PXG’s University Program Exposes the Gender Gap in Collegiate Golf
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PXG’s University Program Exposes the Gender Gap in Collegiate Golf

PXG’s University Program Exposes the Gender Gap in Collegiate Golf
“It is beyond me that the men’s and women’s golf teams are frequently afforded different levels of support” – Bob Parsons, PXG

PXG recently announced a sponsorship platform where it will provide tour level fittings and equipment to both men’s and women’s programs at six major Division I schools – Duke, Cal, SMU, Oregon, Oklahoma, and Vanderbilt. However, in a departure from typical pieces on PXG, the equipment itself isn’t the most important part of the story.

Providing elite amateurs and collegiate players with free equipment isn’t new. It’s the reason why you see a plethora of Ping and Titleist clubs in matching Ping and Titleist bags at high-level state and national junior tournaments. The idea is simple; build (or technically buy…or maybe rent) loyalty during a player’s formative years, and if player goes on to play professionally, it’s likely that player will stick with the brand as his career progresses. There will always be Bryson DeChambeau scenarios where a player works closely with one OEM (Edel) during amateur play only to sign with another (Cobra) for more money, but this is more the exception than the rule.

The costs associated with this version of marketing are simply a part of doing business for many OEMs, but there is a spending limit. Because budgets allow for a finite amount of equipment to distribute, the equipment sponsors must decide who are the haves and who are the have-nots.

The HAVES

When it comes to equipment sponsorships, every OEM targets the elite of the elite – those with more robust playing resumes. From a quantitative perspective, this group represents a higher-percentage wager. These are the equivalents of First Round draft picks and they get taken care of regardless of gender, college attended or their duration of stay.  See: Jordan Speith, Leona Maguire.

Then, there’s the “at large” population. These are players who are good enough to make a roster at a Division I school but have procured equipment through more traditional means during junior golf. Put bluntly, male players have a distinct advantage, and according to the current Division I coaches I spoke with, are routinely provided OEM (TaylorMade, PING, Titleist, and Callaway) equipment, free of charge, while members of a collegiate team.

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HAVE-NOTS

Conversely, female players at the same institutions, at best, can hope for reduced prices via collegiate pricing programs. There are, however, times when coaches call in favors from other sources to gain access to equipment for players, but again, these are exceptions and not indicative of a well-balanced system. With that, I’m not suggesting the system has any moral obligation to treat male and female athletes equitably, and that’s what makes this move by PXG noteworthy, if not entirely unprecedented.

Often, this is collegiate discounts are the same as those offered to high school players across the nation. In a strictly monetary sense, female Division I scholarship golfers are often treated the same as the local high school golf team – which speaks volumes regarding the equipment industry’s view of female players in so far as their collective ability to provide exposure and bring value to the brand is concerned. I don’t believe any company purposely excludes female golfers because of gender; rather it’s a matter of resource allocation and the reality that a line has to be drawn somewhere. In this case, the delineation is largely gender-specific.

THE GENDER GAP

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There’s no revelation in suggesting men and women are not treated equally. In the arena of professional golf, prize money is dictated by how (and how much) revenue is generated by each tour. The PGA Tour (via TV contracts and corporate sponsorships) brings in nearly 10X the revenue of the Ladies PGA Tour, and thus the men play for much larger purses on a weekly basis.

Comparing players who won similar events, women received approximately 20% of what their male counterparts made.

The revenue-driven argument loses some of its luster in an examination of an event like the U.S. Open, which is put on by the USGA; an organization charged to act in “the best interests of the game for the continued enjoyment of those who love and play it.” Given the USGA’s non-profit status, one would think it would be committed equally to both men and women, but monetarily speaking, it’s not even close. Men’s US Open Winner, Brooks Koepka, took home nearly 2.5X what Park Sung-hyun did for winning the women’s version of the same event. For those scoring at home that’s 2.16 million vs. 900K.

Within the collegiate golf world, the differences are equally as stark. One coach I spoke with detailed the awkward, yet undeniable contrast of watching the men’s team go through a fitting with a large OEM for its newest gear, while her girls practiced on the opposite side of the range. It would have been more bothersome if it wasn’t so commonplace.

Another coach recounted her numerous conversations with players asking for equipment, which puts her in the position of trying to sell the idea that getting a significant retail discount is something special. However, the scores of Pro V1s and stacks of long brown boxes full of free equipment for the men’s team sprawled all over the back of the office say pretty much all that needs to be said about the way things are.

At some point, the inequality becomes normalized and female golfers (and coaches) became resigned to the realities of lesser treatment. This is the backdrop against which PXG entered this conversation and when Bob Parson’s stated “It is beyond me that the men’s and women’s golf teams are frequently afforded different levels of support,” his response conveys a moral imperative to work to level the playing field – or in this case, the tee box.

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I reached out to numerous college coaches for this piece and unsurprisingly, only two replied, both women. The implicit message is this move by PXG meant more to women’s programs because frankly, they needed it more.

Can you imagine asking a Division I football player to buy a helmet? It sounds ridiculous because it is. Why major OEMs provide equipment to one gender and not the other is treated as a matter of simple economics, but maybe that rationale won’t’ suffice any longer.

Should OEMs be required to provide equal support for men’s and women’s programs at the same institution? You tell us.

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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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      Thomas Murphy

      6 years ago

      I applaud the move but it is marketing move, see an opportunity and make use of it and it wraps in a nice message. You say “a line has to be drawn somewhere. In this case, the delineation is largely gender-specific” — you could also say it is a “market-driven” allocation. Why do men make more? because currently there is more commercial interest. been to an PGA event and an LPGA event crowd size?
      One could say this is shortsightedness by the vendors who have an opportunity to grow the market. This to me is what PXG is trying. Ping has probably been the other closest complete with specific models as well as sponsoring. The hope like Titleist you can claim a market and to project forward that effort will grow the market. I hope that it does.

