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''[http://www.callawaygolf.com/Global/en-US/Products/Clubs.html Source]''
''[http://www.callawaygolf.com/Global/en-US/Products/Clubs.html Source]''

== History ==
'''1982-1986: Hickory Stick and The Early Years'''
Callaway Golf was founded in 1982 by the late Ely Reeves Callaway, Jr. Ely Callaway was raised in [[Lagrange,_GA|Lagrange, GA]] and was a graduate of [[Emory_University|Emory University]] and a cousin of golf great Bobby Jones. Ely Callaway was a former Burlington Industries executive, he retired from the textiles company in 1973 and established a vineyard in Temecula, California in 1974. In 1981, he sold Callaway Winery and Vineyard to Hiram Walker & Sons for $14 million, a $9 million profit.

Ely Callaway was restless in retirement and playing lots of golf when he noticed an old-fashioned, hickory-shafted wedge in a Palm Springs-area golf shop. He was intrigued by the club, which looked like the clubs he had played as a youth. However, these traditional-looking wooden clubs had a technological twist – the Hickory Stick clubs had a hollowed wooden shaft that was reinforced with a steel core for consistency and strength. The company was looking for investors, Ely Callaway was on the lookout for a new venture and he purchased half interest in Hickory Stick USA for $400,000 in 1982. Hickory Stick was originally owned by Richard Parente, Dick De La Cruz and Tony Manzoni.

The company was renamed Callaway Hickory Stick USA in 1983; Ely Callaway became president and CEO, and moved the four-person company’s headquarters to Cathedral City, California. By 1984 he had purchased the company in full. As the company began to grow and develop new products, pro shop owners recall Ely Callaway personally delivering orders of his “Demonstrably Superior and Pleasingly Different” clubs from the trunk of his Cadillac. In 1985 Ely Callaway met and lured successful billiard cue designer Richard C. Helmstetter away from his business in Japan first as a consultant and later as chief club designer, and the company was moved to the seaside town of Carlsbad, California. Also in 1985, Ely Callaway hired Bruce Parker as head of sales; Parker later became the company's Chief Merchant and through his tenure with Callaway Golf he was responsible for sales in excess of $3 billion. As early key members of management, Helmstetter and Parker were involved in major decisions during the company's early and explosive growth.

Helmstetter and his design team at Callaway Golf were the first golf manufacturers to introduce and use computer-controlled milling machines to ensure uniform flatness on the face of putters in 1986. '''1987-1990: The S2H2 Revolution''' Helmstetter focused on new technology while Parker focused on selling, and Ely Callaway continued to promote his clubs to most everyone he met, from neighbors to players on the professional tours to Hollywood stars. In 1988 the company was renamed Callaway Golf Company, and S2H2 Technology was introduced in S2H2 Irons. The patented, breakthrough innovation, still used in many Callaway Golf designs today, combined a cavity-back iron with perimeter weighting, progressive offset. The hollowed-out or Tru-Bore shaft technology was part of the S2H2 design, it extended the shaft tip through the clubhead to the sole. S2H2Stainless Steel Woods debuted in 1989 and company sales went from $4.8 million in 1988 to $10.4 million in 1989. The S2H2 Gems club line for women was introduced in 1990, and Don Bies became the first Senior PGA Tour player to win with an S2H2 Driver. By the end of the year, S2H2 Drivers were #1 on the Senior PGA Tour and the company’s sales reached $21.5 million.

'''1991-1997: Big, Bigger and Biggest'''
With the help of Glenn Schmidt, the company's master tool maker, Helmstetter and Callaway Golf developed the original Big Bertha driver with a large-volume (190cc) steel clubhead. The club was wildly different from other drivers on the market; it was far larger, with a bigger sweet-spot, akin to the newly enlarged tennis rackets of the time. The size and design made it easier to hit and more forgiving, meaning it helped golfers achieve straighter, longer shots, even on off-center hits. Despite some skeptic from his team, Ely Callaway named the club Big Bertha – it was unusually large and wide compared to other clubs of the time – after the World War I German cannon famous for its distance and accuracy. The new club technology forever changed the golf equipment industry, and in 1992, Callaway Golf went public on the NYSE, trading under the symbol ELY. "We changed attitudes by the creation of a truly superior product that was pleasingly different," he later told Emory Magazine. "The attitude before Big Bertha was that, for most golfers in the world, the driver was the most feared, least-liked club in the bag. Now it's the most popular. Everybody loves it. That doesn't mean they're perfect every time, but they like to use the driver because it is so easy, relatively, to use."<ref> http://www.emory.edu/EMORY_MAGAZINE/winter97/callaway.html</ref>

