If your best swing thought arrives somewhere between the turn and the clubhouse, you’re the audience for the Stewart Golf podcast. The British electric trolley brand has launched The Stewart Golf Podcast with three episodes dropping at once—ready to stream on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts for anyone who likes their golf chat unfiltered and their stories properly told.
Stewart Golf has been in the modern walking-game business since 2003, when it launched its first electric trolley and began building a following that’s quietly become a who’s-who of sport and entertainment. The brand’s hook is simple: golf doesn’t just give you shots—it gives you time. Time that, in the right hands, turns into the kind of conversation you can’t force in a studio.
“As someone who’s been fortunate enough to play golf with many of them, I’ve benefitted from one of the things that golf gives us: time. Time to talk, to listen, and to really connect,” said Stewart Golf CEO Mark Stewart. “It’s been a privilege to be able to talk candidly with these household names and get a real window into their world to learn why they are so passionate about golf.”
The line-up: familiar faces, proper stories
Headlining the opening run is iconic broadcaster Vernon Kay, a Stewart ambassador for more than 20 years. The man has been around golf long enough to have the sort of stories that don’t need embellishment—friendship with Tiger Woods, his work for Children in Need, and those golfing moments you remember long after the card’s been binned.
Joining him for the initial launch are England cricketer James Taylor and former Red Arrows pilot Mike Bowden—two very different lives, one familiar obsession. If you’ve ever noticed how golfers can talk gear one minute and life philosophy the next, this is that, done with intent.
Where to listen to The Stewart Golf Podcast
The first three episodes are available now across:
That matters because golfers don’t live in one app. Some listen in the car, some on the range, and some in the kitchen while pretending they’re “just stretching.” The Stewart Golf podcast has sensibly met everyone where they already are.
What Stewart Golf is really selling here: connection
This series sits neatly in the traditional heart of golf—shared rounds, shared time, shared talk—while using a modern format that suits how people actually consume media now. In other words, it respects the old rhythms of the game, but doesn’t expect the audience to live in 1998.
The stated aim is to celebrate the personalities and perspectives that define the sport, and to bring the community a little closer through conversation that feels like it happened naturally—not like it was sanded down by committee.
And there’s an unusually blunt detail that speaks volumes about the relationships Stewart has built.
“What makes this podcast truly special is that every one of our guests has given their time completely free of charge – a real testament to the strength of the Stewart Golf brand and to the relationships we’ve built over the years,” continues Mark Stewart.
That’s not a sponsorship line; that’s a signal. In a world where everyone has an agent, free time is the rarest currency—and Stewart has managed to get people to spend it willingly.
What’s next
Two additional episodes are already recorded and set for release early next year, which is the right cadence: enough time to keep it feeling like an event, not so long that you forget you subscribed.
If you’re the sort of golfer who likes a podcast that sounds like the best part of a fourball—curious, funny, occasionally revealing—this one is worth adding to the weekly rotation.
The Stewart Golf podcast is not trying to reinvent golf. It’s doing something more sensible: reminding you that golf’s best feature has always been the conversation between shots.