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Why We Like It
- The five versions here feature five face-curvature combinations (bulge and roll) based on swing speed, each designed to improve how much heel and toe mis-hits curve back to the center line.
- Growing from input of staff player Bryson DeChambeau, the main thinking is that faster swings need more face curvature than is typically seen in modern driver design.
- The range of heads covers different face curvature designs for swing speeds of less than 90 miles per hour to more than 135 miles per hour with adjustable lofts that run from 2.5 degrees to 13.5 degrees.
- The slower and average speed models in the LA Golf lineup feature face curvatures that are generally flatter and centers of gravity that are deeper.
- For swing speeds up to 109 miles per hour (most average golfers), the face curvature is a flatter 12 to 13 inches. However, for swing speeds of 110 miles per hour or more, that curve tightens from 10 inches to as little as eight inches.
- The design features a cast titanium body with a beta titanium face insert.
- Each model comes with an LA Golf A-Series shaft through an online fitting tool that dials in the player to one of the shaft’s five weights, five flexes and three launch profiles.
- MOI rating: Above Average
- 2.5 to 13.5 degrees (Five models, each with an eight-way adjustable hosel)
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Hot List testers noted a stealthy matte‑black head that invites an aggressive swing; center strikes explode with high launch, low spin and exceptional distance, and ballflight is true. It’s easy to hit straight and forgiving—mis-hits often stayed playable and sometimes self‑corrected—yet rewards dialing in. Sound/feel ranges from soft and springy to a crisp, high‑pitched clack. One drawback: off‑center hits can lose significant distance.
Hot List panelists observed a quiet, traditional-shaped performer with a matte-black, non-distracting head. Reviewers praised the soft, low-volume feel, hot ball speed, high launch and surprisingly low spin on mis-hits, plus strong distance and shot-shaping when struck well. The face sits square for easy setup and contact feels seamless once you find a groove. It rewards solid strikes, though off-center shots—especially on the toe—can lose distance and add spin.
Hot List testers noted the club invites an aggressive swing and rewards it with explosive ball speed, low spin and very consistent, long, mostly low-flight shots that often roll out. Its all-black matte head and simple alignment logo drew praise, and many found mis-hits self-correcting—keeping direction and yardage tight (often within ~5 yards). It feels solid and a bit heavy at impact with a loud, high‑pitched metallic note on contact.
Hot List panelists observed a stealthy matte-black head with a subtle alignment mark and an explosive, high-launching ball flight — shots "screamed" off the face and produced impressive distance even when it felt slower. Center strikes were rewarded with a lively, jumping feel and strong carry; heel misses still tracked well with limited lateral dispersion. Impact sound ranged from crisp and piercing to quieter and muted. One notable drawback: it offers limited forgiveness on mishits.
Range Results
We tracked 20,000 shots through player testing and then had them analyzed by our team of scientists. These graphics reflect the relative performance our players saw for each club in the category.
A Skeptic’s Guide To New Golf Equipment
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