LA Golf Shafts: Same Strategy New Arena
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LA Golf Shafts: Same Strategy New Arena

LA Golf Shafts: Same Strategy New Arena

In March of this year, LA Golf Shafts officially acquired the inventory, assets, and patents from the now-defunct Matrix Shafts. Once upon a time, Matrix was a purveyor of high quality and high dollar shafts, but in recent years it suffered a variety of financial wounds, many of which were self-inflicted. Perhaps the most egregious misstep was selling shafts in the aftermarket for nearly the same price as a complete club with the same shaft. Not many consumers are going to pay $199 for a shaft when they can spend a couple of pennies more and get the entire club.

The pieces Matrix left behind (OZIK line in particular) provided a perfect opportunity for Reed Dickens. He promises that LA Golf Shafts isn’t going to be just another run of the mill blasé shaft company.

Given this context, LA Golf Shafts’ aim is to be exactly what most existing shaft companies are not, and that starts with the business model. Dickens started Marucci Bat Company out of a shed. Under his stewardship, it evolved the number one bat brand in Major League baseball, not by paying players to rep the product but by offering something more organic – equity positions. Now, Dicken’s latest endeavor (LA Golf Brands) is looking to replicate his uber-successful model in the golf space.

Companies often talk about finding athletes who fit the brand. This isn’t a simple matter of shuffling around puzzle pieces to get optimal brand exposure. LA Golf Shafts, via equity partnerships, places a premium on finding players who both fit the brand and want to engage in a different style of marketing platform. We’re talking about guys who will invest in both the “control and passive” elements of the game. Suffice it to say, how Reed decides to promote and market the brand will fit the premium nature of the product, but he won’t be afraid to push some boundaries either.

The theory is players who receive fractional ownership of the company in lieu of a paycheck will have a more vested interest in how the company performs. As such, LA Golf Shafts hopes to create a more organic experience by requiring its Tour staffers to have some proverbial skin in the game.

WHO?

Unlike stock endorsement arrangements, the players don’t represent the company – for all intents and purposes, they are the company. As such, LA Shafts isn’t going to recruit every Tom, Dick, and Harry, but it would do well to have a major name or two to put in front of consumers to create some positive momentum and brand credibility before it makes product available to retail consumers – which should happen sometime in early 2019.

The 7th ranked player in the world, Bryson DeChambeau, is already on board, bagging an LA Golf putter shaft en route to winning back-to-back FedEx Cup events and being named to the United States Ryder Cup team over the last few weeks. That said, Bryson is a different cat. He’s an outlier of outliers in terms of his equipment, demeanor, and approach to the game. So, while his bent toward quantitative analysis and mad scientist persona sounds like a match made in super geek heaven, LA Golf Shafts will likely be looking to acquire a balanced stable of players, including several others currently ranked in the OWGR’s Top 10.

LA Golf wasn’t willing to name names, and while Tiger Woods and Dustin Johnson have been tossed around the rumor mill, at this point, it’s all conjecture. However, what we do know is the OEM wants visible players who are active on social media and willing to embrace the R&D side of shaft creation. It’s hard not to think of names like Rickie Fowler, Brooks Koepka, and Justin Rose. Rickie would make sense because he’s a media darling and Brooks is the poster man-child for free-agent golfers having won three majors in 15 months playing a set of Mizuno irons designed specifically for him – all without compensation. He hits the ball a country mile, and as one of golf’s young guns, everything seems to suggest he’ll be a constant presence on the professional stage. New World #1, Justin Rose, is a known serial shaft-swapper. The upside and downside are he’s shown a willingness to play whatever gives him the best performance – even if the relationship might be a little short-lived. Rose won three times in 2017, including the WGC-HSBC Champions in Shanghai, using a TPT 15 series driver then curiously switched to MRC’s Tensei Pro Orange for 2018. LA Golf Shafts could be a good fit for a player like Rose as it would be able to quickly modify designs to fit specific player needs – particularly if and when those needs change.

Additionally, LA Golf Shafts plans to be a global company, so it will work to find player/owners to fit each of the intended worldwide markets. It’s reasonable to expect the company to target international players with some pull in Europe and Asia and select players on the PGA Tour Champions. The concept is to cast a wide net and maximize exposure rather than trying to load up on a single marquee player or two.

PRODUCT

The world of golf shafts – particularly those of the OEM variety – can be a shady one. On the shaft production side, working with major OEMs is often “a pain in the ass” according to industry veteran and noted shaft guru, John Oldenburg, who brings two decades of experience as the lead engineer at Aldila to his new role of Chief Product Officer at LA Golf Shafts.

Accomplished shaft designers are asked to take their best thinking, materials, and technology and cut it down to fit within the strict cost parameters set by the purchasing OEM. You might as well be asking Bobby Flay to make mac ‘n cheese out of a box. Because it’s a large volume conversation and a major profit center for the shaft company, it’s a necessarily evil companies have historically been forced to negotiate to remain relevant and move the requisite volume of product.

That said, LA Golf Shafts will not be in the OEM/inline business – at all. Every shaft will be exclusively available in the aftermarket and will be designed by Oldenburg. Moreover, all shafts will be 100% made in the good ol’ United States of America, in an environment where Oldenburg will be able to oversee the entirety of the process.

