Equipment
The GolfWRX Q&A: A fresh edge for Tour Edge
If you’ve read our recent Tour Edge launch stories, including its first-ever golf ball release and Max fairway woods, you’ve seen a company bringing fresh products to the market, complete with a new logo.
Quietly announced last year, the new logo is more than a standalone cosmetic change. Indeed, there’s much more going on at Tour Edge, and it extends to from products to positioning in the marketplace.
Gone are the focuses on Champions Tour staffers and price point, replaced by a company that stands poised to enter the conversation with larger OEMs — and even position itself in the apparel space.
The logo, the golf ball, new products — we talked with Tour Edge’s Vice President of Brand & Strategic Partnerships, Alessandra Ladd, and Vice President of Product Development, Matthew Neeley, about it all.
Enjoy the conversation below.
GolfWRX: Before digging into the new logo and brand refresh, I have to ask about the Exotics golf balls. Why, after 40 years in business, did Tour Edge decide the time was right to get into the golf ball space?
Alessandra Ladd: For a long time, we honestly didn’t think golf balls were our lane. Tour Edge started as a club company, built by a master club designer (David Glod), and we were careful about not jumping into categories just because people expected us to. Even though retailers and green grass shops asked us about golf balls over the years, it never quite felt like the right fit.
What changed was the golfer. Over the last decade, we started hearing the question more and more from players who already trusted our clubs. We’re a smaller brand, but we have a very loyal following, and it became clear that we were leaving something on the table by not offering a complete Tour Edge experience.
The real shift happened when Tim Clarke joined as President. He came in with deep experience in the golf ball world, and those long-running internal conversations suddenly became much more practical. It stopped being a hypothetical and turned into, “If we’re going to do this, can we actually do it well?” Once we were confident the answer was yes, it made sense to move forward.
And frankly, a golf ball is the easiest way for someone to try Tour Edge. If you’ve heard about our performance but aren’t ready to change clubs, this gives you a simple, low-commitment way to see what we’re about. If you like the ball, maybe the relationship grows from there, and that felt like a very honest place to start.

GolfWRX: Tell me more about the profile here and the decision to offer a single ball. How difficult was it to pack everything you wanted into one design and what can you say about the result?
Alessandra Ladd: We actually launched with two balls; the three-piece urethane Exotics and the two-piece Surlyn Hot Launch, but most of the heavy lifting started with Exotics. That’s the golfer who’s been with us the longest and already understands what we’re about from a performance standpoint.
If you look at the urethane space, a lot of brands have two, three, sometimes four different versions of essentially the same ball, just tweaked for spin or flight. We didn’t want to do that right away. Coming in cold with multiple SKUs felt like we’d be asking golfers to make decisions before they even knew what a Tour Edge golf ball stood for.
Instead, we focused on building one urethane ball that we felt covered the widest range of players and conditions, with a big emphasis on wind performance. That became the core of the design brief. It was definitely a challenge to balance feel, speed, spin, and control into a single profile, but that’s where we felt we could actually add something meaningful rather than just another offering.
This isn’t a finished story for us (we already have additional balls in development) but these two are very intentionally the foundation. We wanted to start with something we believed in completely and then grow from there, rather than trying to be everything to everyone on day one.

GolfWRX: A new logo is featured on the Exotics golf ball box. What was the thinking behind the decision to change and what went into the creative process?
Alessandra Ladd: The logo change had honestly been talked about internally for a long time. It was one of those ideas that kept coming up but never quite found the right moment. The golf ball ended up being that moment.
Tour Edge has always had a strong product story. Our clubs earned their reputation the hard way, especially things like the combo-brazed fairway wood that took off on Tour without any endorsement deals. But if we’re being candid, we’ve historically been really good at selling products, not necessarily building a brand people wanted to wear or identify with.
Golfers have been proud to have Tour Edge clubs in the bag for years. Being proud of the brand itself? That’s a different conversation. You don’t see a lot of Tour Edge hats in airports or on the range, and that told us something. As we looked ahead to the next chapter of the company, it felt like the right time to change that.
The old logo was also limiting in a lot of practical ways such as on a golf ball, on a golf bag, and on apparel. The new wordmark and the TE mark give us a lot more flexibility and feel much more compelling in those applications. It’s cleaner, more modern, and easier for golfers to connect with.
We’re very aware that a logo alone doesn’t create brand love. That has to be earned. But we do feel like this gives us a better foundation to build from, and it pairs with what’s always mattered most to David Glod: making products that perform and speak for themselves.
As for the creative process, it started with a lot of listening. We spent time digging through reviews, comments, forums, and social posts; not just about Tour Edge, but about brands people genuinely connect with, both inside and outside golf. We wanted to understand how golfers actually talk about brands when no one from the company is in the room.
From there, we built a simple brief. We knew the brand had to feel performance-driven, but also approachable and a little fun. We wanted some mystique to it as well, which is where the TE mark really came into play. And being a Midwest company, there are traits that matter to us: gritty, scrappy, and grounded. We wanted those qualities to come through in the logo and the broader rollout, without feeling forced.
At the same time, we were very conscious about not losing who we already are. This wasn’t about starting over; rather it was about evolving. We explored a wide range of very different concepts, then narrowed in on the direction that felt right and spent a lot of time refining it. There were several eye-opening focus groups involved along the way. We pushed and pulled on it until it worked everywhere including on a golf ball, on headwear, on a bag, on clubs, and digitally. When we landed on it, it felt like a new version of us, yet more confident.

