in, but no moisture gets out. You try to find that fine line between waterproof enough to keep you dry, but comfortable enough so you can wear it and not sweat.”

“If you go Gore-Tex, you’re going to sweat. If you go cheap laminated poly, you’re gonna get wet. I try to be above that level in waterproof, but not so non-breathable that it’s not comfortable.”

“Which is worse, swamp ass or getting wet? I don’t care who you are, and I don’t care what you do – swamp ass is not good.” – Terry Prillaman

Whatever you think you know about rain pants, toss it out. Instead of standard S, M, L or XL sizing, Galway Bay pants are sized like, you know, pants. You can buy 34-32, or 40-30, in either lined or unlined models (lined are for cold weather golf, unlined you can wear a good chunk of the season – both are waterproof). You can also buy an unhemmed model for a more custom length fit.

You’ll also find belt loops, a 7-inch zipper, and 9-inch pockets. You wouldn’t think stuff like that matters, but every detail – and inch – counts.

“Do they (other manufacturers) not understand that when men play golf, they sometimes drink?” says Prillaman. “Occasionally, you’ve got to pee. So I gotta go hide to drop trou so the cart girl won’t catch me. I’m standing there, peeing in the woods with my pants around my knees. I look like a perv, so I’m like, put a damn zipper on there!”

Yes, some other some rain pants do have zippers and pockets, but even those can come up short.

“This is kind of a Euro brand, maybe a Travis Matthews or a Puma or something,” says Prillaman. “But they put a 5-inch zipper in the front. I don’t know if their anatomy’s different, but 5-inches doesn’t work. You need a 7-inch zipper. Also, a lot of manufacturers put 7-inch pockets in their rain pants. I get in my golf cart and sit down, the next thing I know, my tees, ball markers, change, everything, is down on the seat. Put a 9-inch pocket in there!”

“It’s funny how when you go through competitors’ products and examine every little stitch; you find stuff that’s just common sense. Hell, I can do better than that.”

The Difference of Being Different

They say a camel is a horse designed by committee. It’s a clever line, but it illustrates why Prillaman and Galway Bay can go toe-to-toe with the Nike’s, FootJoy’s and Under Armours of the world.

“It’s me against a thousand people with unlimited money,” says Prillaman. “So I have to come up with something better or else I’d get marketed under the table. This is my baby, and I probably spend more time researching fabrics, looking at samples and trying to figure out new ways to make things different.”

Meaningful innovation is what separates the entrepreneurial visionary from the crackpot inventor, and it’s what gives them a fighting chance against an industry’s establishment. The big players, even with all their R&D might, are process and committee-driven, investing time in what they know will sell. Rocking the boat is not in their DNA.

“When I first started, I’m thinking this is way too rational, why hasn’t anybody else thought of it?” admit Prillaman. “But take an Under Armour. What percentage of their business is golf rainwear? Maybe a tenth of one percent? It’s not enough for them to really spend time or money to capture the market.”

“FootJoy can put out a mediocre product and market it to success. If I don’t put out the best or most innovative product out there, I got no chance.”

Instead of design committees, sourcing committees and production committees, it’s pretty much Prillaman himself, his samples and his drawings. Working with his manufacturers, he can bring an innovative product to market within six months.

Galway Bay’s half-sleeve rain jacket is a good example. Lots of people make very good ones, but Prillaman adds a unique twist to his.

“There are times you need a long sleeve, maybe it gets a little chillier or starts raining harder,” he says. “You either deal with it, change jackets in mid-stream, or you make a jacket with zip-on or snap-on sleeves. But you have to take the jacket off, lay it on the seat of the cart, get the sleeves out, set them out and start snapping or zipping. I thought hey, I can do better than that.”

What Prillaman did was find a pair of Nike thermal pull-on sleeves, soak them with a water repellant chemical, and give them a whirl. It turns out the idea worked like a champ.

“So I took these sleeves to China and told them I wanted them cured in Teflon,” he says. “Now I make a Teflon-coated thermal sleeve that’s water repellant. You keep them in your bag, and if it gets colder or rains harder, you pull the sleeves on. You don’t have to change jackets. Water rolls off like it’s a duck’s back.”

“It’s just little things, little innovations, trying to be creative and all of a sudden you create something that nobody’s got. If you don’t think you can improve on what’s already out there, you just leave it alone.”