Mark Brooks was the first PGA Tour player to win with the Big Bertha Driver, and Callaway Golf annual sales $54.8 million. In 1993 a young Swedish golfer named Annika Sorenstam joined Callaway Golf as a staff professional and began to play the company’s clubs, including the Big Bertha Driver. Previously, as a junior player and University of Arizona Wildcat, she had avoided hitting a driver at all. In 1995, she used a full bag of Callaway Golf equipment, including a Big Bertha Driver, to win the U.S. Women’s Open, her first victory on the LPGA Tour. The Great Big Bertha Driver launched in 1996, and Sorenstam won her second consecutive Women’s U.S. Open. Roger Cleveland, a world-renowned legend in the wedge business, joined Callaway Golf as a designer. That same year, Callaway announced the development of a new golf ball business, under the leadership of Chuck Yash, the former head of Taylormade Golf. Callaway Golf spent three years developing its new golf ball and a state-of-the-art production facility. The company’s entry into the market represented a $170 million investment in the research and development of the ball, construction of the 225,000-square-foot (20,900 m2) production facility, and development and purchase of special manufacturing equipment. Callaway’s manufacturing facility and its equipment were designed specifically for the unique production requirements for the new ball.

Ely Callaway resigned as CEO and President in 1996, stepping aside for Donald H. Dye to take over as CEO and President. The Founder continued to be an integral part of the company as Chairman of the Board and as President and CEO of Callaway Golf Ball Company, as well as in a promotional role for Callaway Golf’s products. By 1997, the original Big Bertha Driver had transitioned into the Great Big Bertha Driver and Biggest Big Bertha Driver at 270cc.<ref>[http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/Callaway-Golf-Company-Company-History.html Callaway Golf Company - Company History<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Also in 1997, Callaway Golf acquired Odyssey Golf, which was known for its face insert putter technology and is now infamous for its White Hot putter line.

'''1998-2000: Building a Better Golf Ball'''
In 1998, Ely Callaway reassumed his position as President and CEO of Callaway Golf. Callaway Golf introduced its junior line of clubs in 1998, and the X-12 Irons were launched, with 100,000 sets sold within the first three weeks of production. Callaway Golf spread out into other markets with mixed success throughout the 1990s, but remained at the forefront of consumer’s minds with popular, humorous TV advertisements featuring a tongue-in-cheek endorsement of Callaway Golf clubs by Bill Gates; a notoriously rich man and an amateur golfer with a notoriously high handicap. Other popular celebrities associated with Callaway Golf clubs included rock star Alice Cooper and singer Celine Dion, presidents, including George H. Bush and Bill Clinton, and royalty, including Prince Andrew, Duke or York.<ref>http://www.emory.edu/EMORY_MAGAZINE/spring96/callaway.html</ref>

Callaway Golf’s first golf ball, the Rule 35, was launched in 2000. The company’s entrance into the golf ball market was an early financial drain, but ultimately a technological success that won over the likes of legendary golfers such as Arnold Palmer and Gary Player, who soon began to endorse Callaway Golf balls and clubs. Callaway Golf Ball Company engineers, recruited from Du Pont and Boeing, used aerodynamic computer programs (first used by Boeing and General Electric) to evaluate more than 300 dimple patterns and more than 1,000 variations of ball cores, boundary layers, and cover materials to create the Rule 35 golf ball. Callaway engineers designed only two models of the Rule 35 ball—choosing to develop a "complete-performance" ball rather than separate balls developed for spin, control, distance, and durability. Ely Callaway explained the company’s product development objectives as follows: "We have combined all of the performance benefits into one ball so players no longer need to sacrifice control for distance, or feel, or durability. Each Rule 35 ball contains a unique synergy of distance, control, spin, feel and durability characteristics. This eliminates confusion and guesswork in trying to identify the golf ball that is right for each individual golfer."<ref>http://www.mhhe.com/business/management/updates/thompson12e/case/callaway6.html</ref> '''2001-2004: An Industry and a Company in Change'''

In 2001, Callaway Staff Professional Annika Sorenstam became the first woman, and one of only a few pros, to shoot 59 in competition, and she did it playing Callaway Golf clubs and a ball. That same year, Odyssey introduced its enormously successful 2-Ball Putter, which became the most successful putter launch of all time and introduced alignment technology to the putter marketplace. In May 2001, after selling more than $5 billion in golf clubs at the company he founded, Ely Callaway retired. Just a few months later, he passed away from pancreatic cancer, and Ron Drapeau took control of the company.<ref>http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0884345.html</ref>

