Tornado Tee – Most Advanced Golf Tee I’ve Used

Written by: Tony Korologos | Thursday, May 22nd, 2014
Categories: Golf AccessoriesGolf GearReviews
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Over the last decade, I’ve done my best to write unbiased and honest reviews of products I have actually put into play for a lengthy period of time. Some are better than others but at least I can sleep at night knowing I’ve made a solid effort, and not mailed in a review like other golf review sites do.

Tornado Tee

Tornado Tee

Today’s review is going to be something new, completely BIASED. I’ve been putting off writing this review for the very fact that I didn’t feel I could write in an unbiased fashion. Then I decided I should write it because it features a cool golf product called Tornado Tee, invented by a local guy who I’ve gotten to know over the past couple of years. Why not help a friend and business associate out? Since John is a friend, I know he wants total candidness as well.

Tornado Tee inventor John Hartline and I first met at the 2011 PGA Merchandise show. I stumbled across his booth and saw these strange looking golf tees.  Here’s the video from 2011:

During our meeting at the show I noticed John was from my neighborhood! Since then John and I have become friends, played some golf, and worked together and parallel in the golf world. Lets take a look at these very interesting golf tees.

The candid biased review begins…now.

Tornado Tee

Tornado Tee – many color options availalble

Design

Let’s get one thing straight with the design of this golf tee and any other tee which is “legal” for play. The tee cannot “increase” distance or accuracy artificially. What tees can do, or perhaps not do, is with regards to friction and resistance. Less friction/resistance from the tee means less spin. Less spin means more distance and better accuracy, generally speaking. Now before you argue the point on spin, some spin is needed to keep the ball airborne. We’re not talking about reducing that.

So how does the Tornado Tee help reduce that bad resistance and friction between the ball and the tee? The very wild looking, flexible mesh gives way at impact. You see, the golf ball “deforms” at impact. By deforms, I mean it loses its shape and compresses. It becomes oblong vertically. That outward movement is where the friction and resistance between the tee and ball happen. As the mesh gives way during that deformation, it produces less friction than a regular golf tee. Bingo. Longer and straighter.

How Much Longer?

Logically speaking, the more a person compresses the ball the more the ball deforms. The more the ball deforms, the more dramatic the effect of the Tornado Tee will be. That’s why the big muscle-heads on the long drive tours love the TT, because they’re getting a more dramatic result than someone who can’t compress the ball as much.

There’s also a little bit of resistance horizontally as the ball starts off toward the target. That resistance is also a factor, and one need not compress the ball a lot to benefit.

On The Course

I’ve been using the Tornado Tee off and on since 2011, based on conditions and if I happen to have tees in my bag. I try to give them away to people I meet to give John a little public relations juice. Lately my driving has been quite good. My length and accuracy this season seems as good as it has been in a long time. Certainly the swing has the most to do with that, but the tee seems to be helping a bit too. Every bit counts.

Have I seen massive and unbelievable increases in distance and accuracy? Am I suddenly blowing my drives by my opponents 50 yards like one might expect after viewing a TaylorMade advertisement? No. Of course not. I don’t see 17 additional yards every time I try the latest TaylorMade driver either. If all that were true, we’d be hitting 1,000 yard drives and golf courses would be 25,000 yards long. I can’t quantify it, but I do feel there’s a difference in my game. Probably a few extra yards off the tee. I’m pretty accurate as it is, so I can’t say I see a difference. I’ve been flight scoped as having NO side-spin on many drives though.

Critiques

There are a few critiques that I have for the Tornado Tee. The biggest one is that the ball is not stable on the tee in windy conditions. The ball will move around and sometimes, like yesterday, fall off the tee if the winds are high enough.

Teeing the ball up takes some getting used to. The flexibility of the crown means pushing the tee into the ground is a little different. To do it one must compress the mesh to the plastic, push the tee in, then lightly pull the mesh up. It isn’t hard, just takes some getting used to.