This is also the first year Galway Bay has offered unlined pants, thanks to a new, more breathable fabric.

“My concept was originally for cold weather, but I figured people from Southern California, Texas, Florida don’t need that much cold protection,” says Prillaman. “The unlined pants – the coldest you could wear them without long underwear is about 45 degrees, but you could wear them up to 75 degrees and feel no hotter than if you wore a regular pair of golf pants. The unlined are good from about freezing to 55 degrees.”

“The unlined have a little bit of stretch in the fabric, so it’s like wearing a nice pair of regular pants, they just happen to be waterproof, they block the wind, they stretch and are breathable.”

What’s Next?

You won’t find Galway Bay at many retailers, and you won’t find them at many Pro Shops. That may change, but in order to keep pricing where it is (below other premium rain gear), distribution will likely remain online.

“If I was selling my product today in a retail outlet, it would be $400 bucks for a jacket and $280, maybe $300 for a pair of pants,” says Prillaman. “That’s a price that retail can’t stand in the U.S.”

For now, the company relies on limited advertising and word-of-mouth, although Prillaman agrees seeing is believing.

“If you’ve never heard of it and someone tells you about it, you’d be 50% inclined to buy. If you saw someone wearing it and talked with them, it’d go to maybe 75%. If you put it on and realize what it feels like and how it fits, I would say I’ll make a sale 95% of the time.”

“You have to put it on and compare it with what else is out there, then you can tell the difference. Little things like it doesn’t shoosh as much, it fits better, it doesn’t drag on the ground – all the little features you kinda get once you put it on.” – Terry Prillaman

Prillaman did sell a piece of his company a few years ago to an investor and admits the investor’s idea is to ramp up the company and sell it off. He says the idea of a nice, big check is appealing, but there’d have to be a bunch of zeros and a few commas for him to think twice.

“I’m 65, I still play a lot of golf and this is still enjoyable,” he says. “I like creating, I like traveling, I just like doing it. If I did get approached by someone like a Callaway who said we’d like to buy it, I’d consider it, but I’d want a job. I still want to be involved, otherwise, I wouldn’t want to sell and walk away. Unless, of course, the check is really, really big. But that’s not going to happen this year.”

Better rain gear probably isn’t at the top of anyone’s mind, and you could say Prillaman has a solution in search of a problem. But that’s if you look at his stuff as something to wear only when it’s raining. If you play golf in the spring or fall in cold weather parts of the world, how many layers do you really want to wear?

And if you’re thinking if this was such a good idea, why didn’t the big guys think of it already, you may need a lesson in how R&D in big companies really works.

“I guess the bigger companies figure it’s not that big of a market, so why would we want to do anything different?” says Prillaman. “We’ll just do what everyone else does and make old shusshy, baggy rain pants.”

“I’ve gotten calls from Callaway reps, TaylorMade reps, PXG reps,” he adds. “They’ve bought apparel from me even though they have their own because theirs is crappy and mine is better.”

“It’s very validating, very gratifying to be able to go head to head with anybody, no matter their size or resources, and do it better than they do.”

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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

John Barba

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      ButchT

      5 years ago

      Well, if you order be prepared for less than prompt shipment! I ordered on 12/21 and was told shipped. As of today (12/27), still has not made it to the Post Office in Alpharetta, GA. Just arm sleeves – shouldn’t be that difficult.

      Reply

      Saturday Morning Sherpa

      5 years ago

      Have you tried calling or emailing them? I have ordered several times from Galway Bay and never had any issues. Their phone number and email are on the contact us link.

      I know Terry personally and he is one of the nicest and trustworthy people you can meet. His company makes quality products, I am sure you won’t be disappointed when your purchase arrives.

      Reply

      MGoBlue100

      5 years ago

      Great job as always, JB! I’m in the VERY early planning stages of a Scotland/Ireland trip, and rain/cool weather gear is at the top of the list. At least one pair of GB pants will be coming along. Now to determine how fat I’ll be, and what size to order!