The company introduced its first carbon composite driver technology in 2002, the C4 (Compression Cured Carbon Composite) Driver. This technology, which resulted in a high strength-to-weight ratio of graphite, later led to introduction of cup-face, VFT and carbon composite technologies that would become Fusion Technology. There were some concerns with the club about sound, as it did not have the classic, metallic sound of the titanium and stainless steel drivers that first made Callaway Golf famous. Nonetheless, Annika Sorenstam became the first Callway Golf staff professional to use the driver to win a tournament. The HX Golf Ball line, with the revolutionary new HEX Aerodynamics cover pattern, was also launched, replacing traditional dimples with a hexagonal cover pattern. The following year, the ERC Fusion Driver combining carbon composite and titanium was launched, bearing found Ely Reeves Callaway’s initials. Callaway Golf became the first golf manufacturer to receive more than 100 patents in a single year, and Callaway Golf acquired the assets of Top-Flite and Ben Hogan after it filed for Chapter 11. Following competition from Adidas, the acquisition would eventually cost Callaway Golf $169 million.<ref>http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/05/business/company-news-callaway-golf-beats-out-adidas-to-buy-top-flite.html</ref>

In 2004, Phil Mickelson became a Callaway Golf Staff Professional and used a prototype HX Tour Golf Ball to shoot 59 at the end of the season. That same year, Arnold Palmer used a full bag of Callaway Golf equipment to compete in his final and 50th consecutive Masters Tournament. '''2005-Present: Another Technological Revolution''' Throughout the mid 2000s, Callaway Golf continued to develop its Fusion Technology in drivers, as well as its HEX Aerodynamics in golf balls. Phil Mickelson used Callaway Golf equipment to win his second and third major championships, and Annika Sorenstam captured her 10th career major, 68th LPGA victory and third U.S. Open title, all with Callaway Golf equipment. Callaway Golf’s I-MIX technology, which allows golfers to interchange clubhead and shafts, debuted in 2008, and Annika Sorenstam announced that she would step away from competitive golf to pursue other interests following the 2008 season, after spending her entire professional career as a Callaway Golf staff professional. That same year, Callaway Golf launched its Tour i Series golf balls with four-piece construction.

In 2009, along with golf icons Arnold Palmer and Annika Sorenstam, Callaway Golf was part of a successful bid to return golf to the 2016 Olympics. The company launched its women’s Solaire club sets for women, and the uPro GPS was awarded “Best of What’s New” recognition from Popular Science magazine. In 2010, Callaway Golf topped Golf Digest’s “Hot List” for the fourth consecutive year, winning more medals than any other golf manufacturer. The company expanded its reach to India in 2010, one of the game’s fastest growing markets, and the Diablo Edge line of clubs was launched.

== Founder/Ely Callaway History ==
Ely Reeves Callaway Jr. was born in 1919 in Georgia, where he was raised LaGrange. He showed entrepreneurial spirit and success from an early age; at 10 he earned $150 selling Literary Digest, and used his profits to buy J.H. Hale peach trees. “My father thought they were probably the easiest to raise successfully and also very palatable versus any other peaches," he later told his alma mater, Emory University.http://www.emory.edu/EMORY_MAGAZINE/winter97/callaway.html His peach crop yielded $750. He played golf as a youth and was a distant cousin of Bobby Jones. Ely Callaway won four championships at LaGrange’s Highland Country Club. He was a natural leader in school, and was business manager of his high school newspaper and yearbook. He attended Emory University, was senior class president and graduated with a degree in history.

Ely Callaway joined the Army as a reserve officer in 1940, having earned a reserve officer’s commission through a correspondence course. Despite his intent to stay away from the family business of textiles, he was assigned to the Philadelphia Centralized Procurement Agency; the Army decided fabrics suited him after learning of his family history in textiles. He rose to the rank of major and married. At 24 years old, he was the youngest major in the Philadelphia Quartermaster Depot.

Ely Callaway's three children, Reeves, Lisa and Nicholas, were born in the 1940s and 50s and Ely Callaway went to work for Deering-Milliken Co. in Atlanta. Charming and charismatic, he was chosen to launch a new company division in New York and became a rising corporate star. One of his greatest professional successes in the textiles business came from his development of polyester blends. "I was one of the leaders of the move toward the fundamental new fabrics, Dacron blended first with wool and then with cotton," he told Emory Magazine. "It started at Milliken and increased tremendously at Burlington. My first real success was a blend of wool and Dacron, which went into men's suitings and became very famous. It led the way for all the other fabrics to be adopted as blends instead of 100 percent." He helped quality clothiers realize the benefit of blended fabrics that looked good, cost less and lasted longer, and he gave them catchy, memorable names like Viracle. He used shocking techniques, like dousing a line of models in suits with water to show the fabrics’ innovative properties and garner attention from media. And he was among the first to hire a woman for an executive position. Letitia Baldrige, etiquette author, columnist, and former social secretary and chief of staff for Jacqueline Kennedy, was Burlington’s first director of consumer affairs.<ref>http://articles.latimes.com/1994-07-17/news/ls-16774_1_ely-callaway</ref>

