2009 Hot List: Golf Balls

Hot List Golf Balls: Women's market gets serious

By Stina Sternberg
Photos By Jim Herity May 2009

If you think women's golf balls are all about cute packaging, sparkly covers and pink ribbons, think again. Because golfers with slow swing speeds can't compress a regular ball enough to make it rise and stay in the air for very long, the new women's balls are designed to launch higher than any other category, even when struck at limited clubhead speeds.

"In our computer simulations, increasing the launch angle by 2 degrees--while keeping ball speed and backspin the same--results in about five yards more distance," says Rock Ishii, product development director of golf balls for Nike. "The two ways to make a golf ball fly higher for a slow-swing-speed player are to give it a high-trajectory dimple design and a soft compression. This creates that higher initial launch angle."

Here are a few new entries to consider (above, from left):

Callaway's three-piece HX Pearl is designed with a low-compression core under a firm mantle and a thin-ionomer cover to allow women with fast swing speeds to generate driver distance and spin around the greens ($26 per dozen, callawaygolf.com).

Chromax offers medium-compression, two-piece balls in a myriad of metallic colors ($20 for six balls, chromaxgolf.com).

Nike's Karma also features an extremely low compression (50) for a high initial launch, and the 312-dimple design helps the slowest swingers keep the ball in the air longer ($22 per dozen, nikegolf.com).

Pinnacle's Ribbon puts a premium on durability and soft feel, and its 392 dimples help women with average swing speeds keep the ball airborne ($15 for 15 balls, pinnaclegolf.com).

Precept's Lady IQ 180 pairs a 45-compression core with a soft ionomer cover to help launch the ball high. The 342 dimples promote lift, making the ball ideal for the slowest clubhead speeds ($20 per dozen, preceptgolf.com).

Srixon's SoftFeel Lady has shallow dimples and a soft, gradient core (it gets firmer inside to outside) to help slow swingers generate height and distance from tee to green ($20 per dozen, srixon.com).

Top-Flite's D2 Diva comes with dimple-in-dimple aerodynamics to reduce drag and maximize distance for slightly faster swing speeds ($16 for 15 balls, topflite.com).

Hot List Golf Balls: The selection process

Read Photo Credits

November 21, 2009

Blogs

Bomb & Gouge
Mike Johnson and Mike Stachura share their thoughts on the latest golf equipment news and trends.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE BLOGS

What's In My Bag

Lucas Glover
Lucas Glover
See what's in this 2009 U.S. Open champion's bag.
Dustin Johnson
Dustin Johnson
Find out what clubs this long hitter uses.
Stewart Cink
Stewart Cink
See what clubs the 2009 British Open champ plays.

WHAT'S IN MY BAG ARCHIVE

Equipment on tour

A Little Heavy Lifting

Headweights in putters have been on the rise, with some bordering on extreme
Your search for the hottest new equipment starts here:
The latest equipment ratings
Build your own dream bag
Interactive driver guide

Challenge

Break 100-90-80

Get personalized help to improve your game with the Golf Digest Challenge. Start Now!

NEWSLETTERS

Golf Digest's newsletter
Golf World's newsletter
Subscribe today

Golf Digest

Subscribe >

What's In My Bag?

Golf Digest Challenge

Quote of the day

Golf Digest Shop

Golf World

Visit Subscribe
2010 Pegboards
Give a Subscription to Golf Digest magazine as a Gift

Best Places to Play — Course Finder

Advertiser Events & Promotions