      Reply

      Edmund Urban

      7 years ago

      There are both men and women prodigies in nearly every sport, at ever-improving abilities. If PXG, or any sporting equip manufacturer for that matter, decides to provide premier clubs to young hopefuls of both genders, at their select/preferred schools, and it benefits the players and teams to excel beyond expectation while promoting their equipment, then it is a win-win in my book. I was never sponsored, but my golf equipment was Titleist (tennis and racquetball equip was Head, soccer equipment and apparel was adidas and umbro). If PXG, or another equip company, had loaned me a set of their top clubs when I was in school, I would have been honored, motivated, and encouraged to aspire to pro status merely by such a generous gesture… AND it would have boosted my game that much more.

      Reply

      Sharkhark

      7 years ago

      Wow some go into such debate and over analysis…
      Can’t you just agree… It’s a very nice positive thing he’s doing… That nobody else as an OEM was doing and leave it at that.

      Regardless of his intentions or not. I think it’s great short and sweet!

      Reply

      MyGolfSpy

      7 years ago

      Golf Clap.

      Reply

      Greggytees

      7 years ago

      Here is the real deal you all are missing. All major sports are not sports anymore. They are billion dollar business’s, period. They cater to who brings in revenue, athletic clothes and equipment sales, TV rights and ratings. The last 2 days of the NCCA debacle proves it. For you older guys like me, was the Nicholas, Palmer, Trevino days more of what golf was really about? Maybe I’m wrong but I don’ think so.

      Reply

      Gorden

      7 years ago

      Your wrong, those guys garbed every cent they were offered too. How many Top Flite hats have you seen on old Trevino pictures, and Nicholas and Palmer both put their name on clubs for companies they were part owners of and Palmer pushed Callaway clubs for years…get it straight Tiger Woods is the reason golfers make millions instead of thousands…

      Reply

      Justin case

      7 years ago

      Guys. The name is NICKLAUS. smh

      Dave D

      7 years ago

      I applaud Bob for treating the men’s and women’s team equally, but lets not pretend like he is closing the gender gap here. There exists a huge disparity in collegiate golf, but in this case it is heavily weighted towards the women.

      At D1 schools the max number of golf scholarships is 4.5 for men and 6 for women. At any school with a D1 football team (which all of the PXG schools have) all 6 women’s scholarships are definitely used due to Title IX considerations, but all 4.5 men’s scholarships may or may not be available. But for the purpose of this argument we’ll say that all scholarships (both men’s and women’s) are available and offered.

      So let’s take Duke as an example. According to their respective team websites there are 7 players on the women’s golf team and 11 on the men’s team. That means on average the women have 86% of their education paid for, while on average the men only have 41% of their education paid for. Considering that the cost of attending Duke is $70,000 per year that means on average the women’s benefit is $31,000 greater than the men’s per golfer per year. Over a four year career this is $125,000 of benefit to the women. Even if the teams were of equal size the women’s team members would receive annual benefits of between $10,000-$17,500 per golfer per year greater than their male counterparts.

      At a public school like Oklahoma cost of attendance is much less – $27,300 per year for in-state. There are currently 9 women on the golf team and 11 men. So women’s annual scholarship benefit per golfer is $7000 greater than the men’s. If the teams were of equal sizes this gap would be at least $3700 annually per golfer. So even at a public school and assuming all in-state students (which would never happen), the women golfers get a much greater dollar benefit than their male counterparts.

      In most cases I think the men would gladly trade their free golf equipment for an increase in scholarship monies. Again, Bob is doing a good thing treating the men and women’s programs equally, but it is hardly closing the gender gap in collegiate golf – in fact it is widening it.

      Reply

      Chris Nickel

      7 years ago

      You raise some interesting and potentially valid points. Part of the challenge in this conversation is when we start aggregating data and talk more macro econ concepts, where do we stop? Do we need to factor in grants/financial aid/work study? Do we keep going and discuss gender gaps in pay, where women make $.80 on the dollar for every male and take home an average of nearly $11K less per year? If so, whatever additional monetary benefit reaped in college, gets eaten up pretty quickly.

      By addressing an obvious void (I think inequality is an entirely fair adjective) in the system, Parsons is still bringing attention to a topic where it’s clear discussion is needed.

      Reply

      Ppr

      7 years ago

      There is no “gender pay gap” in reality. It is statistically untrue and based on an arbitrary and unfair comparison. The pga tour is for the best golfers in the world; they make more money but nothing is, in fact, stopping a woman from playing on the tour. Oddly, even though women are claimed to be discriminated against, there is a prohibition/discrimination against male golfers as they are not able to play on the lpga.

      Thw word discrimination gets thrown around with a negative connotation way too frequently. I own a set of pxg golf clubs and I applaud Bob putting money in women’s college golf because it’s actually awesome and fun to watch. However, the argument here about discrimination is actually based on public opinion and not some evil chauvinist behind the scenes.

      I think men are underrepresented in makeup ads…you are unlikely to hear a report on the inequality of the makeup industry and how it’s unfair to men. Women buy makeup…it makes sense that they would hire females to do their advertising. I’d guess that pxg sells at least 50 sets of clubs to men for every one woman…meaning there is a massive underrepresentation in the general public of pxg ownership (I am a male pxg owner in fact). There is discrimination in everything we do, it isn’t necessarily bad. To me the argument is akin to saying men under 5’6″ are underrepresented in basketball scholarships. It really is just a weak attempt to stir up bogus news and it’s demeaning to women.

