Top 50 Drivers of All Time
Drivers

Top 50 Drivers of All Time

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Top 50 Drivers of All Time

1. Callaway Big Bertha

The top-ranked driver on our list is the Callaway Big Bertha. It was more than just a golf club. It was a cultural phenomenon. When the Big Bertha was introduced in 1991, it was truly revolutionary (rare for a golf club if you think about it). Crazy to think but, at the time, the 190cc head size seemed like a club that was playing as a man among boys. Combined with an aggressive advertising campaign that captured the public’s imagination, it was literally an instant hit. Golfers at almost all skill levels saw immediate benefits. Pro golfers quickly adopted the Big Bertha, which led to lots of wins, which led to lots of amateur golfers flocking to stores worldwide to buy. They flew off shelves.

2. Titleist 975D

It was in Tiger’s bag when he won Tiger Slam. It was David Duval’s choice the year he became world No. 1. To this day, it remains one of the best-selling drivers of all time. It was also the No. 1 played driver on the PGA Tour. I guarantee you or someone you know gamed the classic Titleist 975D.

3. PING G400 LST

A unicorn at its time, the G400 LST set the standard for a class of drivers offering comparatively low spin with above average forgiveness. It won our Most Wanted Driver test in its first year of release and was so good that it stuck around even longer than PING expected. There’s a case to be made that, across the industry, many of the best drivers in recent years are fruit of the 400 LST tree.

4. TaylorMade R7 SuperQuad

TaylorMade has long been on the forefront of driver innovation, consistently boasting and bolstering its reputation as the #1 Driver in Golf.

In 2004, with the release of the r7 Quad driver, TaylorMade brought movable weight technology to the masses. Three years later, TaylorMade again revolutionized the market with the introduction of the r7 SuperQuad. With its maximum allowable 460cc head clubhead volume and four movable weights, the driver captured the attention and, to no small degree, the hearts of golfers everywhere.

SuperQuad was revolutionary stuff … 26 grams of adjustability was a lot of weight to move back then and still is today.

5. PING G430 MAX 10K

While 10K MOI was a huge talking point this season, what’s notable about the G430 MAX 10K is that it achieves its high MOI numbers without excessive spin. What really differentiates our 2024 Most Wanted winner is how unbelievably straight it flies. For many golfers, coloring between the lines off the tee is one of the most difficult challenges in golf. The G430 MAX 10K makes it a whole lot easier.

6. TaylorMade M1

The original M1 signaled one hell of a reset for TaylorMade. Coming off a run that included R1, SLDR and JetSpeed among others, the M1 was a stake-in-the-ground driver that helped put TaylorMade back on track (or, in this case, two tracks). Featuring TaylorMade’s first carbon fiber crown and a more than competent collection of stock shafts, the M1 reestablished TaylorMade as a leader in driver innovation and performance.

7. Callaway Biggest Big Bertha

Ever wondered why the word “Titanium” is written on just about every golf club? This is why. The Callaway Biggest Big Bertha driver made the word famous. When this driver was released in 1997, I thought this was, and forever would be, the biggest driver head ever made in golf.

Use of Biggest Big Bertha drivers by players on the five major tours (PGA, Senior PGA, LPGA, NIKE and PGA European Tour) in 1997 increased by 66 percent. There is evolutionary and then there is revolutionary. The Biggest Big Bertha was truly revolutionary.

8. TaylorMade Burner Bubble

For the No. 8-ranked driver on our list, we have to go back almost 30 years. It was so long ago that “Taylor Made” was two words. Now it’s just one. Maybe you remember Coolio’s Gangsta Paradise was topping the charts. The Taylormade Bubble Burner was formally introduced to the world in January 1995 at the PGA Show. It was the company’s first titanium driver, which included that Bubble shaft, and it didn’t take long for the copper-colored bomber to start flying off shelves. What made this driver one of the best-selling drivers of all time? Marketing. The bubble shaft was a major differentiator which the company said would increase stability at impact and clubhead speed.

9. Titleist TSR3

From 2009 to 2018, you could make a reasonable argument that Titleist drivers had fallen behind. That changed with the first TS driver. TSi put Titleist back in the conversation, but it was TS and, in our minds, TSR3 in particular, that reestablished Titleist as a force in the driver category. An infinitely playable low-spin driver, the TSR3 offered sensible forgiveness for its place in the market with looks, sound and feel that are as close to perfect as we’ve ever seen.

