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Vince
Ciurluini continued his championship form by winning the
Northern California Long Drive title during the weekend
of May 3-4. His driver is powered by a Harrison Sports Pro
2.5 Ti Tip.
Also
scoring wins with Harrison Sports shafts were Don Carpenter
and Tom Bryant at consecutive Florida Developmental Tour
events. Both used the Harrison Professional
Steel shafts in their irons, which feature a state-of-the-art
stepless design. Well-known club maker, Glen Belden, built
the sets for both Carpenter and Bryant.
The
Harrison Titanium
Series incorporates "jointless titanium tip technology,"
a patent-pending process that integrates a layer of titanium
onto the tip section. The tip section typically is the weakest
part of the shaft, but adding the strength of titanium increases
stability while retaining light weight. Its playing characteristics
reduce shaft twisting to promote more precise shotmaking.
"Harrison
Sports shaft dominance in long drive competitions over the
last decade continually testify to the company's ability
to make shafts that launch drives on a trajectory that produces
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greater
distance," Harrison Sports President Michael Cheng said.
"Competitors using Harrison shafts in their drivers have
won 7 of the last 10 World Long Drive Championships."
The
Florida Developmental Tour is a summer series of events
for golfers aged 18-44 years old. Carpenter was the only
golfer to break par, shooting a two-under 214 for the three
rounds at the Sportsman Resort in Perdido, Fla. The Tallahassee,
Fla., resident earned a first-place check of $2,746.
Bryant's
win came at the Lost Key Golf Club in Perdido, Fla. Bryant,
from Holly Hill, Fla., shot a three-round 207, nine under
par, to claim the first-place check of $2,874.
Whether
in the clubs of tour professionals or every-day golfers,
Harrison shafts are made to the same exacting specifications
that promote distance and accuracy. The company is headquartered
in Pacoima, Calif., and boasts of more than 140 top-10 finishes
and 20 tour championship wins.
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