LA Golf Driver: Does “First-Ever” Technology Justify a $650 Price Tag?
Drivers

LA Golf Driver: Does “First-Ever” Technology Justify a $650 Price Tag?

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LA Golf Driver: Does “First-Ever” Technology Justify a $650 Price Tag?

Although LA Golf has been a part of the golf equipment industry for nearly seven years, I’m still not entirely sure where it fits or even what to make of it.

So, as the company gears up to launch its first driver, it makes sense to revisit the LA Golf timeline to see how we got here (wherever here happens to be).

A brief history of LA Golf

Bryson DeChambeau is a long-time LA Golf 
Player Partner

The company showed up on the golf equipment scene in early 2018 when it acquired the inventory, assets and patents of Matrix shafts which had gone belly-up a few months earlier.

At the time, LA Golf Founder and CEO Reed Dickens promised LA Golf wouldn’t be just another run-of-the-mill blasé shaft company. Dickens’ plan was to apply the success of his Marucci (baseball bats) model to golf. That meant implementing a player-owned model that relies on the players themselves to raise awareness.

LA Golf Shafts have been used by Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Michelle Wie West and others but it’s fair to say neither the company nor its products have gone entirely mainstream. To be fair, mainstream success in the shaft category typically requires widespread OEM adoption and it’s not like an LA Golf’s $300-plus shafts are coming stock in anything.

As a shaft brand, LA Golf may not be blasé but it’s certainly boutique.

LA Golf acquired Sik golf and its descending loft technology.

In 2021, LA Golf purchased SIK Golf, primarily for the company’s “descending loft” technology. It’s the same tech COBRA licenses for use in its in 3D-printed putters. The tech is fundamentally sound and arguably the most valuable asset in the LA Golf portfolio although I’m not sure it’s enough to justify the $500-$600 LA Golf charges for its putters.

In early 2023, LA Golf launched the LA Golf ball. Our ball test showed it to be a strong performer, good enough to be considered alongside other top DTC offerings like Maxfli and Vice. That said, with a $70 price tag, it was hard to make a sensible case for LA Golf over those other DTC options, let alone premium OEM offerings – especially if factory-level quality is part of the conversation.

It’s worth a passing mention that LA Golf currently lists the out-of-stock ball at $54.99. Whether the ball is temporarily out of stock, a new one is in the pipeline or it was a permanent casualty of the fire at Launch Technologies remains to be seen.

Putting all this together, the suggestion is that LA Golf’s success to date comes more from buying things (the remnants of a shaft company, a putter brand and a factory golf ball) than creating things and its reputation is built as much on price as on any documented performance benefits.

Its notoriety is due, by and large, to its roster of “Player Partners” like Bryson and DJ. And that brings us to this week and the announcement of pre-sale availability of LA Golf’s upcoming driver lineup and an opportunity to launch something uniquely LA Golf.

The new drivers are listed at $650 which feels steep for a company with no previous product or documented R&D history in the driver category but it does align with LA Golf’s positioning as a premium brand.

LA Golf bills the new drivers as “the first driver to deliver a face and performance shaft to match your swing.”

There is some indication that tagline is attributable to DeChambeau which would make sense given reports of his obsession with bulge and roll and his purported belief that it should be possible to make a driver fly straight regardless of where you hit it.

It’s an interesting theory but this is hardly the first time it has been explored. It’s the reason it will ultimately be important for LA Golf to spell out the particulars of how their designs differ from what’s been done to date.

So far, the information is big on potential but light on detail.

About LA Golf drivers

The LA Golf driver will be available in five models. The name of each appears to bear some relationship to their unique bulge and roll profiles. That gets us these five models: 13-12, 12-11, 10-10, 9-9, 8-7.

A quick reminder: bulge (heel to toe) and roll (top to bottom) refer to the curvature of the face. Plenty has been written about bulge and roll but the simple explanation is they work to offset the gear effect by seeking to create optimal launch conditions from sub-optimal impact.

Bulge works to correct or tune what is generally described as side spin while roll works to increase or decrease launch in conjunction with the increase (low face) or decrease (high face) in spin on off-center impact.

Based on the names alone, it may not be entirely obvious which one is likely right for you. Fortunately, LA Golf has provided a fitting tool.

The heads are designed to fit a range of golfers with swing speeds as low as 89 mph all the way up to long-drive guys with speeds above 135.

To add some additional context, the 9-9 targets swing speeds 125-135 and suggests a nominal loft of eight. The 8-7 is for 135-plus swingers with a nominal loft of four degrees so we’re definitely not targeting the masses.

It’s likely the majority of mere mortals (swing speed above 89) will fit into the 13-12 or 12-11.

The initial description, and the photos for that matter, suggest all the heads are strikingly similar, if not identical, in shape. Same height, same shape (and aerodynamics) … the same everything except for the bulge and roll profiles unique to each model.

