EQUIPMENT

Adam Scott Visits the Miura Factory



Get a behind the scenes look as Champion Golfer Adam Scott travels to Himeji, Japan and tours the Miura Factory to get an up close look at the incredible forging process. Plus, Adam Scott provides insight into what went into the creation of the AS-1 irons.

LEARN MORE: https://miuragolf.com/pages/adam-scott

About Miura Golf

The Miura story is one of family, passion, and precision. It’s one focused on the power of touch and a belief in meticulous attention to detail. It’s one grounded by an unwavering commitment to the pursuit of perfection.

It begins in Himeiji, Japan, with the art and discipline of samurai and ends with the finest hand-crafted golf clubs known to man. Our founder, Katsuhiro Miura, set out to make something elegant and refined, to create something beautiful, with the highest degree of integrity, something that isn’t done in the golf industry.

His patience and unique forging process ensures the grain of the steel is fine and uniformed, leading to a feel unlike anything else. The Miura feel. Every club is hand-crafted, one-by-one, and touched by Miura-San or one of his two sons, Shinei and Yoshitaka.

https://miuragolf.com

32 Comments

  1. That was really cool. Good for AS such a class act seems like a perfect fit to partner with Muira. I love the JDM companies and their art they produce

  2. I’m seeing more pros to gaming Miura’s in the future and rightfully so. I have the cb-301 and can say it’s the best feel irons and I’ve owned Titleist and Mizuno before fitted into Miura.

  3. What a great video, love seeing the family aspect of the company, very cool

  4. Adam Scott is one of my favorite players on tour. If he could just putt, he would had at least 6 majors under his belt.

  5. Most people I've talked to who've hit miura and mizuno prefer the feel of the Mizuno, including myself. I bought a 6-iron of Miura mb 101 and I have a full set of srixon blades, I put the exact same shaft in both and hit 1000s of balls with them and guess what? the ball flight, feel and everything else is indistinguishable. the only difference between the two was that I paid 3x as much for thr miura as I did for srixon. Don't fall for the marketing. I am glad I only bought 1 club instead of a full set which costs over $3,000. Also, most pros don't even play blades. 3rd strike is a marketing lingo. Means nothing from scientific perepective.

  6. I forgot mention, I also have Tigers irons with his spec (at lesst that's what TM claims), and I've took them apart to reshaft them and weighed the heads and they were very precise. Anyway. they too feel the same as srixons. So at the end of the day. as someone said, a blad is a blade is a blade. And the only time you'd think the feel is different from ome blade to another blade is because you didn't hit them in the center (sweet spot). Golf business is 99% based on bogus marketing. How else would they sell a new driver every year claiming it's longer in distance than last year. Well, by now your driver hit should be carrying 500yds with a 100mph SS, according to their marketing.

  7. Fantastic video. To see the care and craftsmanship behind each Miura club was incredible. And seeing the close family connections throughout the process makes Miura clubs truly special.

  8. Adam in heaven in earth! He got a lesson from Miura San, something you can't buy with money. What a wonderful set of irons he got! I would take a set too…..
    Japanese forged irons are the best you can get! I hope they will win a major with Adam Scott.

  9. Please next time give everyone safety glasses, i have had sparks in one eye and it HURTS especially when the spark sticks to the eye ball. (ouch)

  10. This was the first time I understood that Adam's logo says "as". Always thought they were to s's mirrored for some reason 😀

  11. This is amazing.
    Love to see how detailed everyone is to their craft.
    Thank you for sharing.

  12. Great video. Adam Scot always comes across really well but it is also fascinating to see Japanese master craftsmen at work. Those blades look awesome but, sadly, I would never be brave enough to try them!

Write A Comment