      Dave S

      7 years ago

      Even if the gender wage gap were true (which many studies have shown it to be a farse), we’re not talking about Corp. jobs where women are adding equal value to the company as the men in their respective positions… we’re talking about golf. A professional makes money in golf by winning. The more you win, the bigger the prize money and sponsorship offers. The money a player wins comes from these sponsors (the OEMs) and thru television deals (they want to sell product and ads to the general public). If more men buy clubs and watch pro golf on TV, then it would be silly for OEMs to allocate an equal portion of their sponsorship dollars to women’s golf.

      Art

      7 years ago

      Isn’t Title IX supposed to be about education, and to level the financial playing field related to obtaining an education?

      It seems fair that an equal number of men and women get a free ride, regardless of what sport they play.

      Men get fewer golf scholarships because football programs (for example, no dig on football here) take a lions share of those appropriated for men.

      Reply

      Dave D

      7 years ago

      Art – i totally agree with you that Title IX is about education and that the total number of scholarships should be equal (i think technically they have to be proportional to the male/female ratio in the general student body). But that doesn’t mean that disparities don’t exists in certain sports. Check out the number of schools that have eliminated men’s swimming, gymnastics, & even track & field since Title IX was implemented. Yet those same schools still have the women’s teams. In many other sports the disparity between the number of men’s/women’s scholarships is much worse than golf:
      Volleyball – 4.5 men/12 women
      Soccer – 9.9/14
      Bowling – 0/5
      Gymnastics – 6.3/12

      Yes, this is all directly related to football and the 85 scholarships they get with no female equivalent sport. But if I’m a male golfer (or volleyball player, swimmer, T&F athlete, etc) my odds of getting a scholarship are much, much lower than my female counterpart. And if I do earn a scholarship it is likely to cover much less of my education than a female playing the same sport. At the end of the day a male collegiate golfer works just as hard as a female collegiate golfer and has more or less the same expectations from their coach, yet the male golfer is “paid” much less for the same work. That is the definition of inequality.

      Now I totally understand why it happens. And honestly I don’t even have that much of an issue with it. It just bothers me that some view one part of the issue and say that women are being treated unfairly because they don’t get free golf clubs, when in the overall picture women collegiate golfers have a much better deal than their male counterparts.

      Chris Nickel

      7 years ago

      There are most certainly gaps in pay between genders. The data is pretty overwhelming, in fact. It’s statistically true and is pretty much the antithesis of arbitrary. Now, to what degree you believe this is the result of certain factors, is the subject of much debate and economists who are much smarter than either of us disagree as to exactly what causes these gaps, but it exists nonetheless.

      Discrimination is a loaded word and publications often use “wage discrimination” to soften the connotation a bit. Regardless, you’re trying to give examples without declaring the type of system in play. In a merit based system, if you’re “good enough” you get the reward. Yes, women could play and compete on the PGA tour if they had the requisite skill to do so.

      If a junior golfer is good enough to get noticed, they get equipment. But that’s not the part of the system PXG is addressing. The “merit” bar has already been met and these are players who can compete at the Division I level, but receive different benefits because of how the NCAA does/doesn’t manage relationships/boundaries with OEM’s.

      By your logic, every football player should run a 40 yard dash and then get a jersey based on the order in which they finish. Newer equipment goes to the faster players and older stuff to the slower ones. Or does it make more sense that any player on the team should receive some level of equal benefit. That’s the question.

      In terms of whether or not this is demeaning to women – you’d have to ask the programs, but I don’t image that’s the response you’d get.

      Reply

      Dave S

      7 years ago

      To be fair, Chris, not much of what you said makes any sense. The issues inherent in your “Merit” bar analogy is that there are TWO merit bars… one for males and one for females. So while female D1 golfers may have met the female merit bar for their sport, they have not met merit bar for male D1 golfers (this applies at all levels tho). The reason for the lesser investment in women’s D1 programs by the OEMs is simple! Women don’t get nearly the same publicity for their golf as men do, b/c women, by-and-large, don’t watch as much golf on TV or buy as much golf equipment/apparel as men. There’s not some grand conspiracy amongst OEMs to devote as many resources to them; if they thought there was a good ROI to be had by doing so, they would… they are slaves to the almighty dollar. And before you say that doesn’t make sense b/c college golf, even for men, doesn’t get much publicity, keep in mind that these golf programs will produce the next generation of PGA Tour superstars that WILL generate revenue. It’s a sound business decision for them to invest in these top programs in hopes that they’ll generate brand loyalty and sign the next round of superstars. For women, it’s not. That’s it.

      Chris Nickel

      7 years ago

      Dave – Last try to make this simple for you. If the system should operate as you suggest – where OEM’s provide equipment based on factors like ROI, then yes – it makes sense to continue as is. However, there seems to be some question around whether this is how it should work. You seem to be of the mind that what makes sense in a market-based economy should also make sense at public and private educational institutions. Not all would agree and I think there’s a very valid conversation to be had.

      Your argument that women’s golf is somehow in a superior financial position (is somehow “advantaged”) as compared to males is entirely myopic and I’d be shocked if you could get any women’s coach to share in this opinion. That said, I’m always ready to be surprised.

      Dave D

      7 years ago

      Chris – I read this reply and initially thought you were responding to me, then i realized you were actually responding to Dave S. Nonetheless, I did find some data – individual sport budget data is really hard to find but the University of Oregon does have a nice breakout (http://www.goducks.com/sports/2011/11/21/205337248.aspx).

      In 2016-17 the men’s team includes 11 players, the women’s team only 9. The 2016 expenses were $685K for men and $663K for women. That is $62K per player for men and $73.5K for women. 2017 & 2018 budgets are similar where the men get approximately $10K more budget per year (but assumably the men will continue to have larger teams).