That’s based on what’s available now so it’s entirely possible there will be more to the story when the drivers go from pre-sale to for sale but one would hope the photos on the sale pages accurately represent what golfers can buy right now.

With that, $650 is a big ask for me given that the info we have so far suggests LA Golf is pulling one design lever (bulge and roll) to differentiate models in a category where the rest of the industry routinely pulls several.

When the dust settles, LA Golf may, in fact, prove to be the first to specifically market matching bulge and roll with your swing as the thing that makes its drivers better but it borders on absurd to suggest it’s the first company to vary bulge and roll based on the target golfer’s swing.

We could go back further but in interest of recency, tailoring head design to the specifics of your (or any other golfer’s) swing is exactly what Callaway was doing with Paradym Ai Smoke lineup when it talked about designs being optimized for specific buckets of player types. In that case, head shape, face topology and CG location were optimized for a target group of players defined by things like swing speed, attack angle and other aspects of club delivery.

Likewise, in discussing G440 with PING two years ago, the R&D team talked about how data collected from the Stack System informed the face designs for each model, specifically noting how it tuned the bulge profile of the LST to not overcorrect for a higher swing speed player’s toe miss.

Those are just two of several examples as offering different face design optimizations between models is quite literally a part of nearly every driver conversation we have.

It’s also fair to point out that golf companies have been trying to optimize shafts for different player types for as long as any of us can remember. Again, this isn’t new thinking.

More details to follow?

It’s certainly possible LA Golf will add detail and clarity as their drivers become widely available but the initial read is there’s nothing fundamentally new here although the apparent lack of differentiation between models based on anything other than bulge and roll would qualify as unique.

The wild card in all of this is in the implementation.

As I said, Bryson has long-held theories about better optimizing bulge and roll and it’s possible, if not likely, that LA Golf’s particular implementation could be significantly different than anything we’ve seen before. If that’s true, then we might have something to talk about and take a closer look at.

It’s also true there is plenty of risk in taking something that works for Bryson and applying it to the masses.

So with all of that said, I’m certainly curious to see how LA Golf take on bulge and roll differs from everything we’ve seen to date but I’m not convinced leaning into bulge and roll as the most important differentiator between heads designed for different audiences makes the most sense.

It’s certainly not enough to justify the pricetag during the pre-sale period for an untested driver from a company with no history in the category.

More to come, for sure.

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Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony is the Editor of MyGolfSpy where his job is to bring fresh and innovative content to the site. In addition to his editorial responsibilities, he was instrumental in developing MyGolfSpy's data-driven testing methodologies and continues to sift through our data to find the insights that can help improve your game. Tony believes that golfers deserve to know what's real and what's not, and that means MyGolfSpy's equipment coverage must extend beyond the so-called facts as dictated by the same companies that created them. Most of all Tony believes in performance over hype and #PowerToThePlayer.

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

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Tony Covey





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      Fake

      1 year ago

      This might be the right club for the right person, but it’s out of my personal price range. Thank goodness companies like Cleveland and Tour Edge are selling relatively affordable drivers.

      Reply

      Drewzer

      1 year ago

      I believe you can see a glimpse of this driver in the video on YouTube, Grant Horvat and Phil Mickelson(sorry if misspelled lol) vs Dustin/Austin Johnson.

      Reply

      Eddie

      1 year ago

      Lets see it play out first .
      There has to be big gains in each head for the swing speed groups.
      If it doesn’t, then you have problems.
      Big gains , have to be there and the sound and feel must also be there. If it sounds like Krank heads it’s not going to make it .
      LA golf was Matrix, that’s what helped the get traction. There price’s always where in question.
      Lets see if Club Champion gets these heads for fitting.
      LA golf needs to have the available for testing the masses .

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      You forgot to mention that LA Golf was MATRIX SHAFTS

      Reply

      Drewzer

      1 year ago

      It’s literally in paragraph number 3

      Reply

      Steve P

      1 year ago

      If the drivers feel anything like their carbon headed putters, these will be the Turd of the Year for 2025!

      Reply

      Coletrain

      1 year ago

      My 2019 tour edge EXS driver has a bulge and roll face that’s all right on it. I should resell it for $700. The whole world is full of goods with over the top marketing hyperbole. Just in the hope that it will retain social media Glory and make somebody rich. When it doesn’t work you end up in a world with the most depression in human history.

      Reply

      Josh

      1 year ago

      “It’s certainly not enough to justify $650 during the pre-sale period for an untested driver from a company with no history in the category.”

      A suspicious number of new Social Media accounts over the last week bragging about how a company with a fraction of the R&D Budget of Taylormade has reinvented the driver category and every swing goes 300+ yards straight regardless of where you hit it! would disagree! Act fast before they’re sold out!…

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      People bought PXG right off the back, jumped on the bandwagon quite happily when they first came out with no background per se, so I see no problem here

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      Right off the bat…
      Sorry about the audio dictation error
      Apple Intelligence isn’t so intelligent
      🤣

      JB2334

      1 year ago

      I think the fitting approach is cool (although obviously unproven so far) but outside of customized boutique wedges and putters, I don’t see a company that isn’t one of the bigger 5 OEMs introducing first-run equipment at that price point and being successful…plus they’re ugly as sin.

