PING G Le3: Engineered Exclusively for Women
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PING G Le3: Engineered Exclusively for Women

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PING G Le3: Engineered Exclusively for Women

The new PING G Le3 line of golf clubs is many things. But the item at the top of the list is also the simplest.

It’s good business.

The PING G Le3 lineup, you see, is a full line of custom-fit and custom-built clubs specifically for women. In case you hadn’t noticed, more women are playing golf than ever before.

The National Golf Foundation’s most recent statistics show the number of women golfers in the U.S. alone has grown 15 percent since 2019. Overall, women now make up 25 percent of all on-course golfers.

For a company such as PING with a long history of supporting women’s golf (you’ve heard, perhaps, of the Solheim Cup?), it’s a smart move to potentially capture a large share of a growing demographic.

This isn’t a watered-down, “shrink it and pink it” boxed set, either. It’s a full line of premium gear with all of PING’s current technology.

An image of a woman golfer using the PING G Le3 line of golf clubs.

PING G Le3 For Women

PING Executive Vice-President Stacey Pauweis is the granddaughter of Karsten and Louise Solheim.

“The new PING G Le3 family offers a full set of performance-engineered custom-made clubs that deliver added distance, unmatched forgiveness, a confidence-inspiring look and a pleasing sound,” she said in a prepared statement.

The set includes a driver, fairways woods, hybrids, irons and putters. These aren’t your standard PING products with lightweight shafts. PING says the line has been engineered from grip to tip for 80 mph and lower swing speeds.

 A close up of the PING G Le3 golf irons for women.

What’s more, the entire lineup is available for custom-fitting and PING-authorized fitting centers.

G Le3 Driver and Fairways

PING is using its best technology in the new G Le3 series. The high-MOI driver features lightweight shafts and grips to help get the ball up and fly generally straight. The titanium head features a forged face and a fixed, high-density weight in the rear for a low, back and slightly heel-ward center of gravity. That’s a recipe for faster ball speeds and higher launch.

Oddly, the G Le3 driver also features crown turbulators and a Vortex cavity. Presumably, that’s for an aerodynamic advantage but even PING has told us that aerodynamic advantages start to peter out as swing speeds go down. But, heck, here we are.

A view of the PING G Le3 driver.

The driver is adjustable with PING’s lightweight Trajectory Tuning Hosel. The 11.5-degree driver can be loft-adjusted up or down 1.5 degrees as well as lie-adjusted up to three degrees flat.

The PING G Le3 fairways come in four flavors: 3-, 5-, 7- and 9-woods and are also adjustable. Those heads are stainless steel with a maraging steel face wrap to optimize face flex while reducing spin.

Irons, Wedges and Hybrids

While not even remotely a box set, the PING G Le3 line is designed to be a set. Specifically, the irons and wedges are meant to be blended. The irons are classic game-improvement with a low CG and high-density heel and toe weights for better perimeter weighting. Iron lofts are par for the game-improvement course ranging from a 25-degree 6-iron to a 41-degree 9-iron. They also include PING’s multi-material PurFlex cavity badge, which allows for maximum face deflection while at the same time dampening sound and vibration.

A view of the PING G Le3 golf irons.

Noticeably lacking from the standard iron set is a pitching wedge. PING is making the G Le3 pitching wedge to be more like a wedge and less like a 10-iron. The pitching, utility and sand wedges feature fully machined grooves while the sand wedge has a bit of an Eye 2 thing going on with a wider sole and a slimmer hosel.

With any combo set featuring hybrids, the transition to hybrids is always a little hinky and can leave a large gap between the longest iron and shortest hybrid. To smooth that transition, PING is making each hybrid a quarter of an inch longer than the one before it. That, says PING, should provide more consistent gapping.

The PING G Le3 golf hybrids

PING G Le3 Putters

PING rounds out the G Le3 lineup with four classic designs gussied up with a white, two-piece elastomer insert called Pebax. It features a soft front piece with PLD-inspired shallow grooves and a firmer back piece to ensure feel, forgiveness and distance control.

The four new putter models include the G Le3 version of the Anser, along with fellow classics, Fetch and Ketsch. The fourth putter is a new design called the Louise, named after Karsten’s wife, business partner and confidante.

The PING G Le3 Louise putter

The Louise is a mid-mallet, similar to the Tour-proven PING DS72, but with a mid-slant hosel. The Ketsch G is machined from 6061 aluminum and has a stainless-steel sole plate to maximize MOI and optimize CG.

All four feature a new G Le3 specific pistol-style grip.

PING G Le3: Final Thoughts, Price and Availability

Lightweight is officially a thing now for mainstream golf OEMs. It used to be the sole domain for the likes of XXIO, which designs lightweight clubs for all lower-swing speed players, regardless of gender. Previously, women’s offerings were most often the same head with more feminine graphics and coloring, maybe some lighter adjustable weights, and a light shaft.

A cynic may say that’s exactly what PING is doing but that’s generally not PING’s way. The company is going to great lengths to make sure customers know G Le3 is an organic design exclusively for women with a heavy emphasis on custom-fitting, just like the traditional men’s product lines.

And that “just like the men” equality includes pricing. The G Le3 driver, for example, carries an MSRP of $540. The fairway woods are $325 each and the hybrids (22-, 26-, 30- and 34-degree models) are $245. The irons (6-iron thru 9-iron) and wedges are $185 each.