      Some (maybe even most/all) of the gap in budget per athlete is because women’s scholarship costs are clearly more than the men’s because of the additional women’s scholarships allowed by NCAA rules, but at least at this one school the total financial commitment per athlete is greater for the women than the men.

      dang3rtown

      7 years ago

      Ok, just to clear up some serious lack of understanding here. Do you know why the scholarships given to men’s golf teams are on average significantly less than those given to women’s teams? Football. You can’t just look at one sport, you have to look at the whole pot of money. Title IX mandates the same amount be spent on scholarships between men’s and women’s athletic programs. When football takes 85 scholarship slots, the men’s golf team gets a lot less scholarship funding. That’s the beginning and end of that.

      Reply

      Dave D

      7 years ago

      To be clear, there was no lack of understanding on my part at all. I totally understand that football is the driving force in the difference. But you can’t ignore the fact that there is a significant difference in funding for men’s and women’s golf, and that it is to women golf’s advantage.

      bogeypro

      7 years ago

      Golf doesn’t make the University any money. Asking for the University to pay for the equipment is not a good idea and would probably result in many schools dropping the program. Just look at university water ski teams. They have to get real creative to get boats. Personally, I believe Parsons is just trying the liberal trip of pulling the equality card in order to get his brand noticed. This guy seems like a snake oil salesman.

      Reply

      Golfhack

      7 years ago

      Parsons a snake oil salesman??? Puhleeze!

      The man created one of the first computer tax programs from his basement, 30 some years ago, and sold it for a tidy multi-million dollar sum.

      He then parlayed those profits into a fledgling domain registrar in around 1996, building it into what today is the largest domain registrar in the world, and one of the largest privately held corporations in the world.

      As an avid golfer, he then searched out premier clubmakers who could produce an extreme quality line of golf clubs…PXG.

      Snake oil salesman? Get a clue. What have you accomplished to blur his accomplishments comparatively?

      Reply

      Adam P Smith

      7 years ago

      The fairness/equality argument is something that exists in the modern day more than ever as grievances and injustices demand attention in a manner that would be alien to our forebears. The fact that TV coverage/revenues and sponsorship fuel the finances of pro golf will always mean that the women’s game suffers and this in turn dribbles down to college and pre-college golf. As the father of a scratch-handicap teenage daughter I’m under no illusion: it is for my daughter and I to be self-sufficient, self-financing. I don’t expect hand-outs and my daughter’s success so far has been down to her acceptance of this fact too. Too many parents expect an easy ride; go pick another sport then. Golf will always fail to be totally egalitarian when the gender gap is concerned; accept it and then one will not be disappointed. In short, toughen up and expect no mercy.

      Reply

      Art

      7 years ago

      The 24th amendment would have been alien as well, among so many other things–what’s your point?

      Reply

      Stephen Pearcy

      7 years ago

      Perhaps neither should be sponsored by commercial interests as that seems to be the root of it all going sour.

      Reply

      Dave D

      7 years ago

      At the D-I level regardless of whether or not a university offers football the max number of golf scholarships available for women (6 per team) is more than men (4.5 per team) per NCAA rules. At any school that offers football scholarships (which all of the schools PXG is supporting do) they are almost certainly funding all 6 golf scholarships for women due to Title IX issues, and may or may not be funding all 4.5 men’s golf scholarships (data is hard to find for these particular schools). But for the purpose of this argument we’ll assume a school is fulling funding both men’s & women’s scholarships.

      So let’s look at Duke University. Per their team websites there are 7 golfers on the women’s team and 11 on the men’s team. So on average 86% of women golfers education costs are covered. For the men on average 41% of their education costs are covered. Duke’s estimated cost of attendance is just over $70K per year. So each women golfer is getting an annual benefit of $31K in additional scholarship money over their male counterparts. This is almost $125K in a four year college career (Even if the teams were of equal size each women would receive at least $10K and up to $17.5K in annual scholarship benefits greater than their male counterparts). I’m sure most male collegiate golfers would glad trade in their free equipment for the additional scholarship benefits received by the women.

      So while I applaud Bob Parson’s for treating the men’s and women’s team equally let’s not pretend that he is closing the gender gap. It still exists and is heavily weighted towards the women on this particular issue.

      Reply

      KAM

      7 years ago

      If manufacturers are required to do this then fewer men’s teams will see clubs. There simply will not be twice the amount of free sets given out. Manufacturers will just stop offering as many free clubs to collegiate athletes. Club manufacturers are not doing great at the moment and doubling down on free merchandise won’t help the situation any. Let the market decide what is best. Forcing companies to change their business model doesn’t always give the intended result. In an ideal world, then yes they would receive equal benefits, but they should provide equal benefits to receive equal benefits. It is a two-way street. Gender is a hot-button topic. If you take gender out of the equation and substitute genders for D1 and D2 schools, the same argument could be made. I doubt anyone would feel all D2 schools should receive the same benefit as all D1 schools.

      Having said all that I think women’s golf is one of the keys to growing the game. Hopefully, people start paying more attention to it and the women’s game grows strong enough to garner more support from manufacturers.

      Reply

      Matt S

      7 years ago

      If Bob Parsons really wants to help golfers he should give money to less deserving programs men and women’s. Giving money to high end schools is really only benefiting players who are privileged golfers from wealthy backgrounds. Do yourself a favor and listen to Malcom Gladwells Revisionist History podcast called ‘My Little Hundred Million’ and you’ll immediately get my drift.

      Reply

      Saul

      7 years ago

      Do yourself a favor and never listen to Malcolm Gladwell. Malcolm just likes to hear himself speak while thinking to himself about how much smarter hi is than others.

      Reply

      Dan

      7 years ago

      USGA callout is meaningful. Anybody notice the USTA checks for both men’s (Nadal) and women’s (Stephens) U.S. Open champions were equal ($3.7M)?

      Reply

      Chris Nickel

      7 years ago

      Because of the disparity in revenue, there’s an expected difference in purses for PGA/LPGA tournaments. However, the USGA has plenty of revenue – which has to be reinvested b/c of its tax status – to pay both men and women equally.

