TaylorMade 2010 US Open Staff Bag
TaylorMade 2010 Summer Commemorative Bag
The Taylor Made 2010 Summer Commemorative US Open Staff Bag is a Limited Edition staff bag celebrating the US Open Major Championship of 2010. This is 1 of only 205 serialized bags made in the United States. Constructed of Anodized and Micro Perforated Synthetic leather for a classic-contemporary look. It features a 9.5-inch top with a 6-way velour lined top and full-length dividers.Product Features:
- Anodized and Micro Perforated Synthetic Leather
- 9.5" inch top
- Six Way Velour Top with full length shaft dividers
- Ten Total pockets, including a velour lined valuables pocket
- Integrated Umbrella Sleeve
- Removable Belly Panel for custom branding
- Compatible with Fast Action Snap Technology
- Weight: 11.4lbs
golf.com wrote an article explaining the hidden meaning within the TaylorMade 2010 Summer Logo. "The '8' in the middle of the logo represents the layout of Pebble Beach Golf Links, which coils over and around the rocky shores of the Pacific Ocean in a path that looks like an eight.
The clam shell at the bottom symbolizes the annual Clam Bake hosted by Bing Crosby that eventually became the PGA Tour's AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.
The center of the design features the grill from a 1936 Duesenberg, a classic American car. Each year on the third Sunday of August, along the Pebble Beach's 18th fairway, the resort hosts the Concourse d'Elegance, a vintage car and motorcycle competition.
The angel-shaped hood ornament with a flame in the center represents the Lone Cypress Guardian Angel. In 1984, the famous 'Lone Cypress,' a 200-hundred year old tree that sat solemnly atop a rock on the Monterey, caught fire. A woman living nearby noticed the blaze, alerted Pebble Beach Security and the tree, was saved.
Under the car's grill and the angel is a wall—similar to the seawall that runs alongside the 18th fairway and green. It's that made from five stones which represent the five U.S. Opens that Pebble Beach has hosted (1972, 1982, 1992, 2000, 2010)."