GolfWRX: GolfWRXers love details, whether that be club specs or font selection. How did the process play out? Any interesting stories from the brand refresh?
Alessandra Ladd: This is actually a story we haven’t told publicly yet, but it’s one GolfWRXers will appreciate. The brand refresh was happening in real time alongside Exotics club development and as the Exotics golf balls were getting close to production. That meant we were effectively running two parallel universes: CAD files, tooling, packaging, and print assets all existed with both the old logo and the new one, because we knew the decision would come down late.
From a detail standpoint, that mattered. Font weights, spacing, stroke thickness, and how the mark reproduced at very small sizes were all under the microscope, especially on a golf ball, where you’re talking about extremely tight tolerances and limited real estate. A logo that looks great on a website header doesn’t always survive pad printing, embossing, or laser engraving without adjustment, let alone embroidery on apparel and headwear.
The brand team made a final pitch to David Glod and the executive leadership team late one evening, walking through a full stylescape that showed how the logo would live on everything from a dimple pattern to crown graphics to packaging panels. Then Dave flew back to Michigan, and went radio silent for about four weeks. At that point, timelines were getting real. Tooling decisions, vendor sign-offs, and print deadlines were all approaching, and we were essentially holding our breath.
Then what felt like out of the blue, Dave called a day-of all-company meeting. He had the brand team re-present the same deck but this time to the whole company. He went around the room and asked for honest feedback from everyone, from engineers to sales to ops. After a long pause, he finally said something along the lines of, “Alright. New logo. Let’s do this.”
You could feel the room shift immediately. There were smiles, a little disbelief, and one very quiet moment from our VP of R&D Matt Neeley, who knew he had a narrow window to get updated artwork, tolerances, and spec sheets out to vendors before anything went irreversible.
What that moment really captured is how this company operates. We move fast when we need to, but decisions aren’t casual. Dave is extremely intentional; he wants to make sure changes work technically, aesthetically, and for the golfers who’ve trusted Tour Edge for four decades. The logo wasn’t just approved; it was stress-tested across real-world constraints before it ever made it onto a ball or a club.
And you can see the difference comparing the new Exotics Max driver to its predecessor:

GolfWRX: Returning to products, I’d like to talk about the Exotics Max driver. What can you tell me about the technology story and the development process?
Matt Neeley: As of last summer, the Exotics E725 had become one of the most successful drivers we’ve ever launched, strong retail performance, record sell-through, and consistently positive feedback from third-party testing. That said, one of the few consistent pieces of feedback we heard from a segment of golfers was that spin was just a little higher than they wanted. When we designed E725 around full-face forgiveness and 10K MOI, we had to make some trade-offs, and one of those was CG placement. To get that level of stability, the center of gravity had to sit slightly farther back, which gave us great forgiveness but came with a small spin penalty.
So, the primary goal with the new Exotics Max was very clear: reduce spin without giving up the stability and forgiveness we had already achieved. From a design standpoint, which meant moving the center of gravity forward by about 2–3mm while still maintaining 10K MOI, which is not an easy problem to solve.
With E725, we were already pretty maxed out on discretionary mass. We had a carbon fiber crown and a titanium body, so there wasn’t much left to redistribute. The best way for us to get some more mass to play with was by switching over to our full carbon fiber construction, consisting of a carbon fiber crown and sole. That change reduced the weight of the “frame” by roughly 18 grams. After replacing the titanium sole with carbon fiber, we ended up with about 10 grams of usable mass that we could reposition.
We used that mass strategically around the face and perimeter to pull the CG forward by about 2mm while preserving the stability of the head. In robot testing, which translated to a spin reduction of roughly 250 RPM compared to the E725, without sacrificing MOI or forgiveness.
So, the story of Exotics Max isn’t just lower spin; it’s lower spin without giving up the stability that defined the previous generation.
GolfWRX: For the golfer who might not be as familiar with all the members of the Tour Edge family, where does the Exotics Max fit into your woods lineup?
Matt Neeley: We actually simplified our naming structure this year because the old system just wasn’t landing with golfers. We’d been telling the E, C, and X story for years, and it made sense internally, but it wasn’t intuitive for consumers or fitters at retail.
So, we took a more straightforward approach and aligned with language golfers already understand. The Max family is the model that fits the biggest part of the market. High forgiveness, easy launch, stable flight, mid spin, and a clean, confidence-inspiring look at address. If you’re not sure where you fall, Max is a great starting point in fitting.
For higher-speed players who want to lower spin and launch, there’s the LS collection. For golfers with slower swing speeds who want more help with launch and direction, we have the Lite family featuring lighter overall weight and built-in draw bias to help with launch and direction.

GolfWRX: Turning to another recent release: Exotics MB and CB irons. Now the MB is a beautiful blade-style design, and the CB features an impressive amount of technology. Can you tell me more about the irons?
Matt Neeley: A lot of golfers see “MB” and “CB” and immediately assume they’re too much of a players’ iron — and that’s actually a mistake with this set. There’s more forgiveness built into both of these than people expect.
Both models are forged from 1025 carbon steel and CNC-milled to spec, and they’re built off the exact same platform. Same overall head shapes, profiles, bounce, and lofts. The only real physical differences are that the MB has about a 1–1.5mm thinner topline and a 2–2.5mm narrower sole. They blend seamlessly which allows golfers to build a combination set to their preference.
Where things get really interesting is the forgiveness story. For a forged MB and CB, there’s a surprising amount of perimeter weighting built into the heads. The VIBRCOR system plays a big role in that, and it does two things: it enhances sound and feel, which, being a 1025 carbon steel forging, is already very good, and takes it to another level in terms of softness and feedback.
Second, and more importantly from a performance standpoint, it replaces a large section of stainless steel in the center of the face (about 7.8 g/cc density) with our proprietary TPU material at roughly 1.2 g/cc density. That removes roughly 20–25 grams from the middle of the face, depending on the head, and allows us to redistribute that mass toward the perimeter.
The result is a forged MB and CB that still lets you work the ball and hit every shot you want, but with noticeably more stability and help on off-center strikes than you’d normally expect in a blade or player’s cavity. It’s still a true player’s iron; it just gives you a little more margin for error.

GolfWRX: Finally, when you look at the recent brand refresh and product releases, how do you see Tour Edge positioned now in terms of what you offer consumers and your place in the market?
Alessandra Ladd: When we look at Tour Edge today, it comes down to one thing: performance. That’s what connects the brand refresh and the new product launches.
We do spend on getting the word out (you’ll see our 2026 advertisements on golf publications, in your social feed, while you’re streaming, etc.) but as a privately owned company, we don’t believe that spending big automatically makes a product better. We feel what matters to golfers is innovation, testing, quality, fitting and demo days, and real tour validation, not just endorsements or short-lived campaigns. When we invest in marketing, it’s to make sure golfers know about products that genuinely perform.
That focus keeps us lean and nimble. We make decisions fast and get gear that performs where it counts – no extra layers, no added costs. Our operations are ridiculously efficient: at any point in the season, we can build and ship a custom club in 48 hours.
Put simply: consumers are at a true advantage with Tour Edge. The refresh and this new lineup make that clarity even stronger.
Equipment
Slab city on the Korn Ferry Tour — Lead Tape Report
This week, we have our Tour Photographer, Greg Moore, on the ground at the OccuNet Classic at Tascosa Golf Club in Amarillo, Texas, for the 14th event of the 2026 Korn Ferry Tour season. With that, we see some great things in the Lead Tape Report as we roll into Amarillo.
Joel Thelen
Monday Qualifier, Joel Thelen is in the field this week. He has played on the Korn Ferry Tour for a full season in 2023, and he is back in action this week. A couple of clubs caught my eye this week in his bag.
First off: His trusted Titleist 816 H2 hybrid. This club came out in October of 2015, and it still remains strong in the bag. Also, take a look at this Odyssey White Hot OG 7, putting a capital S in the 7S model. This custom neck has some impressive lean for an arm-lock-style putter. The bottom of the putter is covered in tape for optimal weighting.