      Reply

      Gunga_Galunga

      7 years ago

      Considering female golfers get on average (1) $1,000/year more in scholarship money than males, I don’t really see why they should also get free equipment. Simple economics really. Charge the people who have the money to pay.

      1) http://www.scholarshipstats.com/golf.htm

      Reply

      Jeff Bladen

      7 years ago

      I think all support given to college athletes no matter the source should be part of the title IX calculation of equal treatment. If one gender’s sport gets more equipment spending than another, even if donated by a third party, then that spend needs to be made up in similar equipment spending or some other form like additional scholarship money. Title IX prohibits just this sort of disproportional spending and it should not matter that the source of funds is a third party.

      Reply

      FyearoldGolfer

      7 years ago

      This sounds like a Title IX violation coerced onto the colleges by the OEMs, and the men’s coaches are afraid to stand up for the women’s team out of fear of loss of a OEM’s sponsorship. NCAA needs to step in and insure equal treatment for women in all sports. Do you think the basketball teams of a college have to pay for uniforms or shoes?

      Reply

      Terry Wittek

      7 years ago

      Glad you mentioned the USGA. It’s a shame they don’t pay equal prizes. Doesn’t show much leadership.

      Reply

      BIG

      7 years ago

      Does Bob truly believe in equality?

      That could certainly be debated as Bob himself referred to the sexist GoDaddy commercials as “one of my finest moments”. Regardless of his personal beliefs, it’s my opinion this move has more to do with his own profits than it does with equality. PXG is a disruptor; they have to be. Otherwise there is no need for them in today’s golf market. As an outsider in the golf industry, PXG has found a new and inventive way to increase market share all while being perceived as altruistic. Bob’s found a chink in the other OEM’s armor, and he is going to exploit it for everything it’s worth. Brilliant.

      Reply

      J-Full

      7 years ago

      The answer to the author’s question is undoubtedly, YES!

      If an OEM wants to provide free equipment to certain schools then they must also provide for both the men’s and women’s team.

      I don’t care about the ROI argument because collegiate golf doesn’t have prize money and there’s no guarantee players will stick with a brand post-college. Considering men’s and women’s teams often share the same facilities it makes the preferential treatment even more egregious and disgusting. Imagine you sitting at the dinner table with your sibling, your sibling is eating steak while you’re eating top ramen. Nobody would take “they might make your parents happier in the future” as a valid reason for the meal discrepancy.

      These OEMs aren’t offering equipment simply out of the goodness of their hearts. They’re trying to curry loyalty. So if the men are who they’re REALLY after, supporting the women’s program equally is simply the cost of doing business. Either make everybody pay or nobody pay. And if they choose the former, we know the men will still get equipment for free, the same way revenue sport athletes get “gift cards”.

      I’m happy to see PXG supporting my alma mater, Duke University, but with these student loans, I still can’t afford their clubs lol.

      Reply

      Rick

      7 years ago

      It’s a business decision not a moral one! Apple makes their products where pay is the cheapest let’s hope you don’t own any Apple products.

      Reply

      TLW

      7 years ago

      Do you think that PXG’s commitment to female collegiate golfers is more of a strategic move of necessity in order to go after the top college programs in general? PXG knows that if they offer discounts of any kind to female or male collegiate golfers their products will still cost more than the other major OEMs without a discount. Due to PXG’s high end price point a discount is out of the question regardless of gender.

      Reply

      Jack

      7 years ago

      True “equality” is impossible. Life isn’t fair. To be honest, people are acting like toddlers with the whole “equality” thing… “He has more M&Ms than I do!”

      Reply

      Scottmc

      7 years ago

      Shame on the Universities. They should be supplying the equipment, no different than them supplying football helmets, baseballs or jerseys. If the schools want to cut a deal with the OEM’s, thats on them.

      Reply

      Richard

      7 years ago

      For the future of golf, we better embrace women’s golf. The local high schools have more girls than boys on the golf teams and they know it. Boys golf is competing with alot more sports for the boys. Girls golf really only competes with tennis, basketball and volleyball girls. The golf courses have alot of young women playing now and companies are starting to notice. PXG won’t be the Lone Ranger for long. My guess is Callaway will follow as well soon.

      Reply

      NextSetPXG

      7 years ago

      To be honest; this was new information to me and I’m a little bit sad that this has been situation. Anyway due to PXG decision there is no doubt where my next set of irons will come. And by the way I am male.

      Reply

      Mark

      7 years ago

      Seems pretty lame to charge one but not the other, but…. How about the fact most D1 schools have much more money to fund scholarships for women golf than mens golf. Title 9 has made it that way. I coach high school golf and my number 1 is getting .5 scholarship, because the mens team has 2 full scholarships and the womens has 5 full scholarships. Same for San Diego State, they have 3 full, men and 5 full women. Maybe that should be mentioned.

      Reply

      Rick

      7 years ago

      Can’t private companies do as they wish anymore? Is this communist China? Is political correctness this out of control? Golf spy don’t become ESPN or Golf world! There is an economic decision made, Let them decide if it’s the right one! This is getting out of control!

      Reply

      MZ

      7 years ago

      I agree.

      I’d add too that Parsons is likely only in on this because it’s generating publicity for his brand.

      Reply

      Andrew

      7 years ago

      MGS is giving us information (as usual), and asking a question to start a discussion, nothing more. I don’t see this as leaning in any direction.

      Reply

      Jeff

      7 years ago

      OEMs can do as they wish. It’s the schools that need to treat all their students equally regardless of gender if they wish to continue receiving federal funding. Don’t take tax dollars if you want treat women and men differently. That’s federal law. Thus, If a university wants to accept gifts from any booster for a particular gender’s sport they need to ensure equal funding for both genders through some other means or require the booster to support both genders equally.

