Let it be known that Odyssey Golf listens. They listen to their Tour staff, their professional staff, sales team, and they listen to us. Why do I lead with this? Because finally, the company is giving us what so many have asked for, the White Hot is back!
That said, in the immortal words of one LL Cool J, “Don’t call it a comeback, I been here for years”.
For 2021 Odyssey Golf is officially releasing the White Hot OG lineup of putters, and this putter nerd who has been screaming from the rooftops for years about officially bringing the greatest putter insert of all-time back couldn’t hold back the excitement even if I wanted to.
Let’s dive in.
Legend of the White Hot
Before we get to the White Hot OG line, it is worth diving into just what makes the re-release of this insert such a big deal. Normally, if a company goes back to the well then there will be keyboard warriors and squeaky wheels whining until the cows come home, but the White Hot isn’t just tech, its legend, and from THE #1 putter company on Tour for the last decade that is saying a lot.
I realize writing this, that though some will fondly remember the White Hot and hold it in the same regard as so many of us do, after all Odyssey admits to hearing a desire for this insert to come back for years upon years, others may not have been around to experience the heyday. If that is the case, I bet you have still seen the insert either on a course somewhere or just on TV as over half of the company’s Tour staff uses the White Hot insert retrofitted into their modern putter head-shapes.
The White Hot insert came about when Odyssey’s putter designers were looking for insert materials and had a conversation with Callaway’s golf ball engineers. In that conversation they were lead to the also legendary Rule 35 golf ball and its urethane material. The material itself is a two-part urethane that is firm to the initial touch, but under impact performs much softer and these traits allow it to have better rebound and faster speed compared to other soft feeling options. This is what gives the White Hot insert its legendary feel and roll combo.
For years now, the company has tried to replicate the feel of the White Hot while improving the roll, and to do that they continuously tried to match the hardness as closely as possible, but even as they have accomplished that, something was still off feel and sound wise. Turns out, when they looked at the flex of White Hot compared to their other inserts, though the various designs may have had the same hardness, none of them compared to the White Hot in how it flexes. What does it mean? Basically, that the White Hot was the perfect storm, and though they have designed many inserts since that put a better overall performance roll on the ball, the White Hot remains the be-all for many.
So here we are, 20 years later, and the White Hot is back. Not only is it back, Odyssey wants it made clear, this isn’t a new take on the original, this is the original. The formula, composition, processes, and the way it is cast into sheets and then cut for the models is all the same. It is truly the OG.
Odyssey White Hot OG
While the insert is clearly the star of the show here, Odyssey didn’t want to just throw it into any old head design, nor did they want to miss on the looks. So, they went through their arsenal and selected some of their most popular designs, then they focused in on milling the heads and finishing them with a classic satin silver PVD. With major attention paid to the edge radii of the putters as well as fine milling marks, the company vehemently believes when combined with sole weights, clean graphics, as well as an all-new Stroke Lab (SL) shaft and popular DFX grip in grey, that they will make a lot of golfers incredibly happy.
While the putters will be available with steel shafts for a lower price, the new Stroke Lab is sure to turn some heads. Some of you have spotted a couple on Tour already and the Candy Apple Red upper section is a major departure from the stealthy black of the previous iteration. The new SL has a shorter stepless steel section, is 7 grams lighter, and is a stiffer overall profile which has led to Odyssey’s testing to show 6% more consistent time to impact, 9% more consistent impact location, and a 6% more consistent swing arc.
As for the head shapes, the ever popular #1 and #1 WS (wide sole) make up the blade models alongside the classic #5 SB (single bend) for the mid-mallet option. For mallets, the Rossie with a thinner topline and modernized overall flow is returning in a double bend and slant neck, and naturally their most popular shapes of all time the 2-Ball in double bend, #7 in double bend, and slant neck are also coming to the party.
The Odyssey White Hot OG putters will drop on 1/28/21 and come in at $219.99 for steel and $269.99 with the new Stroke Lab. Do not miss our THP Showcase next week featuring testing of each of these new putters and so much more.