Mitchell Meissner
Taking a look at Mitchell Meissner’s bag this week, we have some great lead tape coverage. Top to bottom working from fairway metals, irons, and wedges. We can see on the short irons and wedges that there is tape at the base of the grip, adding a little counterbalance. Along with that, some tape on the short irons and wedges as well. Moving to his putter, he rolls the Odyssey 7 Bird putter. Meissner putts left-handed and strikes the ball right-handed.






Whats in the Bag
Bud Cauley WITB 2026 (June)
Bud Cauley had >14 clubs in his bag when photographed prior to the Memorial Tournament.
Driver: Titleist GTS2 (8 degrees)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 6 X

3-wood: Titleist GTS3 (15 degrees, B1 SureFit setting)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Chemical Tensei 1K Pro Red 70 TX

7-wood: Titleist GTS3 (21 degrees, D1 SureFit setting)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Chemical Tensei 1K Pro Red 80 TX

Irons: Titleist U505 (3), Titleist 620 MB (4-9)
Shafts: Fujikura Ventus Black HB 8 X, True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue

Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM11 (48-10F, 52-12F, 56-14F), WedgeWorks (60-K*)
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400

Putters: Scotty Cameron Tour Prototype, Scotty Cameron GOLO 6.3 Prototype


Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet Align
Ball: Titleist Pro V1
Equipment
Name every set of irons you’ve owned – GolfWRXers discuss
In our forums, one user has offered up a prompt for the true sickos, inviting fellow forum members to share every set of irons they’ve ever owned. As to be expected, this is a lengthy forum topic.
@Lamosteve began:
Can you name every set of irons you’ve owned? Here’s mine
Spalding Dots
Spalding Eclipse
Ram Lazer FX
Lynx Parallax
Mizuno EZ Comp
Ben Hogans
Cleveland CG Red
Taylor Made R9s
PING i20
PING iE1
Taylor Made M6
Our members in the forum have been offering up their own collections. Here are a few posts from the thread, but make sure to check out the entire discussion and have your say at the link below.
- macedan: “Started with a hand-me-down Golden Bear set from my brother when I was in high school, never really played more than once a year or got into the game until about summer of 2017. First purchased a set of Cleveland CG4’s (I actually really miss this set sometimes, soft & not terribly large for a GI iron), moved into Nike Vapor Fly’s by the end of the year. Those lasted until spring of 18 when I decided I wanted new, so I traded them in for TM Rbladez. Honestly, although I liked the Rbladez, poor decision on my part, I think this was really about the only time so far that after a week or two I was kicking myself for not staying with what I had. Rbladez stayed with me until late last summer when I switched to P790’s and (knock on wood) I am hoping this will be my longest lasting set.”
- JimmyC59: “MacGregor Jack Nicklaus Triple Crown. Palmer The Standard. Still play these.”
- jgrzask: “Tommy Armour 845u
Mizuno MP-32
Mizuno MP-33 (2 sets)
Bridgestone J33cb – still own
Srixon i-302 (2 sets) – still own
Tourstage X-Blades – still own
Mizuno Hot Metal – still own
Nike Forged Blades – still own
Titleist 714 AP1 – still own
Cobra Forged SS – still own”
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ericsokp
Feb 23, 2026 at 5:55 pm
What I found interesting/strange about the new CB and MB irons is that the offset in every single iron is exactly the same (2.3 mm). I’ve never seen that before as typically the longer irons have more offset that gradually gets smaller as you progress through the set. I was wondering why TE didn’t go this route?
Benny
Feb 24, 2026 at 1:21 pm
Adams, and TM did this. TM it was their “3mm” irons If I remember correctly and then for Adams they did it in CB2-3 and CC’s and others.
Arnie
Feb 23, 2026 at 1:23 pm
I have found the “Exotics” name and logo to be a big turn off since they first introduced it. I hope they move on now. The products are very good and clearly need something less dumb. In a golf context the word “exotics” has zero meaning. Might be a good name for a group of call girls or the like…