      Reply

      dang3rtown

      7 years ago

      Except it’s not communist China, it’s far worse; the NCAA. I don’t see how this isn’t a Title IX violation. If you are providing a material benefit to men, you must provide it to the women as well. Ping couldn’t just give $1000 to male athletes, why can they give an equivalent value in equipment without it being considered some form of emolument?

      Reply

      Rod_CCCGOLFUSA

      7 years ago

      PXG fitting + clubs + swag = more cash than 97% of everyday golfers can afford, and it’s well beyond the budget of most college golf programs. The NCAA & USGA continue to turn a blind eye to corporate branding’s assault on “amateur” status. Isn’t it time to set aside this farce and permit players and programs gain income based on their worth?

      Reply

      Keith

      7 years ago

      The University should fund equipment.

      Reply

      Walt Pendleton

      7 years ago

      The reason manufacturers do any promotional programs comes down to branding the next generation of golfers…or PROFIT. Business isn’t about giveaways, its about turning a profit, working to stay one step ahead a competitor and creating a ROI for investors. Everything else is marketing fluff or BS

      Reply

      Jon

      7 years ago

      As I look at, it would seem that OEMs have a set amount of money in their marketing budgets. Part of that budget is for advertising and part of it is for promotional give a ways like providing equipment for college golf teams.

      The OEM’s marketing budgets come out of the income that they make for the various product lines that they sell. If an OEM derives a lot of income from say golf balls, like Titleist they are likely to put more money into marketing for golf balls than they might for golf clubs.

      In that vein, the OEM’s have a marketing budget for the Men’s clubs they sell and a separate marketing budget for the Women’s clubs that they sell. The income from Men’s clubs is significantly higher than the income from women’s clubs. Therefore, it is not unreasonable to think that the marketing budget for the men’s clubs is significantly higher than the marketing budget for women’s clubs.

      So is it not unreasonable to assume that given the disparate market budgets for Men’s and Women’s clubs it would only follow that the college equipment promotions would be in line with those differences.

      I am guessing that as soon as the market for women’s clubs equals the market for men’s clubs that the OEM’s college equipment promotional programs would likely be equal as well.

      To those like me who lament this, I suggest that you talk not just your wives, girl friends, sisters and daughters but every female you know into taking up golf and buying more women’s golf clubs.

      Once we do that in enough numbers problem solved.

      Reply

      Andrew

      7 years ago

      Here’s the rub- most even slightly serious lady golfers don’t play the very limited selection of “ladies'” gear, and therefore are underrepresented in the hard goods segment. Along these lines, there should be more equity in this “advertising” setup.

      Reply

      GolfRealist

      7 years ago

      If there was a statistic for who actually bought golf clubs (men vs women) in percentage of the total dollars spent in the golf equipment market. Do you actually think it’s even close? Men represent a much larger percentage of golfers, and it’s a logical conclusion to say they make up the majority of the dollars spent on golf equipment. Beyond that, the potential reward for having a male professional golfer play your equipment is much greater than a female professional golfer. These OEM’s giving equipment to collegiate golfer is an investment in future return, it’s not a discriminatory action. Business is war for profits, business is logical, emotions and emotional tactics are used in business only when it creates a larger profit.

      Big Easy

      7 years ago

      The Universities should demand whichever brand they align themselves with to outfit both the men’s and women’s teams the same. They sign contracts for uniforms, helmets, bats, shoes, balls, sunglasses, hats, sweatbands, kneebraces, chewing gum, and probably toilet paper so why not demand the same on golf clubs and balls!!

      Reply

      JM

      7 years ago

      .

      True equality would be the men and women competing together against each other. Pretty sure the women want no part of that.

      There is a absolutely a gender gap in most male and female sports. There is also usually a performance gap as well.

      Reply

      MZ

      7 years ago

      Hey man, that kind of realtalk might offend someone!

      lolozzol

      Reply

      Eron

      7 years ago

      To be honest, NONE of them should receive free equipment. You cannot accept gifts from strangers as a college athlete, however large companies can (essentially) bribe you with free items for your “team” or individual, and thus get afforded advertisement and by some proxy-endorsement of those athletes/ schools.
      Some will piss and moan about the following, but leave sports out of colleges and universities- yes they recruit people that way and some students flock because of athletics, but that is not what those institutions are for. Make a stronger amateur circuit.
      That would make this debate a short and sweet one.

      Reply

      Ken

      7 years ago

      Aside from the obvious comments already stated, like any college sport most of these players won’t be on tour after graduation, so I’m not seeing where the ROI matches up in that business model. But who am I to say.

      Most student athletes however will be lifelong golf enthusiasts, and several will become course Pros, HS/College coaches, or involved in the industry in some way. Their biggest asset is becoming ambassadors for a game that has become overly expensive to participate in, and is in general decline especially with girls/women.

      So if OEMs want to create brand loyalty and marketing, rather than trying to target the elite programs/players for short-term risk/reward, why wouldn’t they target long-term brand loyalty/word-of-mouth to a larger audience through deeper discounts for qualified students?

      Grow the game by making it affordable for high-school and college players, that will continue to take the the game back to the next generation.

      Reply

      Kerry Cole

      7 years ago

      Investment vs return.. let’s be real.. you put money into something you can hopefully get more out of… I love golf men and women both.. BUT as others have stated there is way more money in men’s golf… Besides I am a male chauvinist pig.. women should be shoe less and anchored to the kitchen/bedroom…

      Reply

      mnfats95

      7 years ago

      No, OEM’s shouldn’t have to provide equality. That is the college’s responsibility. If the college is paying for equipment for the players then they should provide the same for both sides.

      If the OEM’s are deciding to furnish this equipment then they should be able to choose who it goes to. You can argue the ethics of the matter all you want as to whether this is fair or just or whatever. But at the end of the day the OEM’s are under no obligation to treat everyone the same the colleges are.

