National Post

Golf equipment with a personal touch

Hand-forged clubs come with expensive price tag

- James mccarten

Golf may have already given way to hockey season in Canada, but Bill Holowaty still has irons, wedges and putters on his mind. Expensive ones. So should you, he surmises.

Holowaty is the co-founder of Miura Golf, a high-end boutique clubmaker with its deepest roots in the samurai sword traditions of ancient Japan but also a strong connection to the year-round golf season on Canada’s West Coast, thanks to its Vancouver-born chief operating officer.

And while skates and shin pads are never far from the mind of the University of British Columbia grad and college hockey standout, his career as a Thunderbir­d enshrined in UBC’s Sports Hall of Fame, Holowaty is these days consumed by the gospel of premium hand-forged golf clubs.

Holowaty and Miura are part of an ongoing trend in the golf equipment industry towards higher-end gear that enthusiast­s are willing to pay for, out of a combinatio­n of brand loyalty, demand for detailed custom fitting and a fervent belief the premium pays dividends on the golf course.

Miura irons are designed and built by hand by the company’s namesake, Katsuhiro Miura, and his sons Yoshitaka and Shinei. The company says that its proprietar­y forging technique, a product of its hands-on approach, results in steel with a finer grain and fewer imperfecti­ons, resulting in a unique feel at impact that devotees swear by.

“As parents in Canada, what we spend on our children for hockey — $250 hockey sticks, $600 for a new pair of skates, never mind the costs of travel and whatnot — there’s an investment that is made for our kids that certainly should translate over to golf,” he says.

Holowaty’s message has been gaining traction in recent years.

Companies like Miura, PXG, Honma Golf and Maruman Golf have for years been doggedly pursuing the tippy-top Donald Trump segment of the market — golfers willing to spend $3,000 and upwards for a premium set of irons, $1,000 for a driver and $500 for a putter.

Indeed, the golden driver Japan’s prime minister gave the U.S. president when the pair met for the first time in 2016 was a Honma — list price US$3,755, according to reports.

But while there are those who will pay top dollar simply for bragging rights, Holowaty argues that the premium is worth it when it comes to irons, a fixture of golf bags that often takes a back seat to the sexier sticks — the driver and the putter chief among them.

“There’s an understand­ing now that there are difference­s in terms of quality as long as they are borne out in the performanc­e,” he says.

“That’s where club-fitters really help us, because the performanc­e of your irons when you’re being fitted allows you to feel the difference — to see that, ‘I’m buying quality but I’m not sacrificin­g anything else.’ ”

Miura is also well-positioned to take advantage of the growth of the driving iron, an emerging trend among skilled players looking for a reliable go-to option off the tee for those narrow holes where hitting the fairway is more important than distance.

Not all better golfers are comfortabl­e controllin­g a hybrid, a cross between a wood and an iron that was all the rage when it showed up on the scene about 15 years ago because of its ability to launch high, soft shots as far but far more easily than those difficultt­o-hit 2- and 3-irons.

 ?? STUART FRANKLIN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Canadian golf executive Bill Holowaty says there is a market toward higher-end gear.
STUART FRANKLIN / GETTY IMAGES Canadian golf executive Bill Holowaty says there is a market toward higher-end gear.

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