Mike,
Great question. We were buzzing the entire video chat with them. They made the point that the shaft matters and is a big focus for them. As for the duration of the shaft development, I don’t recall them saying a time frame for it and don’t have it in my notes. They specifically called out looking at the feedback from the original shaft and looking for ways to improve upon it. @xThor @Muchmore18 @Tevenor did any of you recall them giving a development time for the new SL shaft?
They held these up in the video chat and they look sharp. They did mention that these use a magnetic closure which I know many will like!
Nothing timeline related that I can remember. But certain parts of the presentation seemed to go at warp speed with how much info we were being given. So I may have missed that as well if they did mention it
Fixed it for you lol they wanted us to be very aware they were magnets and not velcro!
Heh, it’s a small detail but an important one! I very much dislike velcro headcovers at this point.
Same! Magnets all day!
Can confirm </redacted>
From a pure performance and roll standpoint, I don’t think many would argue with you on that. I think the nostalgia and feel of the white hot is what people will chase with this line. Options are great, and personal preference is a thing. If it was a 1 size fits all type of world, I’m sure Luke and Odyssey would have everyone in a mallet with the microhinge star insert.
I am in the same boat with you. Blue gloss spray paint?
Yes. They will be an option to go with stepless steel or the new Stroke Lab 2.0 shafts in red.
Truly appreciate this my man, thank you for diving in and reading it!
The article talks about them being steel or stroke lab, two different price points as well
There’s a pretty detailed explanation of the new Stroke Lab shafts in the article.
This is me also. But I will always grab a milled putter over an insert given a choice.
This is true. The Callaway guys felt the original white hot insert was ahead of its time and gives a great roll off the face with an exceptional feel but as far as plain performance they said the microhinge star insert is better.
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The OG of truly great inserts. I like how bold they are going with that moniker.
I use a white hot pro Havok model from about 2014 or so. Wondering if this is the same insert or not.
Not the same insert. This was pre-White Hot Pro
This isn’t being offered as a new and improved insert. It’s the same formulation and insert of old.
If you want new and improved, that’s where the microhinge star insert comes in.
They have improved the insert over time which is why it had different iterations. But none of those had the same feel or sound that drew soooo many people in to the original White Hot in the first place. When you still have the amount of players still using an old White Hot insert putter as well as a large amount of tour players still using that exact insert, that’s the advertising in itself. I’ve never used a putter that had an original WH in it but I know exactly what it is. This release wasn’t about changing or improving as much as it was fulfilling the call from a loud majority of people wanting the insert itself in newer putters.
I don’t want anything — except a new putter. I buy one every year so this one is on my list. As I said – the insert was popular and no need to improve it…but it is unusual for the big manufacturers not to claim a new release is supposedly improved. OK – Odyssey is saying some of the new offering is improved…of course they would. I liked the feel of the old WH putters and happy to see it hasn’t been banished to a back room.
I thought @Jman explained all that pretty well in the article.
He explained everything wonderfully – but many folks are wondering why the enhanced urethane covers now being used on premium golf balls did not make it into the insert for this new release. I’m not losing any sleep over it because I too enjoyed the original WH feel and will be a buyer of the latest release.
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Because it’s not the same. It’s not all urethane that works, it was the specific two part urethane used in the Rule 35 golf ball.
I mean, you had a whole paragraph explaining how they had tried a bunch of different "new and improved" inserts for years, and none of them were as good as the original WH.
With the advancement of technology in graphite shafts and all shafts in general, it is crazy that it can help you with all the things above! I wonder if that is from the previous SL Shaft or all shafts.
Yes we understand that and the answer is obvious – this is the best WH-type insert. It is just interesting to some of us that after all the years of R&D they never came up with an insert that improves on the great original.
had zero to do with believing you – we always believe you
Because if it was new and improved it wouldn’t be the OG
From the previous Stroke Lab
Now I don’t believe you.
#shaftmatters