      My question is whether or not this is a violation of NCAA rules. I would argue that if the student athletes are allowed to keep the equipment then what is the difference between that and someone paying a player for playing? If they aren’t allowed to keep it then I am sure it gets through a loophole somewhere.

      Also, if the college is in on this deal somehow, does it then become the college who is providing the equipment through the OEM and then the equality rules would apply.

      I would guess that they have figured out a way around all of this as it apparently is happening to the point that people have just accepted it.

      Reply

      Go Ducks!

      7 years ago

      Nice move on creating equality by PXG!

      Chris, to your comment .

      “With that, I’m not suggesting the system has any moral obligation to treat male and female athletes equitably, ….”

      I am here to comment that – Yes the “system” does have an obligation, in my view moral, and certainly codified in legislation (most notably Title IX of the Civil Rights Act of 1964), to treat athletes equally regardless of gender.

      KCLEO12 – I am glad to hear your school treated athletes equitably. May I ask which school this was? I’ll be sending kids to college soon how students are valued and treated is a factor in our decision.

      Reply

      Daniel Salazar

      7 years ago

      Title IX killed mens gymnastics in College. Not an attack, just an observation.

      Reply

      Travis Fore

      7 years ago

      It killed men’s golf at many smaller schools too! Most smaller didn’t add women’s teams. They cut men’s teams to make things equal. So men were hurt and women didn’t get anything out of it. Social engineering at its finest!

      Reply

      SJ

      7 years ago

      College athletics is out of control. If a school can’t have equality for your athletes then you should give up the sport. When are we going to move on from the ol boy mentality?

      Reply

      Mark

      7 years ago

      Agreed, Equal number of womens and mens golf scholarships should be available.. However, its not, far more dollars for Womens golf scholarships than mens. My #1 on the high school team I coach got .5 scholarship because the D1 team has 2 mens scholarships to 5 womens.

      Reply

      Coach 1976

      7 years ago

      The gap yawns to epic proportions, no pun intended, when you bring D2, D3, NAIA & NJCAA into the discussion. Of course I understand these companies can’t be expected to give free clubs, balls, etc… to every college golfer in the country, but even PXG’s “we are treating men and women equal” still stinks of gross self promotion. Every program listed in their announcement, along with the other teams the other companies “sponsor”, have the support of piles of booster and alumni cash and could easily pay retail for new clubs for their players. Yet, smaller D1, D2, D3, NAIA & NJCAA are practically laughed at by most golf equipment companies when asked about sponsorship. While I appreciate the “special college pricing programs”, I can only truly praise a couple of companies for there support of college golfers, no matter the level at which they compete.
      Thank you Golf Pride & SuperStroke for stepping up and support us “little people”!
      Coach

      Reply

      Coach 1976

      7 years ago

      And this is coming from a small university women’s golf coach, so I’ve had first hand experience with the companies that really want to support women’s athletics and those that just pretend.

      Reply

      Jordan

      7 years ago

      These companies aren’t giving out sponsorships out of the goodness of their heart. They do it for profits. Women’s golf is not anywhere near as popular as men’s golf. It’s not descrimination. When I played college baseball I had to buy lots of my own equipment, but some other sports got all their stuff paid for. No one expected our stuff to be paid for anyways. Besides, the kids going there are getting a discounted education to play a game for the school.

      Reply

      BF

      7 years ago

      Both men and women should be afforded same benefits. We are not talking about millions of dollars here. Non-profit universities have an obligation to keep things equitable. If equipment companies want to provide complimentary equipment to the men’s team, the university should require the same for women’s team.

      Reply

      OH

      7 years ago

      This is a smart marketing move by Parsons and I think it will pay dividends most certainly in the long-term.

      As for the gender variance on equipment, it’s really not surprising but is definitely disappointing that manufacturers would perpetuate the issue rather than simply offer a full university sponsorship program.

      Reply

      Jack

      7 years ago

      If we’re getting down to the nitty and gritty, then frankly, it isn’t all equal. Why are there so many more women’s golf scholorships available?

      Reply

      Sir10

      7 years ago

      Title IX

      Reply

      Sean

      7 years ago

      Because there is no women’s football scholarships to offset the 90 men’s football scholarships.

      It is not logical to compare men’s and women’s golf and claim the men are getting the short end. You need to look at the total across the program

      Title 9 creates an imbalance in all sports because of football.

      Reply

      Jack

      7 years ago

      Alright, I guess we’ll have to start a women’s football league so that everything is “equal.” Wouldn’t want anyone to feel left out…

      JKC

      7 years ago

      Yet football and a few mens hoops programs are they only teams that bring in any funds to the athletic depts. If not for football college sports would be toast.

      The amount of people that follow college golf is very small and those who follow women’s golf is exponentially smaller. How can you blame the OEMs for not giving away their wares if they do not feel it is even close to making business sense?

      James

      7 years ago

      Simple fact is that at most universities the only revenue producing sports are football and men’s basketball. Without these two sports, there would be no revenue for any of the other sports including minor men’s sports and women’s sports. I am all for women having top notch sports programs, facilities, and equipment but doing at the expense of men who play those same sports isn’t fair either when it is the sports played by men financing all of these non-revenue producing sports.

      Andrew Reeves

      7 years ago

      Kenny B is right…. Follow the money. In a twist, consider the attached (assuming it is accurate and not ‘fake’ news) from Scholarshipstats.com that women get way more scholarship monies.