10. Adams 9064 LS

One could make a case that the 9064LS was the last great Adams driver. Like others near the top of this list, it was ahead of its time, offering the aerodynamic shaping and low spin properties that have become boilerplate talking points across the industry. For reasons that aren’t entirely tangible, the 9064 LS remains an absolute favorite among the MyGolfSpy staff.

11. COBRA LTD
12. TaylorMade SLDR
13. TaylorMade Original (1979)
14. PING Rapture V2
15. Cleveland Launcher
16. Callaway Epic MAX LS
17. COBRA FLY-Z+
18. PING G30
19. Callaway FT-9
20. Titleist 983K
21. TaylorMade RBZ Tour
22. TaylorMade R-series
23. PING TISI
24. Callaway Epic
25. Callaway BB Fusion
26. COBRA KING Deep Face
27. Titleist 905R
28. TaylorMade Stealth
29. Cleveland HiBore
30. Bridgestone J40
31. PING K15
32. PING Eye2
33. COBRA 380SS
34. Titleist 983 JVS
35. Mizuno MP-600
36. S Yard T.388
37. NIKE VR Pro Tour
38. Accuform Whistler (Real First Square Driver)
39. TaylorMade M2
40. Titleist TSi
41. Big Bertha Alpha 816 Double Black Diamond
42. Mizuno T-Zoid
43. Wilson Whale
44. COBRA FLY-Z
45. MacGregor Tourney
46. Wilson Dynapower
47. Powerbilt Citation
48. Lynx Boom Boom
49. Callaway X-Hot
50. JBeam ZY-11

Do you agree with our list? Did we miss anything? Leave a comment and let us know.

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Connor Lindeman

Connor Lindeman

Connor Lindeman

Connor is MyGolfSpy's resident sneakerhead who believes that golf is more enjoyable with a fresh pair of kicks. When he isn't scrolling Twitter to find his next golf shoe purchase, you can find him at the piano or trying a new dessert place with his wife. #Lefty

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      Jimbo

      4 days ago

      “Coming off a run that included R1, SLDR and JetSpeed among others, the M1 was a stake-in-the-ground driver that helped put TaylorMade back on track”

      SLDR is number 12 on this list….

      Reply

      A King

      5 days ago

      Wow, what a question. I don’t change drivers very often. When I find one that is even acceptable I usually use it for years. The one that stayed in my bag the longest: Dunlop Goliath 10.5* bought from Walmart for $30. I have no idea what shaft or flex. I just know that I could swing as hard as I liked and it would produce a low penetrating flight that would bounce and roll for days. Great club. Of course, I opted for “better” drivers over the years that turned out to be “lesser”. I donated it to a charity….stupid me.

      Reply

      mackdaddy9

      5 days ago

      My best ever are the TSR3 I have now, The M1 I played for years and the Ping Raptor.

      Reply

      Jim Fitzroy

      5 days ago

      I still have a mid 1960″s Macgregor M1W persimmon driver with the red keyhole insert. Haven’t hit it in a while, but still remember the sound and feel of a read wood driver!!

      Reply

      Joe

      6 days ago

      There are a few Cobra drivers up there but I’m surprised the Speedzone isn’t on there. It’s still in my bag now and still pumping over 315 on average. It’s a heavier club at a time where they just keep getting lighter and lighter. I feel like it’s a huge advantage to have a bit more mass behind the ball and even on off-center hits, which happen often, I still get over 300 consistently. It wasn’t a huge innovator but I think it distilled old school with the new very well.

      Reply

      Bruce Greenspan

      6 days ago

      Taylor Made Burner Draw driver was a revelation. My slice disappeared without lessons.

      Reply

      MadisonGolfbum

      6 days ago

      Some beautiful real wood missing from this list – Hogan, Penna, MacGs. The sound and feel of a well-struck balata Titleist. I do miss it.

      Reply

      jonathan mebane

      6 days ago

      The Taylormade 2016 M2 needs to be considered as a GOAT

      Reply

      Mike

      6 days ago

      My all-time favorite isn’t on the list. Perhaps it isn’t considered a real “driver”. The TaylorMade SLDR Mini Driver is still in my bag! Every season it is my go-to fairway finder.

      Reply

      Adam Burton

      7 days ago

      I thought that Ping G2 would have made this list. It was such a huge game changer at the time.

      Reply

      Michael Terrebonne

      7 days ago

      What’s crazy is after many years of playing golf I have owned 6 out of your top ten plus many more. I have come to realize the truth in an old saying that the pro I took lessons from would say, “It ain’t the arrow it’s the Indian!”