And the PING G Le3 Anser, Louise and Fetch are $250, while the Ketsch G is $325.

The PING G Le3 line of women’s clubs is available starting today. For more information, visit PING’s website.

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For You

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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

John Barba

John Barba





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      Mike

      10 months ago

      John, nice coverage of the clubs. But I ABSOLUTELY question where that stat that 1 of every 4 “on course” golfers is a woman comes from. That is complete “inclusivity propaganda BS”. So that would mean that at any course at any time, every foursome would include 1 woman (25%). What alternate reality is that ? C’mon, any golfer who actually plays on a course knows that is complete BS.

      Definitely not putting you down at all, I’m just saying, and I know this from my profession, always question and verify when you’re pulling stats.

      Reply

      Jimmy

      10 months ago

      Seriously, just google it. It took me 30 seconds to find the source of the data. I know the commentariat here skews old AF, so let me know if you need some help.

      Reply

      Mike

      10 months ago

      Seriously, what course on earth consistently has 1 woman in every foursome all day, every day. I working at a golf course that is super busy every day and I play at different courses all the time, If you told me 1 in 10 players were women, i would still struggle to believe you. But 1 female in every foursome, all day, every day, every course? NFW. Would love to know where they’re actually getting (or I should say making up) these stats. And ow would they actually measure that statistic?

      The National Enquirer has plenty of info also.

      Jimmy

      10 months ago

      So let me make sure I have this right: you took the time to rehash your original comment in a new post but didn’t bother to look the stat up?

      Ashley

      10 months ago

      You do realize women can play in foursomes on their own right?

      Reply

      Mike

      10 months ago

      I’m talking about the law of averages (not sure why this concept seems so hard for folks to grasp!). Of course 4 women can play in a foursome (duh!). But other than the women’s League play at 1 course near me, this is an incredibly infrequent sight. Maybe it’s just the part of the country where I reside in (northeast Mid-Atlantic).

      As mentioned, I work at a extremely busy public golf course (40K+ rounds annually). In no way shape or form are 10,000 of those rounds played by women. I also play a lot of golf & again, see nowhere near that 1 out of 4 on-course players being a woman.

      I think my comments are being interpreted as being anti-woman. Couldn’t be father from the truth. One of my goals is to to get my daughter prepped for her high school golf team. I’m just questioning that statistic as “gospel”,

      John Barba

      10 months ago

      Mike – there are many ways to interpret stats, but it pays to be thoughtful and apply a bit of common sense.

      The National Golf Foundation’s 2022 participation numbers are fascinating and show some interesting trends. The fact that of all golfers who identify as being on-course only players (many report they only play off-course at Topgolf or on simulators, while a larger number say they participate both on- and off-course), 25% are women.

      It would be illogical, however, to presume that the stat means that at any given point in time, one member of every foursome would be a woman. The world ain’t that structured, bruh! Additionally, that number doesn’t reflect how much golf that 25% – or the other 75%, for that matter – actually play. A person – male or female – who plays twice a month counts exactly the same as someone who plays three times a week. The stat means just and only what it says – that 25% of the golfers who say they only play on-course golf are women.

      Stats are stats, and understanding what they’re saying requires a bit of abstract thinking. It also requires a touch of common sense to understand what the stats mean and what they’re saying. And what they’re saying in this case is women’s participation at golf is higher than it’s ever been. For PING, it means they feel there’s a substantial potential market for their G Le3 line of clubs.

      Reply

      Mike

      10 months ago

      Hi John, thanks for responding. My point was that I’m on golf courses a great deal & do not see 1 out of every 4 players being a woman. That’s how I interpreted the 25% statistic. Obviously they compiled it a different way. I work with numbers/statistics all day so that’s probably why it caught my interest. I wasn’t trying to be mean-spirited at all, I was just “breaking down / trying to interpret” that statistic.

      I may reach out to the National golf foundation as I do want to understand how they developed that %. As referenced earlier, our course has >40K rounds played annually, & other than someone’s name on a tee sheet, there’s no “demographic box” checked. But honestly, I’m much more interested in how well I’ll hit the new 5W I just purchased.

      John Barba

      9 months ago

      Here’s another way to think about statistics – and maybe this will put it into perspective:

      There are 1.4 billion people in China. And there are 7 billion people on Earth. That means that one of our every five babies born on this planet are Chinese. But if you have four kids and none of them are Chinese and you are expecting a fifth, it does NOT mean that your fifth child will be Chinese.

      Then again, it’s a fact that 44% of marriages end in divorce. But if you look at it another way, that means 56% of marriages end in death.

      Again, stats are stats.

      Da Slammer

      10 months ago

      It’s not for “women” – they’ll probably be insulting those ladies who need proper men’s stiff flex clubs because those women are athletes and not once-a-month hobbyists. Let’s make a distinction, shall we? They need to say that these are for the hobby consumer who aren’t strong. Flat out, honest, and clear, that’s what the world needs now, lets not coddle people, lets not mince words. In other words, for ladies who don’t have the strength or coordination of an athlete, ladies who are weak.
      lmao

      Reply

      Mike S

      10 months ago

      Big OOF.

      Reply

      Dave V

      6 months ago

      I’m thinking this would be a good set for my pre-high school kids. They already wear women’s shoes because it’s hard to find decent youth sized golf shoes.

      Reply

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