If one has unsure hands, getting the ball on the tee can be slightly difficult. The mesh is flexible. That’s what gives it the properties it has!

I have had great results from a durability standpoint, though others may not. I’ve been using one tee for at least a couple of months. At four rounds per week, we are talking well over 100 holes with the same tee. I’m able to deliver the driver quite accurately to the tee. I don’t miss the sweet spot by much. But players who do miss the sweet spot will break more tees. I don’t hit the plastic part of the tee. Players who do will likely break it at some point.

The tee is primarily for driving the ball, but can be compressed down to hit hybrids, fairways, and even iron shots. For me, I just use it for the driver.

Custom logo golf tees – See link below for special HOG patron pricing!

Custom Logo

As you can see from the pictures in this (overly long) review, TT can custom print on your tees. I suggest just going with the HOG logo. It is so beautiful.

Conclusion

There are no miracles in golf, contrary to what the big golf companies and their ad agencies want you to believe. Tornado Tee is certainly the most advanced and most effective golf tee I’ve ever played. Will it take me from a 2-handicap to the PGA Tour? Will it make a guy who banana-slices his drives 75 yards from left-to-right hit it straight? Will it make a player who hits 230 yard drives a 300+ yard bomber? No. No gear can do that. But what it can do is give you a bit more distance and accuracy; a bit more of an edge which just might help you like it helps me… winning an extra $2.00 nassau here and there. And with that $2.00 win comes the priceless bragging rights.

HOG Reader Special Purchase

I worked out a deal with John to give HOG readers a special deal if they want to buy Tornado Tees. A coupon code of “HOG” will get you two extra tees to go with the five pack, plus FREE SHIPPING at the Tornado Tee online store. Try ‘em out and see what they can do for you.


First Look: Snap-Hookz Golf Accessory Hanger

Written by: Tony Korologos | Tuesday, May 20th, 2014
Categories: Golf
Snap-Hookz Golf Accessory Hanger - click for more photos

Snap-Hookz Golf Accessory Hanger – click for more photos

I have a few things I hang off my golf bag and often times I’m not a fan of where the bag’s default hangers are.  Often I take carabiners and put them in places where I do want those things mounted.  Sometimes that works and sometimes it doesn’t.

I just did my first round with an accessory which solves the issue of not having enough hangars and not being able to put them in the right place, Snap Hookz.  This unit snaps onto the umbrella buttons of the bag and is completely customizable as far as size, length, hangars, loops…  For my first round I hung my Frogger BrushPro, towel, and a wristwatch GPS.  I’m not into wearing watches so I hang the watch on my bag.

I need to do some tweaking on the strap lengths still.

I’m already hooked on Snap-Hookz but I need to put this unit through a few rounds of testing before my full review.  Stay tuned.   For now check out a couple more photos of Snap-Hookz here.


Opening the Fridge or Winning the Masters

Written by: Tony Korologos | Monday, May 19th, 2014
Categories: Golf ApparelGolf Gear
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Today’s apparel script features the Oakley “Delta” Polo.  I was quite comfortable in my regular business capacity today, and caught a selfie opening the fridge.  You may recognize this shirt as the same one Bubba Watson was wearing during the final round when he won the 2014 Masters Tournament.

fridge_bubba_masters

Bubba wears the shirt winning the Masters.  I wear it opening the fridge.  Both great accomplishments in our own worlds.

Stay tuned for my full review of the Oakley Delta Polo after I’ve had a chance to test it out on the golf course.


Tiger Woods Loses World #1 Ranking to Adam Scott – Will He Ever Regain it?