Textron hired Ely Callaway away from Deering-Milliken, and Textron was then sold to Burlington Industries. Ely Callaway became vice president at Burlington in 1960, president and director by 1968. When he was passed over for the top spot as chairman of the company, he retired in 1973. He had purchased 140 areas of land in Temecula, California some four years earlier, and decided to turn it into a vineyard. Many said the mostly undeveloped area of Temecula was unsuitable for growing grapes; Ely Callaway thought differently. He hired soils and climate experts who determined that the Temecula had a microclimate that was satisfactory for grape growing. Ely Callaway planted his grapes in 1973 and established Callaway Winery and Vineyards in 1974. The first Callaway wines were sold in 1975, and Callaway Reisling was served at a luncheon for Queen Elizabeth II at a New York luncheon; the queen asked for two glasses and a meeting with the vintner, and soon Temecula was on the map as a legitimate wine-producing region. In 1981, Callaway Winery and Vineyard was purchased by Hiram Walker and Sons for $14 million, leaving Ely Callaway with a $9 million profit and a lot of time on his hands as he was, once again, retired.

Ely Callaway was playing a lot of golf when he discovered Hickory Stick clubs, which led to the purchase of a company called Hickory Stick USA, which later became Callaway Golf. "Most people would settle for any one of Callaway's careers," Entrepreneur magazine wrote of him in a 1994 profile. Ely Callaway was awarded an Emory Medal in 1990 and an honorary doctor of humane letters degree in 1996. He often said the secret to his success came from a simple formula. The way to win in business, he said, is to create a product that is "demonstrably superior and pleasingly different from the competition in some significant ways." According to a 1994 profile in Golf Digest, "In his sixty-plus years in business, Callaway's reputation for honesty, ethics, and generosity is unblemished." He often repeated the phrase “Good ethics is good business.”

Ely Callaway also actively involved in minority issues and rights, and was chairman of the National UNCF Corporate Campaign. He believed in giving back, and donated generously to Emory, as well as the local community near Carlsbad, California and the Callaway Golf Foundation. "What is good in life is good in business: Treat everybody right and tell the truth. No matter what you do, do your best and don't give up. Just try, try, try. Then try again."<ref>http://articles.latimes.com/1994-07-17/news/ls-16774_1_ely-callaway/11</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 10:28, 14 July 2010

Callaway Golf Company
Company typePublic (NYSEELY)
GenreGolf
Founded1982
FounderEly R. Callaway, Jr.
Headquarters,
USA
RevenueIncrease US$951 Million (FY 2009)[1]
Decrease US$-31.5 Million (FY 2009)[1]
Decrease US$-20.9 Million (FY 2009)[1]
Total assetsDecrease US$876 Million (FY 2009)[2]
Total equityDecrease US$707 Million (FY 2009)[2]
Websitewww.callawaygolf.com

Callaway Golf Company (NYSEELY) is an American sporting goods company based in Carlsbad, California, specializing in golf. They manufacture a full range of golf equipment, including woods, irons, wedges, putters and golf balls, and also license the Callaway brand name for apparel, footwear, timepieces and accessories.

Callaway Golf also market products under the Odyssey putter brand, acquired in 1997,[3] as well as the Top-Flite, Strata and Ben Hogan golf brands picked up following the bankruptcy of Spalding's former golf division in 2003.[4]

History

Callaway Golf Company was founded by former Burlington Industries textile president, Ely R. Callaway, Jr. Callaway was raised in Lagrange, GA and was a graduate from Emory University. Callaway became very successful in the textile industry and was very fond of playing golf. At games, Callaway would use clubs by Hickory Sticks. The clubs were constructed of hickory-shafts with a steel core. At that time, Hickory Sticks was owned by Richard Parente and Dick De La Cruz. As Hickory Sticks started running low on funds, they sought investors to help the company and approached Callaway. At the time, he had just sold his vineyards for a $9 million profit. Then in 1982, he bought half of Hickory Sticks, the company was renamed to Callaway Hickory Stick USA. In 1984, Callaway bought the rest of the company for $400,000. In 1983, he became president and moved the company to Carlsbad, California where he sold clubs out of his Cadillac. The company eventually changed to its present name in 1988.[5]

In 1985, the company hired Bruce Parker, as head of sales, who later became the company's Chief Merchant and through his tenure with Callaway Golf as head of sales was responsible for sales in excess of $3.0 billion. As a key member of management, Parker was involved in all major decisions during the company's growth.

In 1986, Callaway hired a billiard cue designer, Richard C. Helmstetter, as a consultant. Helmstetter later became chief club designer that same year and introduced computer-controlled manufacturing machines. With his help and the help of Glenn Schmidt, the company's master tool maker, the company developed the original Big Bertha driver using large-volume (190cc) steel clubhead. The Big Bertha driver grew to 290 cc in 1997.[6]

In 1996, the company hired Roger Cleveland as chief club designer and in 2002, launched the Callaway Golf Forged Wedges. These wedges were constructed from carbon steel and a face with modified U grooves.[7]

In that same year, Callaway announced the development of a new golf ball, under the leadership of Chuck Yash, the former head of Taylormade Golf. Callaway Golf spent three years developing its new golf ball and a state-of-the-art production facility. The company’s entry into the market represented a $170 million investment in the research and development of the ball, construction of the 225,000-square-foot (20,900 m2) production facility, and development and purchase of special manufacturing equipment. Callaway’s manufacturing facility and its equipment were designed specifically for the unique production requirements for the new ball.

