We are giving away our prototype zero-torque putter.
Not on the website yet - no one else has one.
Here's how to win.
• Retweet this tweet
• Fill out the form in the next tweet
70 lie
3 loft
303 Stainless Steel
Winner can choose the below:
• RH or LH
• Length
• Black or Chrome Shaft
Runs through Monday, 2/2 at 5:00 pm Central. Winner will be selected by 6:00 pm Central on 2/2.
WATCH: ‘CBS Evening News’ anchor @TonyDokoupil on how the gold-medal-winning men’s hockey team and their unabashed patriotism “rang some sort of a bell in America” that “gave people chills, goose bumps, made them cry even” and reminded us that, while “America is a complicated place,” it’s our “home and, therefore, easy to love”.....
“Only in America, a moment that called to mind a picture of this country that it turns out millions of us were missing. I'm talking of course about Sunday's USA hockey game. The men's team won its first Olympic gold and 46 years, beating Canada in overtime and, by now, you've seen the images of Jack Hughes, 24, Florida born who left blood on the ice quite literally before scoring the winning goal and telling a reporter through broken teeth, ‘this is all about our country right now. I love the USA.’ 5,000 miles away, those comments, as much as the win itself, rang some sort of a bell in America. It gave people chills, goose bumps, made them cry even. Countless masses took a social media to say exactly that and more. It was everything about this team. A bunch of guys who played Toby Keith in the locker room celebration, drank beers during the postgame press conference, cheers to you guys, even thanked the troops in another interview. Hughes was even patriotic in his commentary on American health care.”
“They were gracious in victory and big hearted too, bringing to the ice the children of a teammate who was killed 18 months ago by an alleged drunk driver. They were, in short, American and nothing about that fact seemed complicated for them, even though we're all grown ups and we know America is a complicated place. What they remind us is that it is also home and, therefore, easy to love.”
One of the best stories in CFB is Lawson Luckie, his brother and his mother. I wasn’t aware of it until yesterday but it’s inspiring to see the families love for his brother through thick and thin.
His mother is a saint.