The History of NITELITE® Golf
Corky Newcomb'72 didn't really intend to become
an inventor of zany sporting goods and the writer of outrageous puns.
He meant to be a hotel administrator like his parents, who ran a resort
for many years in Wolfeboro, NH But somewhere on the way to a quiet, sane
life, Newcomb took a detour.
It began in 1972 when he visited a Civil War battlefield in Richmond, Va.,
where his great-great-grandfather was killed. Looking down at the ground,
Newcomb saw bullets scattered about -- and entrepreneurial possibilities.
Soon he had a large crew digging up nearly half a million Civil War bullets
in the Richmond area, which he sold in paperweights and letter openers to
Nieman Marcus. It was his first taste of what he calls "the
fever," the excitement of taking an idea and seeing it through
to a marketable product.
For a few years, Newcomb worked at a Dallas hotel, but "the fever"
won out. "I quit my job and sold bullets," Newcomb
recalls. "Then I started thinking,
'What's next?'" He was playing touch football at sundown one
day with his brothers, and "one of them said, 'If we had a
football that lit up, we could play touch football at night with girls.'
I think it was the 'girls' part that got my attention,"
says Newcomb.
The resulting product was a plastic football with an inserted
tube of hydrogen peroxide gel that glows when bent. A baseball player at
UNH, Newcomb next invented -- after 58 prototypes -- the Automatic Curve
baseball and its cousin, the Automatic Slider, which look like baseballs
with a slice taken off one side. (Newcomb, who gets to meet famous athletes
through his work, likes to tell a funny story about baseball great Carlton
Fisk '69 and how Fisk claims to have gotten the Automatic Curve ball idea
first, hitting apples with a slice missing in an orchard in his hometown.)
Newcomb now markets dozens of items, and writing the slogans for them brings
out his penchant for puns: Jungle Balls, for example, which trade on the
Tiger Woods craze, are "guaranteed to make you a scratch golfer"
and produce "purr-fect putts and drives." Laughing
about his propensity for groaners, Newcomb admits, "I'm just
whacked. Somehow I got that chromosome. I enjoy making people laugh."
But underneath the wacky names and whimsical
advertising, Newcomb has an earnest goal: to make products that help people
have fun or play better.
His Wolfeboro Falls, N.H., company, C.N. is Believing, markets illuminated
products that extend the number of hours people can play games outdoors.
The Won Putt golf ball helps golfers perfect their putting strokes.
The Automatic Curvebaseball gives baseball players a chance to practice
hitting tough pitches. The Big Shot Golfball is 20 percent
larger and easier to get airborne; the Birdie golf ball has a badminton
shuttlecock attached and allows golfers to practice driving in their backyard.
The NITELITE® golf ball is his biggest success thus far. Tournaments
using the glowing golf balls have been described by participants as "a
hoot," but Newcomb claims serious golfers find their game
actually improves. "There are no distractions, since the only
thing you can see is the ball," he points out.
Over 207,000 NITELITE® tournaments have been held worldwide, he says.
Newcomb hasn't totally given up on a sane life: during the summer, he and
his wife, Betsey Brodrick Newcomb '76, manage The
Heritage, part of the resort formerly owned by his parents on Lake Winnipesaukee.
His guests, as well as his two teenage children, are happy to test out his
latest inventions. His kids particularly like the new lighted badminton
shuttlecock. "The only trouble is," he says, "they'd
play all night if we let them."
|