Callaway Golf Ball Company engineers, recruited from Du Pont and Boeing, used aerodynamic computer programs (first used by Boeing and General Electric) to evaluate more than 300 dimple patterns and more than 1,000 variations of ball cores, boundary layers, and cover materials to create the new Rule 35 ball. Callaway engineers designed only two models of the Rule 35 ball—choosing to develop a "complete-performance" ball rather than separate balls developed for spin, control, distance, and durability. Ely Callaway explained the company’s product development objectives as follows: "We have combined all of the performance benefits into one ball so players no longer need to sacrifice control for distance, or feel, or durability. Each Rule 35 ball contains a unique synergy of distance, control, spin, feel and durability characteristics. This eliminates confusion and guesswork in trying to identify the golf ball that is right for each individual golfer."[8]

In 1997, Odyssey Sports was acquired expanding Callaway's line of putters.[3] This eventually led to the release of the Odyssey White Hot putter line in 2000.

Ely Callaway resigned as CEO and President in 1996 stepping aside for Donald H. Dye to take over as CEO and President, but Callaway continued to be an integral part of the company as Chairman of the Board and as President and CEO of Callaway Golf Ball Company and in a promotional role for all of Callaway's products. He later returned in 1998 to reassume his position as President and CEO of Callaway Golf Company but died of pancreatic cancer on July 5, 2001 which left the position to Ron Drapeau.[9]

In 2003, Ron Drapeau, announced the intended purchase of Top-Flite Golf, as well as its Ben Hogan Golf division, soon after it filed for Chapter 11. Following competition from Adidas the acquisition would eventually cost Callaway Golf $169 million.[4]

Financial

In February 1992, Callaway Golf went public on the New York Stock Exchange with a market capitalization of $250 million. By late 1997, it reached a market capitalization of over $3.0 billion.


Callaway Professionals

PGA Tour

European Tour

LPGA Tour

Champions Tour

Nationwide Tour

Legends

Source

Current Products in Production

Source

History

1982-1986: Hickory Stick and The Early Years Callaway Golf was founded in 1982 by the late Ely Reeves Callaway, Jr. Ely Callaway was raised in Lagrange, GA and was a graduate of Emory University and a cousin of golf great Bobby Jones. Ely Callaway was a former Burlington Industries executive, he retired from the textiles company in 1973 and established a vineyard in Temecula, California in 1974. In 1981, he sold Callaway Winery and Vineyard to Hiram Walker & Sons for $14 million, a $9 million profit.

Ely Callaway was restless in retirement and playing lots of golf when he noticed an old-fashioned, hickory-shafted wedge in a Palm Springs-area golf shop. He was intrigued by the club, which looked like the clubs he had played as a youth. However, these traditional-looking wooden clubs had a technological twist – the Hickory Stick clubs had a hollowed wooden shaft that was reinforced with a steel core for consistency and strength. The company was looking for investors, Ely Callaway was on the lookout for a new venture and he purchased half interest in Hickory Stick USA for $400,000 in 1982. Hickory Stick was originally owned by Richard Parente, Dick De La Cruz and Tony Manzoni.

The company was renamed Callaway Hickory Stick USA in 1983; Ely Callaway became president and CEO, and moved the four-person company’s headquarters to Cathedral City, California. By 1984 he had purchased the company in full. As the company began to grow and develop new products, pro shop owners recall Ely Callaway personally delivering orders of his “Demonstrably Superior and Pleasingly Different” clubs from the trunk of his Cadillac. In 1985 Ely Callaway met and lured successful billiard cue designer Richard C. Helmstetter away from his business in Japan first as a consultant and later as chief club designer, and the company was moved to the seaside town of Carlsbad, California. Also in 1985, Ely Callaway hired Bruce Parker as head of sales; Parker later became the company's Chief Merchant and through his tenure with Callaway Golf he was responsible for sales in excess of $3 billion. As early key members of management, Helmstetter and Parker were involved in major decisions during the company's early and explosive growth.