      Reply

      David

      7 days ago

      No pxg

      Reply

      Les Mathews

      6 days ago

      You left out the company that made a huge contribution srixon’s xxio brand invented the flexible face trampoline effect.

      Reply

      The Old Pro

      7 days ago

      I’m glad to see the Cleveland Hi-Bore on the list. It was a tremendous driver. I only wish Cleveland would come out with an updated and adjustable version now.

      Reply

      Ben

      7 days ago

      Callaway Great Big Bertha. It followed the Big Bertha and was the first widely used titanium driver, the Biggest Big Bertha was a flop in comparison.

      Callaway FT3, this was one of the first composite heads and should be included as the first of the FT line.

      Taylor made R7 quad, the first widely adopted driver with moveable weights.

      Taylor made R510TP, one of the first true better players clubs and the first of the TP line.

      Bridgestone J33r instead of the J40.

      Pretty sure the original Taylor made Burner Bubble had a steel head. It was also the first none wooden headed driver to win the Masters.

      Wilson Whale and Killer Whale? Yonex ADX line? A multitude of persimmon makers?

      Reply

      Ken Phillips

      7 days ago

      What an interesting list. As an old bloke who’s developing the senior’s slice, can I suggest that the draw biasdrivers deserve a place? I love that my Ping 430 SFT keeps me on the fairway. I’ve forgone 10 metres, moving from 9deg to 10.5deg but Ping G730 irons got that distance back for me.

      Reply

      The Old Pro

      7 days ago

      The Ping K-15 is on the list and was a slice killer as well.

      Reply

      Patricy

      7 days ago

      Toney Penna persimmon needs to be included

      Reply

      Derek

      1 week ago

      Wilson Whale under-rated, it was revolutionary while being one of the last persimmons

      Reply

      ArchieBunker

      1 week ago

      Where is The Hammer? What about the Killer Bee? Likely outsold several of the drivers on the list!

      (Just kidding!)

      Reply

      Steve k

      1 week ago

      How can the original titanium driver in the Great Big Bertha be left off this list?

      Reply

      Lancer

      1 week ago

      I played a TaylorMade Burner for years, loved that clud. Now I’m playing a sim max 2. Man I just love that club! Funny story had the Burner in the bag for a time after I bought the new one, my golfing buddy loved that club ended up selling it to him for hundred bucks. Still playing it.

      Reply

      KL

      7 days ago

      Ping 10K is so good that I’ve gone back to shaping tee shots after a decade of just trying to hit it straight. Bravo, Ping.

      Reply

      JB Rose

      4 days ago

      2007 Burner
      (300yds & straight works for me)

      Reply

      RC

      1 week ago

      TaylorMade’s R510, 2007 Burner, SIM2 Max, R5, R11 and Callaway GBB come to mind. Loved my Orlimar Tri-Metal.

      Anybody wanting greatness for a cheap price should try to find the 510 or the 2007 Burner. I play with a guy who can outdrive some of the longer hitters with his Ping G20.

      Reply

      Geno

      1 week ago

      What I would like to know is….. how did we go from the Big Bertha driver to the Biggest Big Bertha without touching on the Great Big Bertha, the first driver with Ruger Titanium on the sole? That club just may be the reason for “Titanium” being on the sole of most drivers.

      Reply

      Steve

      1 week ago

      While I appreciate that you have the RBZ in the list, there’s no way it’s below any Adams driver. The white crown revolutionized the golf world for 5 years.

      Reply

      Conrad

      1 week ago

      No wonder I can’t drive the ball. I’ve been using a calloway razr fit Xtreme all this time which is not listed. Must be a horrible club!

      Reply

      Scott Bridgman

      1 week ago

      Ben Hogan apex shaft persimmon from the the 70s

      Reply

      Cooky Goodmun

      1 week ago

      I see the Rapture V2 but I had the original Rapture with the skeleton visible in crown. It went farther than any other Driver I ever had. I drove greens with that and I’ve never come close with any other. Of course it was not super accurate, but looonnggg!!

      Reply

      Graham

      1 week ago

      No Callaway ERC
      Surely the revolutionary driver has to be featured.

      Reply

      Bob Ferguson

      1 week ago

      You left out the Taylormade Burner — draw face bias. I have had one for 12+ years and I can still out drive my friends with it — I’m 73. I recently bought a Ping G45 and while it is straighter, it is not as long as the Burner. Why? The COR is hotter than allowed, but was grandfathered in…LOL!