      Reply

      Noah Scherer

      5 years ago

      I am 6 foot 5. Every rain jacket I try on bunches up in the middle because of the zipper, it interferes with my putting. The only rain gear I can wear is a pullover. Will they becoming out with a pullover

      Reply

      Michael

      5 years ago

      Terry, I coach high school teams and am wondering if Galway Bay, as some other golf apparel companies do, might offer team discounts to high school golf teams? If so, I would love to try the pants and jacket with the thought of potentially making it a future team apparel offering.

      Reply

      Dave conlon

      5 years ago

      From Ireland play golf twice a week all year round, we do get a bit of rain for about 12 months a year so I would love to try out your gear and maybe my mates might get on board too??️‍♀️⛳️

      Reply

      Stevegp

      5 years ago

      Interesting article. I have been curious about his products for a while.

      Reply

      Steve

      5 years ago

      Any thoughts of producing a waterproof pair of shorts?

      Reply

      Dave

      5 years ago

      They do have shorts!

      Reply

      Fr. John (padre John) Gibbons

      5 years ago

      Galway Bay is by far the best golf pants, jackets and vests that I own. I wear them year round. I live in central pa and I play a lot of golf. I am also a catholic priest and cover two state prisons. I have to do a lot of walking within the prison complexes on cold, windy, rainy and snowy days. I say mass in these pants and because they breathe so well, I don’t get so hot. I have played more golf and said more masses in Galway Bay pants than any other brand, golf slacks, or casual slacks. I own 3 jackets, 4 vests, and 4 sets of slacks. If you want some seriously comfortable golf gear, the only company I recommend is Galway Bay!! I have had the pleasure of meeting Terry and he really wants his customers to be satisfied. At first I thought $185 for a pair of golf slacks was a little high. Well, it has turned out to a great investment in a clothing line and company I firmly believe in, along with the owner!!

      Reply

      MGoBlue100

      5 years ago

      Thanks for the review. I’m seriously looking onto at least one pair for an upcoming trip.

      Reply

      Dan-o-golf

      5 years ago

      One detail that I would like to see is a club cleaning fabric (a patch) located on the outside lower left leg of golf pants. The fabric would be a rougher material that will clean the face of my clubs after every shot – particularly while hitting balls on the range as well as during those wet soggy rounds where soil seems to stick to the face of my clubs.

      Reply

      Fozcycle

      5 years ago

      I looked at the products. I hav3 a 27” inseam. Does that mean I should order the unhemmed?

      Reply

      Terry Prillaman

      5 years ago

      It doesn’t matter which length you choose, it’s the same cost and the pants come back the same, even with the “v” cut at the hem. Just choose which custom hemming and if your length isn’t listed, just put it in the notes section.

      Reply

      Gally

      5 years ago

      Great read. I’m in the Pacific NW. I went to Bandon in Galvin Green (goretex) and ruined an iPhone in the supposedly “waterproof” pocket. I’ll try GB!

      Reply

      Evan

      5 years ago

      Great article. His comments on the pants show he clearly gets it. I love Travis Mathew but there is no way a pair of their pants are going to work out. Also, the pockets on my Nike rain pants have probably cost me a dozen pro vs. I’ve been on the search for rain pants with more of a tailored fit, these are going to be it.

      Reply

      Steven

      5 years ago

      Once again another clothing company that doesn’t accommodate for sizes bigger then 2xl. I know its hard to fathom but bigger girth people play golf. Unfortunately we can’t play in inclement weather.

      Reply

      John Barba

      5 years ago

      This was mentioned in earlier replies, but it bears repeating: Galway will be offering up to 3XL in jackets and up to 42 in pants in 2019, and will be working with a Big and Tall online distributor to service that market. But if you want to order today, you are correct – Galway Bay can’t service you.

      Reply

      JW

      5 years ago

      To bad producers overlook larger men/people. I normally need 3xl or 4xl. I am 6’3″ and 115kg (230pound?) But a lot of brands dont cover that size. Callaway has a large people line though.

      Dave C

      5 years ago

      2.2lbs per 1 kilo
      115kg = 253lbs

      Nick

      5 years ago

      I have the opposite problem. Any plans on offering pants with a 30 inch waist? 32 seems to be the smallest available

      Terry Prillaman

      5 years ago

      Steven, in the spring, our new line of pants and jackets will be going one size larger as we’ll have 42 waist pants and 3X jackets. Thanks for your comment.