Helmstetter and his design team at Callaway Golf were the first golf manufacturers to introduce and use computer-controlled milling machines to ensure uniform flatness on the face of putters in 1986. 1987-1990: The S2H2 Revolution Helmstetter focused on new technology while Parker focused on selling, and Ely Callaway continued to promote his clubs to most everyone he met, from neighbors to players on the professional tours to Hollywood stars. In 1988 the company was renamed Callaway Golf Company, and S2H2 Technology was introduced in S2H2 Irons. The patented, breakthrough innovation, still used in many Callaway Golf designs today, combined a cavity-back iron with perimeter weighting, progressive offset. The hollowed-out or Tru-Bore shaft technology was part of the S2H2 design, it extended the shaft tip through the clubhead to the sole. S2H2Stainless Steel Woods debuted in 1989 and company sales went from $4.8 million in 1988 to $10.4 million in 1989. The S2H2 Gems club line for women was introduced in 1990, and Don Bies became the first Senior PGA Tour player to win with an S2H2 Driver. By the end of the year, S2H2 Drivers were #1 on the Senior PGA Tour and the company’s sales reached $21.5 million.

1991-1997: Big, Bigger and Biggest With the help of Glenn Schmidt, the company's master tool maker, Helmstetter and Callaway Golf developed the original Big Bertha driver with a large-volume (190cc) steel clubhead. The club was wildly different from other drivers on the market; it was far larger, with a bigger sweet-spot, akin to the newly enlarged tennis rackets of the time. The size and design made it easier to hit and more forgiving, meaning it helped golfers achieve straighter, longer shots, even on off-center hits. Despite some skeptic from his team, Ely Callaway named the club Big Bertha – it was unusually large and wide compared to other clubs of the time – after the World War I German cannon famous for its distance and accuracy. The new club technology forever changed the golf equipment industry, and in 1992, Callaway Golf went public on the NYSE, trading under the symbol ELY. "We changed attitudes by the creation of a truly superior product that was pleasingly different," he later told Emory Magazine. "The attitude before Big Bertha was that, for most golfers in the world, the driver was the most feared, least-liked club in the bag. Now it's the most popular. Everybody loves it. That doesn't mean they're perfect every time, but they like to use the driver because it is so easy, relatively, to use."[10]

Mark Brooks was the first PGA Tour player to win with the Big Bertha Driver, and Callaway Golf annual sales $54.8 million. In 1993 a young Swedish golfer named Annika Sorenstam joined Callaway Golf as a staff professional and began to play the company’s clubs, including the Big Bertha Driver. Previously, as a junior player and University of Arizona Wildcat, she had avoided hitting a driver at all. In 1995, she used a full bag of Callaway Golf equipment, including a Big Bertha Driver, to win the U.S. Women’s Open, her first victory on the LPGA Tour. The Great Big Bertha Driver launched in 1996, and Sorenstam won her second consecutive Women’s U.S. Open. Roger Cleveland, a world-renowned legend in the wedge business, joined Callaway Golf as a designer. That same year, Callaway announced the development of a new golf ball business, under the leadership of Chuck Yash, the former head of Taylormade Golf. Callaway Golf spent three years developing its new golf ball and a state-of-the-art production facility. The company’s entry into the market represented a $170 million investment in the research and development of the ball, construction of the 225,000-square-foot (20,900 m2) production facility, and development and purchase of special manufacturing equipment. Callaway’s manufacturing facility and its equipment were designed specifically for the unique production requirements for the new ball.

Ely Callaway resigned as CEO and President in 1996, stepping aside for Donald H. Dye to take over as CEO and President. The Founder continued to be an integral part of the company as Chairman of the Board and as President and CEO of Callaway Golf Ball Company, as well as in a promotional role for Callaway Golf’s products. By 1997, the original Big Bertha Driver had transitioned into the Great Big Bertha Driver and Biggest Big Bertha Driver at 270cc.[11] Also in 1997, Callaway Golf acquired Odyssey Golf, which was known for its face insert putter technology and is now infamous for its White Hot putter line.

1998-2000: Building a Better Golf Ball In 1998, Ely Callaway reassumed his position as President and CEO of Callaway Golf. Callaway Golf introduced its junior line of clubs in 1998, and the X-12 Irons were launched, with 100,000 sets sold within the first three weeks of production. Callaway Golf spread out into other markets with mixed success throughout the 1990s, but remained at the forefront of consumer’s minds with popular, humorous TV advertisements featuring a tongue-in-cheek endorsement of Callaway Golf clubs by Bill Gates; a notoriously rich man and an amateur golfer with a notoriously high handicap. Other popular celebrities associated with Callaway Golf clubs included rock star Alice Cooper and singer Celine Dion, presidents, including George H. Bush and Bill Clinton, and royalty, including Prince Andrew, Duke or York.[12]

