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Ping (golf)

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PING is a brand of golf equipment, based in Phoenix, Arizona. It was founded by Karsten Solheim.

An engineer at General Electric, Solheim started making his own putters from his garage in Redwood City, California, in 1959. Due to increasing demand for his putters, he resigned his position at General Electric in 1967 in order to develop the company full-time.

PING currently produces clubs in every equipment category: drivers, fairway woods, hybrids, irons and putters.

Beginnings

PING golf started as a garage business by company founder Karsten Solheim. Solheim's frustration during the game of golf resulted from his difficulty putting with the putters of the era. The engineer from General Electric invented a new putter in his garage know as the "PING 1A".

The name "PING" came from the sound that Solheim heard as the metal struck the ball. The 1A and other PING putters to come would revolutionize the putter market with newly found "heel-toe" weighting.

The success Karsten Solheim found in 1959 with the invention of the 1A would set PING on a road to be one of the great innovators in the rich history of golf technology. The PING 1A's sales and hype would peak as Sports Illustrated named the PING 1A the "musical" putter for the sweet sound emitted.

In 1961, the Solheims moved from Redwood City, California to Phoenix, Arizona where the company would find a permanent home. Despite the increasing sales of the PING putter, Karsten Solheim continued to create his putters single-handedly in his garage after departing General Electric.

In the same year, he invented his first set of irons which he named "69", which he considered to be a good round of golf. Solheim continued to experiment with the effects of good heel-toe weighting in his irons and also milled a cavity into the steel back of the irons for added forgiveness.

The first PGA Tour victory while using a PING club came in 1962 at the Tours Cajun Classic by John Barnum. Sales of the PING putters rose as the popularity steadily increased. The Golf World Cup of 1965 brought even greater sales of the garage-made PING putters as many of the top players used the PING putters during the televised event in Japan.

In 1966, possibly the greatest event of the PING Corporation's history occurred as Karsten Solheim had an idea for a new putter flash in his mind. As he was unable to find a piece of paper, the design for his new putter was sketched on the dust cover of a 78 RPM record. After Solheim had finalized the design, he was still in need for a name. Solheim's wife Louise suggested the name "Answer" for the new putter as it "was an answer for the vexing problems in putting". As the name "Answer" would be too long to fit on the putter, the name was shortened to just "Anser".

The Anser would go on to be the most influential putter in golf while setting the standard for what is considered to be the "conventional" putter and racking up 500 professional golf wins and becoming the "winningest" putter in history. The cavity back and low center of gravity provided superior feel for golfers of all abilities.

PING faced a major golf obstacle at the end of 1966 as the USGA, golf's governing body for rules and equipment, outlawed all PING putters other than the Anser for tournament and handicap play. The decision came as the other PING models had a special bend in the shaft located under the grip which was thought to give players a special advantage in the putting stroke.

In 1967, Karsen Solheim resigned his position at General Electric and moved his business from his garage to a factory calling his company the Karsten Manufacturing Corporation (KMC). The factory was still located in his new hometown of Phoenix, Arizona. The patent for the PING Anser putter came on March 21st, 1967. The first major championship to be won using a PING putter came in 1969 at the Masters. The last major innovation by PING during the 1960s came with K1 stainless cast steel iron set.[1]

References