There is a specific corner of golf content where the entire hook is simple: hit it far, hit it fast, and show the proof. These creators sit at the intersection of long drive, speed training, and “tee shot intimidation,” and they influence what golfers practice, what drivers they buy, and which speed tools keep showing up in bags.
Golf Influencer Niche Report
The Power Tee Box List
These creators are known for speed, distance, and “bomb” culture content.
Some are long drive champions, some are long drive competitors, and some are distance-first coaches who teach golfers how to add speed responsibly.
Speed and distance content
Proof-forward clips
Gear + training influence
How this list is curated
- Emphasis on creators whose public positioning is clearly speed and distance.
- Includes long drive champions and active long drive competitors, plus distance-first “hit it farther” educators.
- Links go to public profiles for easy verification.
1️⃣ Kyle Berkshire
One of the most visible long drive stars in creator golf. His content is built around speed, ball speed records, and high-energy “bomb” challenges.
Why he matters in this niche
- Pure distance credibility plus collab-friendly entertainment formats.
- Great for product demos that require repeated use: speed trainers, drivers, shafts, balls.
- Content style is naturally “proof first,” which makes sponsor integrations feel less scripted.
2️⃣ Martin Borgmeier
Long drive champion energy with a strong creator presence. His videos often combine elite speed with “real golfer” humor and collab battles.
Signature lane
Distance battles, undercover style golf bits, and “can I beat” matchups where speed becomes the story.
3️⃣ Justin James
A world long drive champion with a training-forward identity, often tied to power, fitness, and measurable speed development.
Best brand fit
- Strength and conditioning products that need an authority voice.
- Speed training tools, launch monitor workflows, training plans.
- Programming partnerships, not only “one post” sponsorships.
4️⃣ Zack Holton
A rising name in the long drive competitive lane with visible tour recognition messaging on his profile, which makes him worth tracking for “next wave” distance content.
Why watch in 2026
Competitive long drive momentum often turns into creator momentum, especially when the content mixes training, travel, and tournament week storytelling.
5️⃣ Colton Casto
A long drive competitor profile that highlights strong placement and “player of the year” style messaging, plus consistent long drive culture content.
Content lane that works
- Big drive clips, event moments, and personality-driven “distance culture.”
- Strong fit for drivers, shafts, tees, gloves, and performance apparel.
6️⃣ Scottie Pearman
A long drive competitor account that leans into competitive results and monster-drive proof clips. Great for audiences that want the “real tour” vibe.
Sponsor friendly angle
Tournament-week content makes partnerships feel natural because the product is part of preparation and performance, not a separate pitch.
7️⃣ Josh Koch
“Hit bombs” teaching identity with long drive wins baked into the positioning. Good for golfers who want speed, but also want instruction and sequencing cues.
Why his lane converts
- Instruction makes distance feel achievable, not only genetic.
- Perfect for training aids, mobility tools, and speed programming.
- Best performing partnership formats are short drill sequences with a measurable checkpoint.
8️⃣ Maurice Allen
A long drive star with a broader public identity and strong visibility. His content blends distance, personality, and bigger-than-golf storytelling.
Best use case
Big moments, campaigns, and events where the goal is cultural reach plus undeniable distance credibility.
9️⃣ Ken Long
A distance creator who positions himself directly in the long drive lane and publishes speed-forward golf clips. Strong for the “everyday golfer wants bombs” audience.
Sponsor fit
- Training aids, grips, gloves, tees, and “small gear” that shows up in every drive clip.
- Best when the product has a clear role in the setup, constraint, or feel cue.
🔟 Cassandra Marie
Golf plus fitness positioning with distance-friendly energy. Useful for brands that sell performance, training, and athletic golf identity.
Why she fits the distance niche
Distance content performs best when it looks athletic and repeatable, not only “one lucky swing.” Fitness-forward creators are a natural bridge for speed training products.
1️⃣1️⃣ SofiaTheSwede
A long drive athlete profile with performance and training emphasis. A good watch for women’s long drive visibility and strength-forward golf content.
Good partnership angle
- Performance products for training blocks: mobility, strength tools, recovery, speed trainers.
- Event appearances and clinics, where long drive is used as the crowd magnet.
1️⃣2️⃣ Abby Marting
A professional long driver presence that is easy to brief: distance identity, event availability, and clear niche alignment.
Best content formats
On-range speed sessions, long drive event clips, and “how I train for distance” segments that make products feel like part of preparation.
Quick comparison table
Tool: Ball Speed to Distance Potential
Quick estimate based on common rules of thumb used in distance training. Results vary by launch, spin, strike quality, altitude, and conditions.
Results appear here.