Callaway Golf’s first golf ball, the Rule 35, was launched in 2000. The company’s entrance into the golf ball market was an early financial drain, but ultimately a technological success that won over the likes of legendary golfers such as Arnold Palmer and Gary Player, who soon began to endorse Callaway Golf balls and clubs. Callaway Golf Ball Company engineers, recruited from Du Pont and Boeing, used aerodynamic computer programs (first used by Boeing and General Electric) to evaluate more than 300 dimple patterns and more than 1,000 variations of ball cores, boundary layers, and cover materials to create the Rule 35 golf ball. Callaway engineers designed only two models of the Rule 35 ball—choosing to develop a "complete-performance" ball rather than separate balls developed for spin, control, distance, and durability. Ely Callaway explained the company’s product development objectives as follows: "We have combined all of the performance benefits into one ball so players no longer need to sacrifice control for distance, or feel, or durability. Each Rule 35 ball contains a unique synergy of distance, control, spin, feel and durability characteristics. This eliminates confusion and guesswork in trying to identify the golf ball that is right for each individual golfer."[13] 2001-2004: An Industry and a Company in Change

In 2001, Callaway Staff Professional Annika Sorenstam became the first woman, and one of only a few pros, to shoot 59 in competition, and she did it playing Callaway Golf clubs and a ball. That same year, Odyssey introduced its enormously successful 2-Ball Putter, which became the most successful putter launch of all time and introduced alignment technology to the putter marketplace. In May 2001, after selling more than $5 billion in golf clubs at the company he founded, Ely Callaway retired. Just a few months later, he passed away from pancreatic cancer, and Ron Drapeau took control of the company.[14]

The company introduced its first carbon composite driver technology in 2002, the C4 (Compression Cured Carbon Composite) Driver. This technology, which resulted in a high strength-to-weight ratio of graphite, later led to introduction of cup-face, VFT and carbon composite technologies that would become Fusion Technology. There were some concerns with the club about sound, as it did not have the classic, metallic sound of the titanium and stainless steel drivers that first made Callaway Golf famous. Nonetheless, Annika Sorenstam became the first Callway Golf staff professional to use the driver to win a tournament. The HX Golf Ball line, with the revolutionary new HEX Aerodynamics cover pattern, was also launched, replacing traditional dimples with a hexagonal cover pattern. The following year, the ERC Fusion Driver combining carbon composite and titanium was launched, bearing found Ely Reeves Callaway’s initials. Callaway Golf became the first golf manufacturer to receive more than 100 patents in a single year, and Callaway Golf acquired the assets of Top-Flite and Ben Hogan after it filed for Chapter 11. Following competition from Adidas, the acquisition would eventually cost Callaway Golf $169 million.[15]

In 2004, Phil Mickelson became a Callaway Golf Staff Professional and used a prototype HX Tour Golf Ball to shoot 59 at the end of the season. That same year, Arnold Palmer used a full bag of Callaway Golf equipment to compete in his final and 50th consecutive Masters Tournament. 2005-Present: Another Technological Revolution Throughout the mid 2000s, Callaway Golf continued to develop its Fusion Technology in drivers, as well as its HEX Aerodynamics in golf balls. Phil Mickelson used Callaway Golf equipment to win his second and third major championships, and Annika Sorenstam captured her 10th career major, 68th LPGA victory and third U.S. Open title, all with Callaway Golf equipment. Callaway Golf’s I-MIX technology, which allows golfers to interchange clubhead and shafts, debuted in 2008, and Annika Sorenstam announced that she would step away from competitive golf to pursue other interests following the 2008 season, after spending her entire professional career as a Callaway Golf staff professional. That same year, Callaway Golf launched its Tour i Series golf balls with four-piece construction.

In 2009, along with golf icons Arnold Palmer and Annika Sorenstam, Callaway Golf was part of a successful bid to return golf to the 2016 Olympics. The company launched its women’s Solaire club sets for women, and the uPro GPS was awarded “Best of What’s New” recognition from Popular Science magazine. In 2010, Callaway Golf topped Golf Digest’s “Hot List” for the fourth consecutive year, winning more medals than any other golf manufacturer. The company expanded its reach to India in 2010, one of the game’s fastest growing markets, and the Diablo Edge line of clubs was launched.

Founder/Ely Callaway History

Ely Reeves Callaway Jr. was born in 1919 in Georgia, where he was raised LaGrange. He showed entrepreneurial spirit and success from an early age; at 10 he earned $150 selling Literary Digest, and used his profits to buy J.H. Hale peach trees. “My father thought they were probably the easiest to raise successfully and also very palatable versus any other peaches," he later told his alma mater, Emory University.http://www.emory.edu/EMORY_MAGAZINE/winter97/callaway.html His peach crop yielded $750. He played golf as a youth and was a distant cousin of Bobby Jones. Ely Callaway won four championships at LaGrange’s Highland Country Club. He was a natural leader in school, and was business manager of his high school newspaper and yearbook. He attended Emory University, was senior class president and graduated with a degree in history.

Ely Callaway joined the Army as a reserve officer in 1940, having earned a reserve officer’s commission through a correspondence course. Despite his intent to stay away from the family business of textiles, he was assigned to the Philadelphia Centralized Procurement Agency; the Army decided fabrics suited him after learning of his family history in textiles. He rose to the rank of major and married. At 24 years old, he was the youngest major in the Philadelphia Quartermaster Depot.