Written by: Tony Korologos | Monday, May 19th, 2014
Categories: PGA TourPro GolfRory McIloryTiger Woods
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Tiger Woods

Will Tiger Break Jack’s record? Before you ask that question the billionth, pass me the barf bag…

Get ready for a nauseating number of articles and features in the golf media about the latest shakeup in the world rankings. Without either player playing a tournament this past week, Adam Scott has attained the top ranking in the world, overtaking Tiger Woods. Tiger moves to #2. Refer to the top 100 golf ranking table as of May 19, 2014 in the previous post.  At least the focus will be Tiger and Adam and the world golf rankings, rather than “hot wives and girlfriends of the PGA Tour,” or some trash like that.

For Adam Scott this is fantastic, the culmination of years of hard work and sticking with it.  The questions I have about Scott:

  • How long will Scott sit at #1?
  • Would he be in this position without the belly putter?
  • What will happen on January 1, 2016 when he can no longer anchor his putter?  He did move to that putting style for a reason.

My opinions? Perhaps I can answer all three questions in one sentence.  Scott could stay at #1 as long as he can anchor his putter.  The swing is practically flawless.

Now that Tiger has lost the #1 spot I have a few questions and comments:

  • How far will Woods fall and how fast?
  • Will Tiger ever gain the #1 spot again?
  • I will NOT ask the mind-numbing question which the media and golf forums have asked about a billion times too many, regarding whether or not he will break Jack’s record.
  • Perhaps a better question: will Tiger win another major?

My answers to these questions? First, nothing can be answered until Woods returns. And when he does, who knows what kind of shape his game will be in, physically or mentally.

Will Tiger ever regain the #1 spot? At this point I doubt it. He’s not getting any younger and his body is quite beat up. Decades of high torque and his violent swings have taken a toll. The advantages he once had over the other players, like length, are no longer advantages.  He is older, not as long, and no longer feared.  The edge is gone, like it or not.

Will Tiger win another major?  I have no reason to think he will based on the last few years, younger players, longer players, etc.

Speaking of #1 rankings, here’s another question:

  • What happened to Rory McIlory?  He has dropped from #1 to #10.
  • Will McIlory regain the #1 ranking?

Opinions Welcome

I’d love to hear your opinion on any of these questions or comments.  I’ll even offer up a friendly debate if you disagree with me.  Comment here, or on any of the HOG social networks.


Shake-up at the Top – Adam Scott Now #1 – Current Top 100 Rankings

Written by: Tony Korologos | Monday, May 19th, 2014
Categories: PGA TourPro GolfRory McIloryTiger Woods
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Official World Golf Ranking – May 19, 2014

