The Nike Golf Tee: 10 Years Later
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The Nike Golf Tee: 10 Years Later

The Nike Golf Tee: 10 Years Later

Written By: Tony Covey

From time to time golf companies need a little help reinvigorating, energizing, or re-branding themselves. And sometimes companies just need help stepping out of their own tightly-packed corporate boxes. When those needs arise, the biggest names in golf often turn to industrial design firms to bring the sexy back to stale product lines.

Although you may never have heard of them, design firms like Priority Designs and The Hive have played major roles in designing products for the biggest names in golf. While their corporate logos never made it onto the clubs, these companies are responsible for products like TaylorMade’s R7 series and Nike’s VRS Covert lineup.

Not Every Design Becomes Reality

Of course, not everything these design firms create makes it to a retail shelf near you. Sometimes what looks like a really cool idea never makes it past the concept phase. Take for example these concept drawings of what could have become Nike’s High Performance Golf Tees.

nike-tee-3

In 2004 a “product innovation firm” called Altitude Inc. was asked to design a better golf tee for Nike.

“As part of our effort, we were also tasked to re-invent the golf tee, increasing its height to enhance the performance of Nike’s new over-sized driver. We analyzed incumbent golf tees, the physics of the swing, ball set-up, and other tactical elements. We also examined the attributes customers desired, such as performance and convenience. Our research and design efforts yielded a diverse range of 33 concepts, and a standing ovation from Nike. Provided free with Nike clubs, these distinctive tees demonstrate Nike innovation, while helping golfers perform better and enjoy the sport at an elevated level. Nike is currently evaluating the four prototype designs for large-scale production.” – Altitude Inc.

nike-tee-2

The more noteworthy concepts from Altitude’s include:

Card (pictured left) – a flat design that enables easy storage.

Spline (pictured right) – a design the cradles the ball and moves it away from the stem, reducing club interference. Score lines on the stem make it easy to set the tee at  a consistent height.

Genie (pictured middle) – the upper (made from recycled cellulose powder) is designed to disintegrate on impact, while the bottom half (made from time-released fertilizer) is designed to stay in the ground and help keep the course healthy.

Mojo Interior – features a liquid center that Altitude suggested be brewed from Tiger Woods’ sweat, turf from Scotland, sand from Pebble Beach and tears from the Nike goddess.

Mojo – a bright orange power core increases visibility while the hourglass shape helps manage friction.

According to the Altitude website, at one point in time Nike was evaluating 4 of 33 prototype designs they created for large-scale production. The designs were featured on the cover of Innovation Magazine and also won a 2004 Business Week/IDEA Gold award in 2004. Despite the accolades within the design community; as far as we know, not a single one of these tees made it to retail.

nike-tee-4

The Tee Matters

In our MyGolfSpy Labs article on Golf Tees, we showed that the tee can make a huge difference in performance (in once case 15.7 yards more than the standard wooden tee), so we’d certainly be interested to see how these prototypes would perform in the real world. Who knows why Nike never let them see the light of day, but as Nike is fond of saying, “there is no finish line”. So within that context, it’s possible that it’s not too late for these interesting (and shall we say unique?) designs to become reality.

 

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Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony is the Editor of MyGolfSpy where his job is to bring fresh and innovative content to the site. In addition to his editorial responsibilities, he was instrumental in developing MyGolfSpy's data-driven testing methodologies and continues to sift through our data to find the insights that can help improve your game. Tony believes that golfers deserve to know what's real and what's not, and that means MyGolfSpy's equipment coverage must extend beyond the so-called facts as dictated by the same companies that created them. Most of all Tony believes in performance over hype and #PowerToThePlayer.

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey





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      David W

      10 years ago

      Who wouldn’t want to use a golf tee that an OB/Gyn might mistake for one of his instruments!

      Reply

      RON

      10 years ago

      Why cant this company nike learn how to make a website , its a joke.

      Reply

      John Vu

      10 years ago

      Ok. I thought this was real until the mojo interior section. April fools day came early MGS?

      Reply

      Hadrian P.

      10 years ago

      These are very interesting concepts, especially the Spline design. But I guess the reason they did not make it was because NIke thought they would not be profitable.

      Reply

      Finalist

      10 years ago

      How can you improve on a wooden tee? Height adjustable, bio, stick it the green as a ball marker or pitch repair.

      Reply

      Golfer Burnz

      10 years ago

      These are pretty cool, but they harken back to the days of the metallic gold nudy tees.

      Reply

      Peter Ciambrone

      10 years ago

      Can you post a link to your tee testing? I’m wondering which tee would give someone 15 extra yards? I want one!

      Reply

      markb

      10 years ago

      It was the 4 yards more tee. But I think their testing sample size was very small.

      Reply

      Christopher

      10 years ago

      Those 4 Yards More™ tees look deadly. So deadly I’d use them as blow-darts to knock-out slow players in the groups ahead.

      All you need is an old x100 shaft and your favourite sedative … you can even use the tee on the next hole after you’ve retrieved it from the corpse … I mean peacefully asleep golfer.

      The Nike tees look neat but I wouldn’t want the loss of a tee that looks that cool to affect my game. They’d have to introduce a five minute search time maximum otherwise we’d never get off the tee-box!

      Michael L.

      10 years ago

      You mean to tell me… that “Nike innovation”… really isn’t “Nike innovation?”

      Reply

      cdvilla

      10 years ago

      If you look at the numbers Nike put up the last couple of years in the performance athletic socks department, you’d realize that there are untapped markets everywhere. I like the Zero Friction tees since they so rarely break. However, I found a crazy thick clear plastic tee the last time I played, used it and was killing drives… it’s now my gamer tee.

      Reply

      Gordon

      10 years ago

      Just…. Wow.

      Note to golf companies: You don’t have to produce absoutely everything related to the game and slap your logo on it to be taken seriously.
      Glad this never saw the light of day.

      The only one with any substance, would be the Genie design, but having either grass seed or a “fertilizer” in the base brings a ridiculous list of issues. I don’t want to carry a chemical in my pocket #1, and if made it out of grass seed… what if the course doesn’t use that grass on the tee box? Thats wouldnt work.
      Good concept, in theory, but they would literally have to be made for specific courses, that want players to use them. Couldn’t be sold over the counter.

      Reply

      Leftienige

      10 years ago

      I hear there might be one you can smoke !

      Reply

      adan

      10 years ago

      So had Nike jumped the shark or what?

      Reply

      golfer4life

      10 years ago

      I think MGS jumped the shark on this one. lol Just busting guys. It is better than reading one of TMs 47 releases in the last few weeks. Have a great New Year guys. Hope to see some of you at the show in a few weeks.
      G4L

      Reply

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