“It is a huge competitive advantage for us that all of the material sourcing, prototyping, manufacturing and testing is happening here in the US with a dedicated and talented workforce that has decades of experience creating prototypes.” – John Oldenburg

In a word, Oldenburg and his team are about authenticity– against the backdrop of an industry which has long struggled with transparency. “Whatever the shaft says it is, it is,” asserts Oldenburg. Consumers will know exactly what is under the paint and it won’t use names or clever paint schemes in an effort to dupe golfers into thinking they’re playing the same shaft as a tour pro. At the same time, if a shaft is sold as the same as one being used by an LA Golf Shafts player, it will be identical.

The truth is, even some very expensive aftermarket shafts work off blueprints which might be a decade old. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, but it is misleading when the only new or improved element of the new and improved shaft is the paint job.

Unless someone is willing to put a signature on the design, consumers don’t know if the vendor simply chose a profile from a catalog or sourced the design work to a third-party. When production happens offshore, there can be little to no oversight by the shaft company which eventually slaps its name on the product. If it can’t speak firsthand to how the shaft is made, there might be a significant difference between what it knows and what it believes to be true.

LA Golf wants to remove all doubt and in doing so attract clients who are willing to pay a bit more ($400-$600 is the likely starting range for premium shafts) for a shaft designed by Oldenburg, crafted from the highest quality materials available, and built to the level of quality required by the world’s best golfers.

Regarding materials, Oldenburg told MyGolfSpy, “There are only a handful (of companies) that make really good composite materials, some of which aren’t golf specific companies.” Consider Mitsubishi Chemical. It’s primarily a carbon fiber company, and a very good one, but even at that, Oldenburg wants to push limits and explore other materials, which previously might have been off the table due to cost. It’s a liberating and motivating proposition for Oldenburg who will have a deeper well of tools at his disposal than at any time in his career.

Over the last couple of years, we’ve started to hear more about shaft manufacturing processes. It used to be that table rolling/wrapping was the only method employed, and while Oldenburg estimates at least 90% of shafts are still produced this way, companies are experimenting with other methods. Seven Dreamers cures shafts in an autoclave, and TPT says its thin-ply winding method eliminates human error by using advanced machinery and robotics. Oldenburg is quick to remind consumers that while it’s easy for companies to sell consumers on a revolutionary process, “The process doesn’t matter if the design and materials aren’t correct. You have to get all of the pieces right.”

Reed Dickens and company are intending on doing just that and giving the industry a taste of something different along the way.

Does it pique your interest? Which players do you think LA Golf Shafts should go after?

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Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris is a self-diagnosed equipment and golf junkie with a penchant for top-shelf ice cream. When he's not coaching the local high school team, he's probably on the range or trying to keep up with his wife and seven beautiful daughters. Chris is based out of Fort Collins, CO and his neighbors believe long brown boxes are simply part of his porch decor. "Isn't it funny? The truth just sounds different."

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel

Chris Nickel





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      Cliff

      4 years ago

      Hi, I currently have the Tour Stability putter shaft. Any difference or improvement in the LA Golf Ozik TP 125/135g putter shaft compared to Stability? One is all graphite and one has a steel tip. But has anyone at MyGolfSpy looked at both? Thank you.

      Reply

      Michael

      6 years ago

      It’s a shame when I talk to younger players just getting started in golf, and they ask why does it cost so much to play? More and more public courses are closing and the ones that remain keep raising their round prices. Golf equipment prices are soaring and at times you don’t even know what you’re paying for! And, now you feel completely comfortable telling us that for a decent golf shaft it’s $400-600! Sad.

      Reply

      scott

      6 years ago

      LA Golf is just another over price shaft but they have one thing going for them you can pronounce there name.

      Reply

      mackdaddy

      6 years ago

      I play Matrix Ozik Tp 7 Hd in my driver and 3 wood nd they are wicked awesome.

      Reply

      Matt Aamold

      6 years ago

      First paragraph in article “Perhaps the most egregious misstep was selling shafts in the aftermarket for nearly the same price as a complete club with the same shaft.”

      Closing paragraphs “LA Golf wants to remove all doubt and in doing so attract clients who are willing to pay a bit more ($400-$600 is the likely starting range for premium shafts) ”

      …Dumb

      Reply

      scott

      6 years ago

      Isn’t that true with most shaft makers.

      Reply

      Marius Bjone

      6 years ago

      Well, since they won’t be in any OEM custom selection…then NO.