      Reply

      Peter R

      1 week ago

      Ping G30 should rank higher for the sole reason it is the only one to have a rap song about it. “The Ping G30 has turrrr-bulators….”

      Epic Flash also deserves a shout out.

      Reply

      Msg

      1 week ago

      No G400
      Max?

      Reply

      MrHogan

      1 week ago

      I can’t believe they missed the boat on the TM 510TP with the real deal 757 Speeder. This driver was a dominant force on tour.

      Reply

      Mark Cook

      1 week ago

      The R510 TP is the greatest driver of all time, without question. Mine had the original Grafalloy Blue — a true unicorn and had to be a complete oversight for this list!

      Reply

      Chad

      1 week ago

      And the R7 Quad. Way more significant clubs than the superquad.

      Reply

      Johnny Kinsella

      7 days ago

      Spot on

      Reply

      John D

      1 week ago

      Persimmon??? – you know, the stuff Jack Nicklaus used to win more 1st and 2nd places in Majors than any player in history.
      McGregor Tourney
      Tommy Armour
      Tony Penna
      All great clubs and I only go back to the 70’s

      Reply

      Kyle McKittrick

      1 week ago

      Where is the 2007 Burner

      Reply

      RC

      1 week ago

      Plus one!!! I’m shocked it’s not even mentioned.

      Reply

      Kyle

      1 week ago

      Burner TP. Greatest driver of the early 2000s.

      Alan

      1 week ago

      The Orlimar Hipti 420. Still a cannon that stands up to anything out there today. Workable and damn long. Maybe not the most forgiving in my hands but still keeps up with more recent drivers for distance.

      Reply

      The Old Pro

      7 days ago

      The Hip Ti was highly underrated.

      Reply

      Gordo

      1 week ago

      Kool Kat By Wood Bros. Wood driver filled with cork and bright coloured paint. Langert with the flat hosels. The original Taylor Made Pittsburgh Persimmon that changed the driver game..

      Reply

      Fallensaber

      1 week ago

      Where’s the SUMO 2! That was easily my favorite driver I’ve ever had. Easy to hit and the ball just flew threw the air.

      Reply

      Michael R

      1 week ago

      MacGregor M84 and M85 were the best persimmon woods ever made. They belong on the list.

      Reply

      Chrid

      1 week ago

      Surely the Great Big Bertha was more revolutionary than the Biggest Big Bertha?

      Reply

      Joseph Parent

      1 week ago

      I guess I am really old, but my favorite driver of all time was probably the old Ping Persimmons drivers. The black crown with the red face and the layers of wood. Ahhh, what a work of art and boy could I crush that thing!!

      Reply

      Ben

      7 days ago

      Ping never made persimmon woods! They were all laminate, very different things

      Reply

      Jeff

      1 week ago

      Now that I know what I know about shafts in middle age, I wish I would have held onto the 975D I had in my 20s. Feel like it would still hold up with a lot of the shafts I’ve played and enjoyed since.

      Reply

      Les

      1 week ago

      The Yonex ADX 100 and ADX 200. Nothing was longer around 1990. They were easy to hit and very forgiving…and log, did I mention long?
      I loved to sound of the all graphite club head. I had the Driver, 3 wood and 5 wood.

      Reply

      keith

      1 week ago

      Sim2 max was the beginning of Taylormade’s greatest drivers culminating in the QI10

      Reply

      Chad

      1 week ago

      You must be new to golf. None of those are top 5 TM drivers ever. And I’m a TM fanboy.

      Reply

      Steve Sowa

      1 week ago

      Steve.
      My favorite is the Callaway xr16 with the Fuji Speeder shaft. I’m not the longest driver but it is still as long as any new one I try.

      Reply

      Steve Sowa

      1 week ago

      Steve.
      My favoriteq is the Callaway xr16 with the Fuji Speeder shaft. I’m not the longest driver but it is still as long as any new one I try.

      Reply

      Mike Wallace

      1 week ago

      510 tp should be in the top 5.

      Reply

      Grumpy Ogre

      1 week ago

      I came here to say the same thing…

      Reply

      Max

      1 week ago

      King Cobra Ti. I worked in the bag room and looping during the summer it came out and it was the new hotness. Bertha had been out for a while and GBB wasnt quite on the market yet, so this is the one everyone gravitated toward (not to mention, it was a helluva stick in its own right)

      Reply

      mywong23

      1 week ago

      I’ve hit some of longest drives with those….. of course my swing speed was higher in my youth…..
      still have a BB & 975D collecting dust in my garage….

