Snell Golf My Tour Ball Review

Written by: Tony Korologos | Monday, July 17th, 2017
Categories: GolfGolf BallsGolf EquipmentGolf For WomenGolf GearReviews
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Dean Snell has likely been involved in your golf equipment for many years.  You just didn’t know it.  Dean is one of the designers of many of the world’s top golf balls like the Titleist ProV1, TaylorMade TP Red & Black, TaylorMade Penta, and many others.  Dean is now making his own tour-caliber and amateur-focused golf balls under the Snell Golf brand.  Today I’m reviewing the MTB, or “My Tour Ball.”
Snell MTB My Tour Golf Ball

About the Snell Golf MTB

“Tour” is the word most commonly used for golf balls which have performance characteristics in line with what a PGA Tour professional would require.  Those characteristics would include high spin and a soft cover, which aren’t necessarily characteristics which would benefit a high handicap golfer.  Why?  Pros can control their spin.  High handicappers generally can’t.  So the high ‘cappers will have serious distance loss due to side-spin, and will have very bad accuracy as the ball will be hooking or slicing more.  Further, most higher handicap players come up short, and a ball that has high spin and stops quickly or even backs up on a green, isn’t good in that situation.

For the lower handicap players and pros though, the MTB is a very affordable and high performance alternative to the $50-$60 per dozen tour offerings from the big name brands.  Let’s take a look at the construction of the ball.

MTB Construction

The MTB is a 3-piece or 3-layer golf ball.  Each layer produces performance properties and when combined gives the ball it’s overall performance.

The first layer of the MTB if we go inside-out, is the core. Just like the earth’s core, the core on the MTB is the center. Most of the mass of the golf ball resides in the core and the ball’s general feel and “compression” comes from this layer. Softer cores result in lower spin, and therefore less side-spin. Soft cores can mean more accurate drives because of the reduced spin. But there’s a fine line with soft cores because as the core gets softer the distance is lessened. Snell’s MTB combines a soft core with technology which still helps produce the max ball speed allowed by golf’s governing bodies, and thus the most optimized combination of low driver spin and distance.

The mantle is the next layer. The mantle layer still has influence on the overall ball speed and compression. The mantle’s true performance benefits are in iron shots and short game shots. The mantle helps to increase spin as the shots get shorter, which is optimum. Low spin on long shots and higher spin on short shots.

The cover of the ball is perhaps the most crucial in terms of giving a golf ball the “tour” label. Tour balls typically have a “urethane” cover while cheaper balls may have covers made from other rubber/plastic materials like ionomer. Urethane gives a golf ball very soft feel in the short game and putting, and high spin on short shots, chips, and pitches. When you see tour pros “yank the cable” and spin a ball back to the crowd’s joy, that’s almost guaranteed a urethane cover ball. Pros and low-handicap golfers want the spin and control of urethane and the MTB has it.

Snell MTB My Tour Golf Ball

On The Course

I admit I’m a bit late to the party with my review.  I actually received a box of MTB’s to try close to two years ago.  At that time I was playing a different ball and didn’t want to change.  A couple of years later I got some more and finally decided to play them again this season as my game was in such bad shape I needed a gear and mental overhaul.

From the tee the MTB is comparable to a tour ball such as the ProV1.  This is bit more spin off the driver than balls I’ve tended toward in the past like the Bridgestone B330, and thus can be less accurate for me if my swing gets a little wild.  I also find that extra spin results in a little shorter overall distance off the driver for me.  These are the reasons I’d previously not opted to have the MTB as my “gamer” ball in the past.  There have been a few occasions where all launch factors have been perfect and I’ve hit massively long drives with the MTB.  Accidents happen.  Blind squirrel syndrome.  That said the ball is plenty long still and it does offer me the chance to “work the ball” (curve it) if I need to.  Balls with less driver spin are harder to work.

Approach and in is where the MTB has made a big difference in my game.  I’ve found my distance control has been much improved, though I must admit I also changed to different irons at the same time as my ball switch.  Trust me on this. The irons are not an issue. I really love the feel of the ball off my irons and I’ve been gaining more and more confidence with each round.  I’ve had some bad distance issues this season and when I made the iron and ball switch, those issues vanished.

I’m sticking approach shots now, even backing some up.  Most recently I recall some very nice mid-to-long irons stopping on a dime, like a 6-iron I hit last weekend from about 185 yards.  The ball mark was in the shadow of the ball.  Mark first, then fix. Don’t accidentally move the ball when fixing the mark!

Short game shots are where the MTB really shines.  My chipping and pitching (which I’ve whined about for a long time online) has been 1000x better.  I’m actually saving par often now because I have better feel and control around the greens. I’m finally able to get the ball close enough to the hole to make a par-saving putt.  In the case of par-5 holes, I’m chipping it close and making a 2-3 footer for birdie now.  Huge difference on the scorecard.

I’m enjoying the feel of putting with the MTB as well.  The urethane cover feels nice and soft and I have solid distance control.  When I miss a putt (not often!), I know my next one is going to be very close.  I like to “seam up” the MTB with it’s alignment arrows, which are also along the ball’s seam.  That helps my alignment.

Last week I played 41 holes with the MTB.  13 holes were a net match and then an 18 hole round a couple of days later.  Yes I trusted my net match outcome to the MTB and glad I did.  I won the match.  My total in relation to par over those 41 holes last week: +1.

Durability

Tour balls are typically not durable.  It’s hard to make a all with a soft urethane cover which resists scuffs, but the MTB does a fine job of it.  I expect a tour ball like this to last a round or two before I retire it to the practice ball bag, but the MTB’s are lasting longer than that.

Let’s do a little test.  Which of the balls below has been in play for 36+ holes?

It’s a trick question.  Both balls have been played over 36 holes.

Conclusion

At $31.99 via the Snell Golf website, these tour-level balls are roughly half the cost of some of the big name brand balls and offer comparable or even better performance.  Call it a two-fer.


2 responses to “Snell Golf My Tour Ball Review”

  1. joecarrow says:

    The Detailed information about “MTB” it’s worth reading.


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