This Week Last week End 2013 Name Avg Points Total Points Events Points Lost Points Gained Events Played
1 2 2 Adam Scott 7.9936 327.74 41 -120.67 54.98 41
2 1 1 Tiger Woods 7.8495 313.98 40 -170.58 5.07 36
3 3 3 Henrik Stenson 7.7203 401.45 52 -120.40 44.92 59
4 5 7 Matt Kuchar 7.1229 370.39 52 -110.33 160.81 53
5 4 28 Bubba Watson 7.0429 323.97 46 -71.33 232.98 46
6 6 11 Jason Day 6.6067 264.27 40 -64.66 96.28 38
7 7 10 Sergio Garcia 6.2649 306.98 49 -82.90 124.59 49
8 9 4 Justin Rose 6.1097 305.48 50 -130.15 63.13 50
9 8 22 Jordan Spieth 6.0949 274.27 45 -44.15 152.37 45
10 10 6 Rory McIlroy 5.7644 288.22 50 -137.57 107.35 50
11 11 5 Phil Mickelson 5.7570 276.34 48 -115.24 45.65 48
12 12 19 Jim Furyk 5.4783 262.96 48 -79.05 123.81 48
13 13 9 Zach Johnson 5.3312 277.22 52 -96.59 91.13 53
14 14 16 Dustin Johnson 4.9370 246.85 50 -77.86 94.16 50
15 16 14 Graeme McDowell 4.2574 208.61 49 -94.44 42.74 49
16 15 8 Steve Stricker 4.2573 170.29 40 -77.06 18.42 31
17 17 47 Jimmy Walker 4.2071 218.77 52 -44.77 134.19 55
18 18 18 Charl Schwartzel 4.1899 217.88 52 -78.42 46.41 58
19 19 17 Luke Donald 4.0114 200.57 50 -96.63 63.73 50
20 22 12 Ian Poulter 3.9586 193.97 49 -83.85 21.14 49
21 21 20 Keegan Bradley 3.9367 204.71 52 -84.29 62.15 56
22 20 15 Jason Dufner 3.9361 196.81 50 -99.77 37.75 50
23 23 32 Victor Dubuisson 3.8834 155.34 40 -33.05 56.18 40
24 24 73 Patrick Reed 3.8557 188.93 49 -23.03 136.57 49
25 34 37 Miguel A Jimenez 3.7836 170.26 45 -38.51 77.81 45
26 25 23 Hideki Matsuyama 3.7194 148.77 40 -41.01 34.76 39
27 26 25 Lee Westwood 3.7037 192.59 52 -77.97 79.38 54
28 28 39 Martin Kaymer 3.6606 190.35 52 -48.17 97.63 58
29 27 13 Brandt Snedeker 3.6309 181.54 50 -98.52 26.18 50
30 29 26 Jamie Donaldson 3.5704 185.66 52 -54.44 60.76 52
31 30 21 Webb Simpson 3.5236 176.18 50 -80.78 37.86 50
32 31 24 Thomas Bjorn 3.5176 179.40 51 -47.90 35.35 51
33 32 36 Graham Delaet 3.4512 172.56 50 -44.12 68.05 50
34 33 29 Bill Haas 3.2359 168.26 52 -58.36 52.38 55
35 35 42 Jonas Blixt 3.0219 157.14 52 -43.82 64.47 53
36 36 31 Hunter Mahan 3.0008 156.04 52 -64.89 52.50 54
37 37 40 Rickie Fowler 2.9920 149.60 50 -54.49 70.97 50
38 39 34 Louis Oosthuizen 2.8857 150.06 52 -78.75 74.74 52
39 38 33 Ryan Moore 2.8427 139.29 49 -52.45 30.77 49
40 40 66 Stephen Gallacher 2.7249 141.69 52 -36.20 78.61 52
41 41 53 Harris English 2.7174 141.31 52 -34.85 57.80 56
42 45 56 Gary Woodland 2.7072 140.78 52 -29.11 56.63 52
43 42 38 Francesco Molinari 2.6718 138.93 52 -55.95 51.53 57
44 43 88 Matt Jones 2.6676 138.72 52 -21.50 81.08 54
45 44 89 Russell Henley 2.6013 135.27 52 -30.06 83.27 58
46 49 49 Joost Luiten 2.6008 132.64 51 -34.99 47.54 51
47 46 133 Matt Every 2.5469 132.44 52 -25.46 90.72 55
48 47 60 Chris Kirk 2.4799 128.95 52 -35.56 57.06 57
49 48 27 Ernie Els 2.4774 128.83 52 -79.01 30.00 61
50 53 108 John Senden 2.4561 127.72 52 -31.47 82.00 57