      New Data! 2016 Athletic Scholarship Averages for NCAA I Golf teams
      The following are the results of our 2016 survey of NCAA I schools that sponsored varsity golf teams during their 2015-16 fiscal years. The results reflect the average number of athletic scholarships and average dollar amount awarded by responding schools, as well as the low and high range for the number and average dollar amount of scholarships awarded per team.
      2016 NCAA Golf
      Men’s NCAA I Golf Teams Average Low High
      Scholarships awarded per team 9 6 16
      Average Scholarship per team $ 12,663 $ 4,050 $ 28,975
      Women’s NCAA I Golf Teams Average Low High
      Scholarships awarded per team 8 5 12
      Average Scholarship per team $ 21,519 $ 5,490 $ 41,174

      Number of scholarships awarded is per team, so for 4 year schools typically only 25% or so will be available for the incoming (i.e. freshmen) class. Data includes responding schools only, programs that do not award athletic scholarships (Ivy League, etc.) are not included in these results.

      Reply

      David W

      7 years ago

      I didn’t think that I was naive about a situation like this. I know that the men are treated better because of the money, but I never thought it was to the point that the women had to buy their own equipment. This is ridiculous and should be fixed by the NCAA.

      Of course it won’t happen anytime soon since they now have to deal with what they knew had been going on for as long as there have been major college basketball and football but chose to ignore it. I’m glad to see the FBI step up and do what the NCAA should have done 40 years ago.

      Reply

      Bryant Blanton

      7 years ago

      To be fair, they’re only forced to buy their own equipment if the coach doesn’t use the program’s budget to get equipment for the players.. A well-funded program should be able to assist the players in this department.. Football teams aren’t given helmets, they must buy them to issue the players, and golf should be no different.. Sponsorships aside, the program’s budget is where teams of all sports get the bulk of their equipment.

      Reply

      Ron K

      7 years ago

      David, You obviously are naive. I have spent over 25 years of my life in various aspects of the golf business including being a sales rep for a major OEM manufacturer. The gist of this article as far as pricing offered to women Collegiant golfers for their equipment is somewhat correct but at the most misleading. After 10 years of coming in contact with major golf teams in the South East there have been very very few instances where the players on the women’s team are not given equal opportunities to the men team.

      Reply

      Chris Nickel

      7 years ago

      Ron – You said it yourself – “major golf teams” in “the South East” – Your experience with a select group of programs isn’t indicative of how the entire system functions. If it did function as you suggest, there wouldn’t even be an opportunity for PXG to do what it’s done. If you have information regarding collegiate pricing structures different from what OEM’s provided me, please do share.

      KM

      7 years ago

      Equipment doesnt matter, if youre a good player you can play with anything!

      Reply

      Kenny B

      7 years ago

      Really? OK, then let’s make it even and require that OEMs can’t give fitted equipment to the men either.

      Reply

      Santiago

      7 years ago

      I don’t think there is a mens us open. Just a US open where both ladies and men can qualify. Michelle Wie tried to several times. Same deal for the PGA, if a woman is good enough to play in it, she can.

      Since there are no gender restrictions for a US Open, I don’t see why the pay for a ladies only event should pay the same.

      Reply

      Don

      7 years ago

      Good on PXG for doing this. I wonder though if the other OEM’s will truly follow suit. I am surprised that Ping doesn’t do this already.

      Reply

      Deadeye

      7 years ago

      The brand of equipment does not matter as long as its properly fit. I applaud PXG for this I think some OEMs will follow. I do not think it should be a requirement.

      Reply

      Kenny B

      7 years ago

      Should OEMs be required to provide equal support for men’s and women’s programs at the same institution? You tell us.

      Yes.
      The disadvantages of women at the pro level are based on sponsors and TV viewership. Follow the money. At the college level that doesn’t, or should I say shouldn’t, exist. There is no prize money for winning tournaments. Equal opportunities are not being afforded to men and women. This inequality could be one of the reasons why U.S. women today who turn pro come into the LPGA at more of a disadvantage than the men who come into the PGA

      I don’t see this issue as much different than alumni or businesses paying star athletes to come to a college to play football. The bigger schools are going to get a better deal.

      Smooth move on Parson’s part for doing this, and I think PXG will reap some benefit from it, and it may shame some other OEMs into providing better deals for women golfers.

      I enjoy watching the LPGA, and thank you for writing this article.

      Reply

      Bryant Blanton

      7 years ago

      You do realize the opportunities for women at the college level outnumber those for the men, don’t you? Schools take a huge hit on small women’s sports like gold and soccer to afford the opportunities necessary to field profitable men’s sports like football.. Football has no 100+ female athlete counterpart, so it takes several women’s teams to equate to a football program.. This is where women have a distinct advantage.. They often receive full scholarships for the bulk of the team, so that football can exist.. College athletics, from an “opportunity” standpoint is pretty female biased outside of Football and basketball.. Baseball, wrestling, soccer, even men’s golf aren’t scholarshipped nearly as well as their female counterparts..

      Reply

      Mike Eovino

      7 years ago

      No one is FORCING FBS schools to offer 85 full scholarships a year to their football players. FCS schools manage with 63 full scholarships (or the value of 63 full scholarships spread around to up to 85 players). DII schools field football programs with 36 full scholarships (or the equivalent). And DIII schools do it with grants and aid, but no athletic scholarships for their football teams.

      An FBS school makes a choice to offer 85 full scholarships to football players. Here’s hoping it’s a rational one.

      KCLeo12

      7 years ago

      I played college golf at a Division 2 college and we rarely got anything at all for free other then Clothes, Bags, and balls. The womens team recieved all the same things. I know several people that played at division 1 schools that never paid for anything. I think that the return on the investment is usually higher for Mens golf not only because of the PGA Tour but the percentage of men playing golf is much higher then women. So even if they dont make it to the tour they are more likely to play that brand and recommend it to their buddies.

      Reply

      Andrew Han

      7 years ago

      Totally agreed and glad the article pointed out the economics of it. It’s simple, but if Parson sees a business opportunity that other OEMs don’t, good for him. I think he came out earlier this year stating that he will focus more on the LPGA this year.

      Reply

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