      Reply

      Robert G

      1 year ago

      First bankrupt company of 2025 LA Golf. Fire sale coming soon.

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      Only if they are planning to sell a lot of these, which they are not. They know they are niche. And doing just fine being niche.
      You also forget that there are millionaires and billionaires with disposal income that have flooded the game since the end of Covid

      Reply

      Sonoma-Valley-Tom

      1 year ago

      Price comparison: The XXIO model 13 lists for $700. It’s a Srixon / Cleveland club in different clothes.

      Is LA Golf equipment made in the USA? If yes, is the price level still justifiable?

      Reply

      TenBuck

      1 year ago

      Just for S&G, I did the fitting tool and when it was all said and done, the cost of the driver was $799, of course that was with the shaft that they recommend with the head. No thanks!!

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      That’s not bad! Any of the other main manufacturers drivers cost the same when you add a custom shaft, so LA Golf is right on target

      Reply

      Aidan King

      1 year ago

      All those other brands have a decades of experience behind their products. Why would anyone pay that for a unproven product when you could get a Titleist GT with a Tour AD/Ventus for the same price.
      Their shafts are nothing special to begin with.

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      People had no problems with PXG when they first came out so I see no problem here since they already have a reputation for their shafts

      DonB

      1 year ago

      When was the last time you bought an aftermarket shaft for your new driver? The price certainly (club + shaft) added up to more than $650. I would bet that is what they will push. Look with our driver you get a premium level shaft and you are actually saving money! We will see, but I would bet it is something like that. Didn’t they use a similar tactic to sell their putters?

      Reply

      Bhtgator90

      1 year ago

      They’re insane – who’s pricing their products at LA Golf?

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      Why? The TM Qi35 LS is $650, and then if somebody adds a special shaft that costs another $350, you’re looking at a $1000 driver.
      LA Golf ones are the same

      Reply

      Aidan King

      1 year ago

      You must work for LA Golf the way you are going around defending a driver that isn’t even available yet.
      You keep mentioning it is the same price as some other top model but negate to mention they are all proven and tested unlike LA Golf.

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      When PXG first came out, how were they priced?
      Exactly.
      People still switched over in droves.
      No I am not defending them – but this is market pricing, it is the way of the world

      Ned

      1 year ago

      Just like everything LA golf makes way overpriced and no way better it’s than other brands. Reminds me of early days of PXG.

      Reply

      ChitownM2

      1 year ago

      While I’m not convinced these head designs are going to be any good, the price isn’t crazy. They are charging the same as some of the big 5 but are including a real deal $300 shaft. From that perspective you’re paying $350 for the head vs $650 from Callaway or TM, etc

      Reply

      KingJames

      1 year ago

      Launching a premium-priced product as an initial market entry is a common strategy, particularly in the golf industry. The goal is often to establish a perception of high quality and exclusivity. This “halo effect” can then be leveraged with the subsequent release of more accessible, lower-priced options. Consumers, drawn to the brand’s prestige, are more likely to consider these less expensive models, even without the top-tier price tag. Think of it as the automotive industry’s playbook: Mercedes-Benz, BMW, and Audi all offer entry-level models that allow consumers to experience the brand’s cachet without the cost of their flagship vehicles.

      The golf market, in particular, seems remarkably resilient to price increases. With golfers consistently demonstrating a willingness to invest in new equipment, manufacturers are incentivized to push the price ceiling. Introducing a high-end product initially allows a company to capitalize on this trend, capturing the segment of the market willing to pay a premium. A more affordable follow-up then broadens the appeal, attracting those who desire the brand association but are more price-conscious. It’s a calculated approach that maximizes both perceived value and market penetration.

      Reply

      ChitownM2

      1 year ago

      I imagine this is as cheap as they are ever going to get. I would expect the price to go up at retail launch and future models to be more expensive. I don’t think they’re trying to replicate what PXG did. $650 isn’t a bad price when they are including a $300 real deal shaft.

      Like the article mentions, I’m not sold on this head tech, but at $350 for the head vs $650 for Callaway or TM the ask isn’t unreasonable.

      Reply

      birdie dancer

      1 year ago

      yugo or 911 both will get you to the golf course..neither has any effect on how you score on the course…and a using a $650 driver vs your old M2, or Fusion is not going to make a difference in your score either. run what u brung and tighten up that course management and save many more strokes than any new club will do for u.

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 year ago

      The TM Qi35 LS is $650.

      Reply

      League Golfer

      1 year ago

      Right on Birdie Dancer! I like your comment.

      Reply

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