51 50 35 Gonzalo Fdez-Castano 2.4236 126.03 52 -46.91 20.37 59
52 51 44 Kevin Streelman 2.4230 126.00 52 -42.10 33.37 54
53 52 41 Billy Horschel 2.3548 122.45 52 -41.53 27.57 56
54 54 46 Thongchai Jaidee 2.3475 122.07 52 -43.94 33.13 61
55 55 113 Kevin Stadler 2.3030 119.76 52 -29.59 75.34 55
56 58 126 Ryan Palmer 2.2659 106.50 47 -28.65 70.24 47
57 56 51 Richard Sterne 2.2405 105.30 47 -38.00 26.35 47
58 57 30 Nick Watney 2.1989 114.34 52 -66.51 10.06 56
59 60 43 Matteo Manassero 2.1523 111.92 52 -48.84 25.07 56
60 61 103 Chesson Hadley 2.1269 87.20 41 -14.50 41.35 41
61 59 98 George Coetzee 2.0927 106.73 51 -32.65 61.29 51
62 71 72 Marc Leishman 2.0863 108.49 52 -38.57 52.39 53
63 138 186 Brendon Todd 2.0675 105.44 51 -13.64 70.65 51
64 62 84 Mikko Ilonen 2.0520 94.39 46 -24.28 44.58 46
65 63 101 Pablo Larrazabal 2.0471 106.45 52 -30.66 57.61 57
66 78 78 Charles Howell-III 2.0038 104.20 52 -31.19 43.72 59
67 73 54 Boo Weekley 1.9775 102.83 52 -35.40 20.95 57
68 65 52 Bernd Wiesberger 1.9741 102.66 52 -41.29 24.90 55
69 66 106 Scott Stallings 1.9589 101.86 52 -30.30 55.46 57
70 68 233 Kevin Na 1.9588 78.35 40 -19.50 65.22 40
71 64 111 Anirban Lahiri 1.9499 79.95 41 -17.20 34.76 41
72 69 475 J.B. Holmes 1.9459 77.84 40 -9.97 74.65 33
73 67 50 Branden Grace 1.9401 100.89 52 -51.75 29.37 58
74 70 62 Kim Hyung-sung 1.8651 96.99 52 -30.79 22.05 55
75 72 45 David Lynn 1.7827 92.70 52 -46.55 5.26 59
76 75 102 Charley Hoffman 1.7726 90.41 51 -28.43 40.25 51
77 74 65 Thorbjorn Olesen 1.7604 91.54 52 -44.01 29.61 59
78 76 118 Tommy Fleetwood 1.7402 90.49 52 -19.79 38.65 56
79 77 48 Peter Hanson 1.7311 86.56 50 -54.29 20.72 50
80 81 71 Ross Fisher 1.7255 89.73 52 -30.28 25.84 56
81 82 67 Koumei Oda 1.7170 84.13 49 -26.33 12.03 49
82 83 58 Brendon de Jonge 1.7110 88.97 52 -37.89 22.81 69
83 79 59 Kiradech Aphibarnrat 1.6987 88.33 52 -31.68 9.75 54
84 80 81 Chris Stroud 1.6917 87.97 52 -25.11 23.47 56
85 88 134 K.J. Choi 1.6497 85.79 52 -25.58 45.38 52
86 85 83 Ryo Ishikawa 1.6382 85.19 52 -30.63 32.33 77
87 87 63 Peter Uihlein 1.6221 84.35 52 -26.69 8.39 58
88 84 86 Brooks Koepka 1.6201 74.52 46 -18.73 28.56 46
89 86 64 Angel Cabrera 1.6071 77.14 48 -28.66 11.06 48
90 90 317 Will Mackenzie 1.5909 82.72 52 -7.61 62.96 54
91 91 55 Scott Piercy 1.5849 76.08 48 -47.70 6.50 48
92 95 87 Paul Casey 1.5812 82.22 52 -22.79 24.96 53
93 92 161 Jason Kokrak 1.5794 82.13 52 -16.96 42.02 55
94 89 70 Roberto Castro 1.5786 82.09 52 -28.56 16.42 60
95 93 138 David Hearn 1.5709 81.69 52 -21.15 38.06 59
96 94 176 Noh Seung-yul 1.5687 81.57 52 -23.54 54.38 62
97 98 74 Chris Wood 1.5483 77.41 50 -32.65 19.96 50
98 106 150 Alejandro Canizares 1.5358 79.86 52 -18.72 38.35 55
99 96 136 Daniel Summerhays 1.5237 79.23 52 -23.01 38.01 58
100 97 245 Russell Knox 1.5169 78.88 52 -11.86 54.00 57

1 44 45 46 47 48 74