      Reply

      Chris

      5 years ago

      Great piece, and great good luck to Mr. Prillaman. I picked up a Galway Bay jacket on clearance a few years back on a whim — couldn’t find much about the brand except a few online reviews — and it is outstanding in every way. Now that I know more, I wouldn’t hesitate to try their other gear.

      Reply

      RB

      5 years ago

      Great article!!! I’ll check it out. Thanks for the news and Merry Christmas.

      Reply

      Lee H.

      5 years ago

      Being in SW Florida, rain comes in to play for me more during the summer months. This is also when I play most of my golf (less people around and much lower rates). This means temperatures are in the upper 80’s and 90’s, with high humidity. Typically I will cancel my tee time to avoid wearing a hot rain outfit. The half sleeve jacket with rain sleeves option might work for me. Not sure the pants would though. But overall, seems like great products.

      Reply

      Lee H.

      5 years ago

      Were rain gloves and waterproof hats discussed as well?

      Reply

      Fozcycle

      5 years ago

      Thanks for the review John. Now I have to put Galway Bay on my Christmas list.

      Reply

      Ben Hewes

      5 years ago

      Great story and a great review.
      I wish I could contact Terry Prillaman direct…. then I could have my usual moan about the sizing of American apparel.
      All manufacturers (with the exception of Wrangler) assume every man living here is fat….. that is NOT the case.
      I am a 34×34……. yet their lined rain trousers are not available in that size…. they’re available with an inside leg of 30 & 32, but NOT 34.
      In fact, a 34 inside leg is not available in any size.
      Why the hell not?
      This drives me potty.
      I find – at last – a pair of rain pants that are lined and actually work – and they will not fit me.
      Very (VERY) annoying.

      Reply

      John Barba

      5 years ago

      You might want to try his unhemmed version. He offers them unhemmed for the very reason you describe.

      Reply

      Terry Prillaman

      5 years ago

      Ben, while we’re out of stock on a lot of our pants, we make the 30 and 32 inseam but we also offer a 36″ unhemmed inseam for people taller than average. We do custom alterations which generally takes a couple of days. Keep in touch.

      Reply

      RMK

      5 years ago

      I like like playing 3 hour golf and so here is CA, the best way to do that is play in the rain. As a 6’5″ 200lb lifelong player with a 37″ inseam and sleeve length finding pants/jackets (especially rain gear) that fit has always been a problem. Seems being overweight isn’t much of a problem but tall and thin is well, forgetaboutit. After a couple of email exchanges with Terry, I’ve ordered some unhemmed unlined (live in CA) pants. I have hope that these will do the trick and with a March trip to Ireland planned, they will get thoroughly tested.

      Drew Ryan

      5 years ago

      Thanks John, spot on as always, and just at the right time- looking at wet, cold weather for the next few months at least. I will be looking for Galway Bay this evening!

      Reply

      joseph

      5 years ago

      Great article. Tell him to make a better color scheme on the existing jacket, and sell a rain set at a discount when a buyer purchases both items. $500+ for a jacket and pants for here in Cali makes little sense, yet I need some solid gear for the few days a year. Perhaps a less extreme West coast version designed for CA/AZ golfers? There’s a market out here…

      Reply

      Hughie

      5 years ago

      Looks like a great product. It’s too bad they top out at a 40″ waist. Should i loose weight? sure i should, but it would be nice to have rain pants in the meantime

      Reply

      Kenny B

      5 years ago

      My thought exactly!

      The other guys do have XXL size that pulls over regular pants, so I guess I’ll just keep swishing with fabric bunched up around my ankles.

      Reply

      John Barba

      5 years ago

      Terry did tell me he’ll be going up to 3X on jackets and 42 on pants for 2019. He’ll also be supplying a Big and Tall online company and can pull from that inventory if needed.

      Scott king

      5 years ago

      If I hadn’t just gotten a rain suit cobbled together from MGS most wanted list / sale and an REI used sale I may have to get some of these

      Reply

      TR1PTIK

      5 years ago

      I’m interested. I want to play as much golf as I can, but I hate the cold and no one wants to be soaking wet if they’re playing in the rain. A little late for Christmas, but perhaps I can talk my wife into getting me something for my birthday!

      Reply

      Anthony

      5 years ago

      Really interested!

      Reply

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