      Reply

      James Ambursley

      1 week ago

      The original PING G should be on the list as PING based many of the drivers on the original build. I still have it in my garage and periodically use it, especially for small courses.

      Reply

      John Bethune

      1 week ago

      Seems like there is a fair amount of recency bias here. My all time favorite driver is the Hogan Producer, circa mid 1970s.

      Reply

      Slight_Miss

      7 days ago

      Is it recency bias or is it just younger writers who haven’t been doing this equipment gig for a while? Some of the omissions are explainable if the changes over the last 35 years weren’t lived.

      Reply

      Doug Mael

      1 week ago

      Pretty good list, other than the omission of the TM R510TP and Founders Club Fresh Metal.

      Putting the R7 Quad in the top 10 and then having the TM R-Series at #22 seems redundant to me. There are a couple other R-Series drivers that could have made the top ten, such as the R5/R5TP and R7 425 models, so why not just put the R-Series in the top ten? And the R510TP certainly deserves a spot near the top of the list.

      Reply

      PMercer

      1 week ago

      Doug!!! I know what you mean, man. Hope you’re well – Patric/lowandleft from back in the day.

      Reply

      Jim Huebel

      1 week ago

      Hey Doug, good to hear from you. I agree with your suggestions. Personally, I’d also include the Ping G2. I owned 2-3 and remember seeing several at GEA outings back in the day.

      Reply

      Jim Matusiak

      1 week ago

      I picked up a lightly used Ping G410 this spring and I can report that this club makes my list of all time best drivers I’ve ever used. I’m not sure if the G430 would make $500 difference in my game or not, but I might wait a couple of years and find a nice used one to see. Stand-by for my update in 2026.

      Reply

      Peter Simshauser

      1 week ago

      @ Jim M.: Suggest you consider the G425 series. IMO it’s the best of the Ping G400 series, and the 430 hasn’t been able to replace it in my bag (despite my penchant for dropping big coin for marginal improvement!). Good luck.

      Reply

      Morse

      7 days ago

      Word. The G410 is incredible. Took a friend’s advice and cut an inch from the shaft. I rarely miss fairways now.

      Reply

      Slight_Miss

      1 week ago

      My eyebrows raise when a golf equipment testing site puts together a “GOAT” driver list and doesn’t include (anywhere) the Nickent 4dx Evolver. It’s the driver that every driver since has “copied” in that they were the first to offer the ability to change shafts.

      I also question SLDR being viewed in this positive light yet the Tour Burner omitted. I doubt a single pro would consider putting a SLDR in their bag at this point, yet those Tour Burners were in play many years after their release. In spite of all the SLDRs sold, I personally never see them “in the wild.” I still see those Tour Burners.

      Reply

      Bob Ferguson

      1 week ago

      Totally agree!

      Reply

      Mike

      6 days ago

      The SLDR was a new concept in terms of sliding weights towards the front. A concept that really didn’t work for most golfers at the time.

      Reply

      Marty

      1 week ago

      Callaway FT-9 and the OptiFit system. Carbon and Titanium in a modern shape and sounded awesome!! Still love this driver.

      Reply

      Peter Aglipay

      6 days ago

      FT-iq for me and is still my fairway finder – I have the 11*and 13*

      Reply

      Peter

      1 week ago

      Founders Club Fresh Metal or The Judge would have been on my list. Perhaps the Ping Zing, but love this walk down golf’s memory lane.

      Reply

      Doug Mael

      1 week ago

      I agree.

      Reply

      Garen Eggleston

      1 week ago

      Pittsburg Persimmon changed the driver game , without it none of the others would have evolved, and the MacGregor eye-o-magic persimmons were the most sought after

      Reply

      Les

      1 week ago

      I agree, the Pittsburgh Persimmon, the first metal wood. I had one and although I hated the sound at that time, I had to agree that it was great.

      Reply

      TailWagger

      1 week ago

      My favorite driver of all time was the Yonex Super ADX Graphite from the mid-eighties. Way ahead of its time. Sadly, though it was worth a dozen or more yards over anything else I had played at the time, the composite head was only good for a season or two before it fatigued. Would love to see a modern take on that design.

      Reply

      Garrett D

      1 week ago

      No Ti-Bubble 2 or Great Big Bertha?! List invalidated!!!!

      Reply

      Fred Guerrero

      1 week ago

      How about maybe, possibly, pretty please, the “Top 10” most forgiving drivers of all time. It may allow us driver impared golfers to purchase a driver without having to sell any organs on the dark web. My family thanks you!