      Reply

      Chris Nickel

      6 years ago

      I’m assuming you understand that LA Golf isn’t going to have inline offerings – so there won’t be the option of a $500 driver w/ a $400 LA Golf shaft in it as a “stock” option. If you want the $400 shaft, it would be above and beyond the $500 club – so the total would be $900 – Which is exactly the opposite of what Matrix did previously

      Reply

      steve hamer

      6 years ago

      the game will not grow much if clubs keep going up in price

      Reply

      Plaidjacket

      6 years ago

      Very nice and well written article by Chris.
      In the golf scene Shafts are one of those items that just don’t light me up. I’ve said many times in the forum that I could care less about shaft technology and shaft specifications. I only ask my fitter to help put me in the right shaft. That’s it!! I also know that spending a fortune on a boutique shaft isn’t going to do one damn thing for my game or quality of play and scoring ability.
      I recall when I was visiting a Club Champion store once and talking about driver fitting with one of their guys. I casually picked up a head and asked the guy how much might “this” club cost with shaft. The fitter grabbed a shaft off the rack and said the head and shaft would be about $650. !! OUCH. I asked about the shaft and head component cost and it was something like $200 for the head and $450 for the shaft. I then asked wouldn’t it be possible for me to get a great fitting/playing driver by only spending … $200 or less for a shaft? The fitter replied, absolutely.

      Reply

      Ben s

      6 years ago

      Odd. When I look out at the sprawling Golf shaft market. I see there’s a need. We could call it a gap. One thing is absolutely for sure. There are no gaps in the high end shaft market. That actually seems over saturated. There are so many shafts from 300 up to 3000. Granted most are in the 300-500 but yes the Japanese market has companies selling shafts well over the 1k mark.

      I’d say we are in need of a great shaft at the 199 and under level. I haven’t found a shaft that fits me well and is under 250. It always seems the shafts that are stuff enough and launch and spin low enough are a lot more than 199. I have to get creative because I’m not a wealthy man.

      Reply

      John b

      6 years ago

      I got fitted for clubs from a boutique fitter and he went with all LAGP shafts. The driver shaft was $400, hybrid were $200 etc etc. Total came out to $4800 with the shafts accounting for over half of that. I agree with a comment that the market share for folks who arent price sensitive will fill up quick. For the rest of us, I sure hope more companies don’t come along and simply try to gouge us. Golf is hard enough without predatory pricing models for clubs and shafts.

      Reply

      Frank Sallee

      6 years ago

      Problem is the market in this price range will be satisfied very quickly and how do you justify against marginal gains or losses with performance.

      Reply

      Spitfisher

      6 years ago

      sounds like the PXG of golf shafts- just too much money with plenty of other options that are one proven on tour and half the cost.

      Matrix made some wonderful shafts like the Black tie and the tame white tie.

      Reply

      Daniel Cowell

      6 years ago

      Gfore logo and prices.

      Reply

      Steve S

      6 years ago

      Friends have purchased clubs used just to get the upgrade shafts. These guys will probably last because they are going for the upscale market that doesn’t care about price. They’ll make money but be much of a player in the overall market. Not a bad thing……

      Reply

      KingSingh

      6 years ago

      Don’t see any issues with the quality of an iPhone or an iPad both of which are assembled outside the US with components that are also sourced from outside the US. In the sporting world, Nike shoes are made in Southeast Asia and are considered high quality products. Saying that products made outside the US are of sub-par quality with poor quality control is marketing hogwash, another strategy to charge $400-$600 for a shaft (even Mitsubishi Chemical’s latest shafts are not priced that high even though they’re manufactured in Japan).

      Good luck to LA Golf and their $400-$600 shafts.

      Reply

      NH Golfer

      6 years ago

      Who the heck would spend this on a shaft? Same idiots that spend $3,000 on a set of irons.

      Reply

      Chris Nickel

      6 years ago

      Probably the people who want to – just like any other product at any other price. And again – though this concept seems challenging for some to acknowledge, the existence of higher priced goods doesn’t preclude the availability of lower cost alternatives.

      Reply

      albatrossx3

      6 years ago

      I had a cleveland w a matix shaft, POS, it would not stay glued into the head.

      Reply

      Joe Golfer

      6 years ago

      That hardly sounds like a shaft quality issue of Matrix.
      It sounds like someone didn’t properly mix the right proportions of the two epoxy parts. Or the epoxy was old or not allowed to cure properly.
      Or the shaft tip wasn’t prepped properly.
      Or maybe a .335 tip shaft was being put into a .350 hosel (Cleveland used .350 hosels in my past experience re-shafting them), and a bad shaft adaptor was used.
      Could be a variety of things, but highly unlikely the Matrix shaft was at fault.

      Reply

      C

      6 years ago

      100% not an issue with the shaft.

      Reply

      D.A.

      6 years ago

      400.00 to 600.00 for a shaft!! I quit reading when I saw the price…..

      Reply

      Chris Nickel

      6 years ago

      Then you still made it 90% of the way through the article!

      Reply

      Les

      6 years ago

      Very interesting idea and I wish them luck. That said, it really doesn’t matter to me directly what they come up with because, as you said, “Not many consumers are going to pay $199 for a shaft when they can spend a couple of pennies more and get the entire club.” That’s me exactly. I’m an older golfer and as such, it doesn’t seem likely that I’d use this “great new shaft.” It just wouldn’t benefit my game any longer, at least not enough to justify the cost.

      Reply

      Jim Haynes

      6 years ago

      They have to reach all levels of the Swing speed spectrum , so Senior tour players, like Langer and Els, PGA guys like Kuchar and Hass, as well as those mentioned above. That would be I’m sure what they are looking at.

      Reply

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