Ely Callaway's three children, Reeves, Lisa and Nicholas, were born in the 1940s and 50s and Ely Callaway went to work for Deering-Milliken Co. in Atlanta. Charming and charismatic, he was chosen to launch a new company division in New York and became a rising corporate star. One of his greatest professional successes in the textiles business came from his development of polyester blends. "I was one of the leaders of the move toward the fundamental new fabrics, Dacron blended first with wool and then with cotton," he told Emory Magazine. "It started at Milliken and increased tremendously at Burlington. My first real success was a blend of wool and Dacron, which went into men's suitings and became very famous. It led the way for all the other fabrics to be adopted as blends instead of 100 percent." He helped quality clothiers realize the benefit of blended fabrics that looked good, cost less and lasted longer, and he gave them catchy, memorable names like Viracle. He used shocking techniques, like dousing a line of models in suits with water to show the fabrics’ innovative properties and garner attention from media. And he was among the first to hire a woman for an executive position. Letitia Baldrige, etiquette author, columnist, and former social secretary and chief of staff for Jacqueline Kennedy, was Burlington’s first director of consumer affairs.[16]

Textron hired Ely Callaway away from Deering-Milliken, and Textron was then sold to Burlington Industries. Ely Callaway became vice president at Burlington in 1960, president and director by 1968. When he was passed over for the top spot as chairman of the company, he retired in 1973. He had purchased 140 areas of land in Temecula, California some four years earlier, and decided to turn it into a vineyard. Many said the mostly undeveloped area of Temecula was unsuitable for growing grapes; Ely Callaway thought differently. He hired soils and climate experts who determined that the Temecula had a microclimate that was satisfactory for grape growing. Ely Callaway planted his grapes in 1973 and established Callaway Winery and Vineyards in 1974. The first Callaway wines were sold in 1975, and Callaway Reisling was served at a luncheon for Queen Elizabeth II at a New York luncheon; the queen asked for two glasses and a meeting with the vintner, and soon Temecula was on the map as a legitimate wine-producing region. In 1981, Callaway Winery and Vineyard was purchased by Hiram Walker and Sons for $14 million, leaving Ely Callaway with a $9 million profit and a lot of time on his hands as he was, once again, retired.

Ely Callaway was playing a lot of golf when he discovered Hickory Stick clubs, which led to the purchase of a company called Hickory Stick USA, which later became Callaway Golf. "Most people would settle for any one of Callaway's careers," Entrepreneur magazine wrote of him in a 1994 profile. Ely Callaway was awarded an Emory Medal in 1990 and an honorary doctor of humane letters degree in 1996. He often said the secret to his success came from a simple formula. The way to win in business, he said, is to create a product that is "demonstrably superior and pleasingly different from the competition in some significant ways." According to a 1994 profile in Golf Digest, "In his sixty-plus years in business, Callaway's reputation for honesty, ethics, and generosity is unblemished." He often repeated the phrase “Good ethics is good business.”

Ely Callaway also actively involved in minority issues and rights, and was chairman of the National UNCF Corporate Campaign. He believed in giving back, and donated generously to Emory, as well as the local community near Carlsbad, California and the Callaway Golf Foundation. "What is good in life is good in business: Treat everybody right and tell the truth. No matter what you do, do your best and don't give up. Just try, try, try. Then try again."[17]

References

  1. ^ a b c Dick's Sporting Goods (DKS) annual SEC income statement filing via Wikinvest
  2. ^ a b Dick's Sporting Goods (DKS) annual SEC balance sheet filing via Wikinvest
  3. ^ a b "CALLAWAY GOLF IN $130 MILLION DEAL FOR ODYSSEY SPORTS". New York Times. July 22, 1997. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  4. ^ a b "COMPANY NEWS; CALLAWAY GOLF BEATS OUT ADIDAS TO BUY TOP-FLITE". New York Times. September 5, 2003. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  5. ^ Golf - CBSSports.com
  6. ^ Callaway Golf Company - Company History
  7. ^ Callaway Forged Wedge
  8. ^ Callaway Golf Company Online Case
  9. ^ http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0884345.html
  10. ^ http://www.emory.edu/EMORY_MAGAZINE/winter97/callaway.html
  11. ^ Callaway Golf Company - Company History
  12. ^ http://www.emory.edu/EMORY_MAGAZINE/spring96/callaway.html
  13. ^ http://www.mhhe.com/business/management/updates/thompson12e/case/callaway6.html
  14. ^ http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0884345.html
  15. ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2003/09/05/business/company-news-callaway-golf-beats-out-adidas-to-buy-top-flite.html
  16. ^ http://articles.latimes.com/1994-07-17/news/ls-16774_1_ely-callaway
  17. ^ http://articles.latimes.com/1994-07-17/news/ls-16774_1_ely-callaway/11