      Reply

      FakeRichGuy

      1 week ago

      Seconded!

      Reply

      Bill Raw

      1 week ago

      Thirded!

      Mark

      1 week ago

      Taylormade 510TP was probably the best driver of its time. I still has a crazy following.

      Reply

      Doug Mael

      1 week ago

      Absolutely!

      Reply

      Russell

      1 week ago

      Still have mine, I pull it out once or twice a year when what ever my ‘gamer’ driver has misbehaved too much.

      Reply

      Michael

      1 week ago

      Why isn’t any PXG drivers on this list?

      Reply

      Kyle

      7 days ago

      Because PXG makes bad clubs

      Reply

      Mike

      6 days ago

      That’s crap, their premium lines are as good as the OEM’s. You do know (but probably you don’t) that the founder went out & overpaid some of the best club people from the OEM’s to work for PXG.

      Zeke

      1 week ago

      Cobra Ultramid, a driver that seemed impossible to master for anyone except John Daly in 1991, became an iconic must-have for aspiring junior golfers. Thanks to Daly’s cool persona and incredible driving distance, this driver, featuring a 100% Kevlar head, quickly gained legendary status.

      Reply

      Jon

      1 week ago

      MAC-TEC!!

      Reply

      Phil

      1 week ago

      Man I can’t believe I only ever played 2 of these, the 975 and the Big Bertha 816DBD. Maybe the Mavrik should be on there. I went to a fitter and tried to replace it earlier this year and couldn’t find anything better! Going WAY back, another one I managed to get hold of and played for a while was the J’s Professional Weapon. That was a big hit on the Tour in the early 90’s.

      Reply

      xkcpro

      1 week ago

      Taylor Made R510 TP???

      Reply

      Jeff Allen

      1 week ago

      No love for the Tony Penna Persimmons? From the 1950s to the 1980s they were the “go to” Driver

      Reply

      Kmo

      1 week ago

      Anything from Wood Bros? Macgregor LFF M09?

      Reply

      Bri

      1 week ago

      Would have had the Cobra F9 in there too and swapped M1 for M3 as it added Twist Face.

      Reply

      Ben

      7 days ago

      100%!

      Reply

      Jim Klassen

      1 week ago

      There have been a lot of great driver heads over the years. One near the top of my list would be the SMT 455 DEEP BORE. I know some folks that still have them in play. Record setting 455 yard drive, like 15 years ago.

      Reply

      GolfDuck

      1 week ago

      I totally agree Jim. I still have a Cherry Red SMT 455 Deep Bore as well as another of my all time favorite drivers, the SMT Nemesis! I also had a Tour Edge, I think it was in the Bazooka series, back in the ’90s that I was very hot for it’s time!

      Reply

      r.t.h.

      1 week ago

      TaylorMade,” Pittsburgh persimmon” thinking circa late 80’s early 90’s

      Reply

      Ben

      1 week ago

      How the Cobra F9 missed the list is insane to me. Easily one of the most forgiving and popular drivers recently. Come on now..

      Reply

      Golf2Much

      1 week ago

      I still have my original Callaway Big Bertha driver. At it’s introduction, it looked so big. Certainly not by today’s standards.
      One driver that might have been a decent candidate due to it’s innovation at the time was the Yonex A.D.X. 200 driver. It was introduced to the US in 1989 and it was one of the first all graphite head drivers out there (it did have a metal base plate). My father-in-law had one and loved it!

      Reply

      Kuso

      1 week ago

      I think the Callaway FT-3 ought to come before all the other FTs since that was one of their first true FTs that established that type of driver for them that did so well

      Reply

      Troy

      1 week ago

      Where is the callaway…Hawkeye??

      Reply

      FakeRichGuy

      1 week ago

      As a kid, I couldn’t have named a single golf club until the Big Bertha. It’s one of those things that seemed to be golf’s of the Louisville Slugger. Even if you didn’t know golf, you knew the Big Bertha.

      Reply

      Rob

      1 week ago

      Can’t believe JBeam made the list, that is awesome! Although I would have placed the FX BM-435 as one of the greatest all time drivers over the ZY-11 as that one has the massive cult following in the JDM world.

      Reply

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    COBRA KING Black Edition TOUR and CB/MB irons. COBRA KING Black Edition TOUR and CB/MB irons.
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    Oct 3, 2024
    COBRA KING Black Edition TOUR and CB/MB Irons
    We Tried It
    Oct 3, 2024
    This Rangefinder is Unique!