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Daniel Trevino revives HOF father’s sombrero logo in apparel line

Daniel Trevino revives HOF father’s sombrero logo in apparel line

ORLANDO – Tucked in a back corner of the apparel section of the Orange County Convention Center at the PGA Merchandise Show (booth No. 6738) is an upstart brand with an old-school logo.

Super Mex Golf is the creation of Daniel Trevino, son of World Golf Hall of Famer Lee Trevino, who made the sombrero logo with a golf club through it famous, beginning in 1967.

“Being Hispanic, and coming from where I came from, I’m proud of this logo because it shows that if you have perseverance, if you sacrifice, if you work hard – you can be successful. Not just in golf, in anything, you can be successful. That is what this logo’s all about,” Lee is quoted as saying in a postcard-size promotional piece describing the essence of the brand.

Nicknamed Super Mex, Lee had a style and swagger all his own. How Daniel decided to revive the logo — which was marketed by Wrangler during Lee’s heyday in the 1970s — and enter the apparel business is a story in its own right. He recalls making up a small batch of sombrero hats for himself and his dad and wearing them when he played in mini-tour events before COVID struck. He’d sweat in them during the tournament but when it was over his fellow competitors would fight over who could have them as a souvenir. (PGA Tour rookie Blaine Hale Jr. wore the logo at PGA Tour Qualifying School in December, noting he’s a big Lee Trevino fan.)

“I remember thinking there’s a business here,” Daniel said.

Super Mex Golf has a booth at the PGA Merchandise Show in Orlando for the first time. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

The family discussed licensing the logo to some apparel companies but decided they didn’t want to hand over control of the logo to a third party. Better to do it themselves. The success of pro golfer Zac Blair selling limited-run quantities of his Buck Club hats direct-to-consumer inspired Daniel’s approach. He took the money he earned playing in the 2019 PNC Championship and parlayed it into selling logoed Imperial hats and Dormie headcovers.

“I bought as much as I could with the $8,000 I had and when I sold them all I just kept re-investing what I made into making more,” he said.

Daniel made the leap into the business about 18 months ago, initially stashing his inventory in his parents’ garage to the point that it took up so much space that Lee had to park his car outside. Daniel says he’s shipped over 4,000 orders and taped every box and mailed them at the post office himself. In May 2023, he…

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