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Keeping you in the swing
Club maker Andrew Hodson serves his customers at the golf course

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by Arthur Utley
for Virginia Business Options
March 2006

The tinker-with-golf-clubs gene revealed itself to club maker Andrew Hodson before he became a teenager.
In those days — the mid-to-late 1970s — the golf technology boom we know today was still a figment of someone’s imagination. Choices were limited. Clubs had steel shafts. Irons were thin blades and unforgiving. Putters didn’t have perimeter weighting and face balancing. Woods were really made out of wood.

Hodson, whose father, Peter, was an assistant and then head golf professional at Willow Oaks Country Club in Richmond, earned his allowance by putting new grips on clubs. Young Andrew got 25 cents a grip.

By the time Hodson was 14, he was adept at refinishing woods and making them look new again. "I was around golf from sunup to sundown, and I liked messing around with the clubs. I had a knack for it," Hodson says, remembering those days fondly.

After graduating from college, Hodson turned his skill into an income-generating venture. Today, he operates Richmond-based Hodson Golf, which offers custom club making and mobile fitting and repair services. Mobile is the key word. Drawing from the example of equipment vans and trailers that are on-site at major professional golf tournaments, Hodson brings his services to the golfers with his mobile equipment lab. "From day one, that’s been the business model for me," says Hodson, 38. On his business card next to “location,” it says: "Wherever you need us!"

You can spot the van at most of the state’s major tournaments, such as the State Amateur and State Open, or the Valentine Invitational at Hermitage Country Club or the Willow Oaks Fall Invitational. Some of the best players in the state use his quick, PGA Tour-level skills on clubs for regripping and reshafting or changing their lie or loft. "I think it gives the tournaments a little extra zip to have him on-site. It’s like at a Tour event," says Willow Oaks member Steve Isaacs, who has leadership roles on the tournament committees for the State Open and Willow Oaks Fall Invitational.

You can spot Hodson’s van near the driving range at public courses such as Independence Golf Club in Midlothian and The Crossings in Henrico County, or at private clubs such as Kinloch Golf Club in Goochland County or Willow Oaks. Hodson also drives the van to the international PGA merchandise show in Florida every February.

Despite his reputation, Hodson’s business is a second source of income. By day, he works as a senior real estate assessor for Henrico County. Hodson is married and has two children under the age of 10. Unlike the days of his youth, he doesn’t want to spend all his daylight hours at the golf course — so he sets his schedule with that in mind. Usually he’ll be at a course one or two afternoons a week and once a weekend.

When Hodson was a teenager, working with clubs meant bending, grinding, re-gripping and reshafting. He bought clubs from club professionals, and the choices were limited to a few major manufacturers. Graphite shafts hadn’t appeared, and there wasn’t much of a components (club making) market. By the early to mid-1980s, Golfsmith and Ralph Maltby’s Golf Works began carving a niche for custom club making, thanks in part to consumers purchasing knockoffs and clones of the top-level manufactured clubs for a quarter to half the price.

Golfers, among the most impulsive of consumers, know how expensive name-brand equipment is, whether it is bought from a club pro, the large discount chains, a catalog or the Internet. Name-brand price markup is huge. Custom clubs “are a pretty good incentive to better your game and not spend a fortune,” Hodson says.

Forty percent of Hodson’s business involves custom clubs. The range of components — heads for all clubs, shafts and grips — is vast, and Hodson has a large inventory. His components are high end, and some are rated higher in quality than many of the name brands. His forte is forged irons, the type used by most good players. His charges vary depending on the shaft and the design of the head of the club. Typically, his irons average about $100 each while drivers range from $400 to $500 each.

Another service Hodson provides is club fitting. You’ll find the van parked at or near the driving range at courses for a reason. “I’ve always despised hitting balls into nets,” Hodson says. “You can watch ball flight at a driving range.” A launch monitor, perhaps the most valuable piece of technology for club makers, provides Hodson with the launch angle, launch speed and ball spin a golfer generates with his or her swing. Those parameters help determine what shaft fits the golfer best. Selecting a head that looks good is important to golfers, but the proper shaft, especially if it’s graphite, is the real key.

Ken Hart, the equipment manager at the University of Richmond, found the shafts in his clubs weren’t what he thought they were, and he purchased custom irons from Hodson, who offers his services to golf team members at UR and at Virginia Commonwealth University. “How many people have the ability to tell you the specifics of the golf club you should be hitting?” asks Hart. “I played five years with Wilson fat shafts that were supposed to be regular shafts, and it turned out they were senior shafts. His trailer has absolutely everything every man and every woman needs to make it right for them. Cost definitely had something to do with [buying the irons].”

Hodson’s inventory is why the golf professionals at the clubs where he sets up don’t view his work as competition. “He’s providing support for what we can’t do. He can offer people quick, on-site repair, and I can’t afford to keep that kind of inventory,” Willow Oaks head pro Richard White says. “And he happens to be a very likeable guy. He takes great pride in what he’s providing.”

Hodson could make club making his primary job, but the turnover rate in the profession is high. The ranks of Class A club makers plying a visible trade in the Richmond area has dwindled to just Hodson in the past couple of years. “You have to know your market, and you have to be good at it,” he says. “The technology changes so much you can get swamped trying to keep up with the components.”