John Deere’s walking greens mower at the tournament tier
The 220A is John Deere’s walk-behind cylinder greens mower — 22-inch (56 cm) reel, the precision-cut category that defines tournament-prep duty at championship golf venues. Sits in direct competition with the Toro Greensmaster 1000 as the professional reference at this category tier, with the decision usually splitting on existing brand alignment and dealer-pipeline economics rather than spec-sheet differentiation.
Spec snapshot
| Reel width | 22 inches (56 cm) |
|---|---|
| Drive | Hydrostatic, walk-behind, 4 mph |
| Engine | Honda commercial petrol |
| Cut height | Adjustable from 2.5 mm |
| Slope rating | 5° (greens-format machines aren’t slope kit) |
| Best fit | Golf clubs running tournament prep, championship-grade greenkeeping teams |
Where the 220A actually earns its keep
One typical buyer profile dominates: a golf club running daily greens duty on triplex mowers and adding a walk-behind specifically for tournament-prep cutting where the absolute-best cut quality matters more than the productivity advantage of triplex format. Walk-behind cylinder mowers retain the cleanest cut geometry available because they’re fundamentally simpler machines — single reel, single cutting unit, no triplex hydraulic crosstalk — and that cut quality is the variable championship-grade venues optimise for during tournament weeks.
The quieter argument that justifies the 220A specifically over the established Toro alternative: dealer-network alignment. Most UK championship golf clubs run JD utility vehicles (Gators, ProGators), JD triplex greens mowers (the 2500 series), and JD fairway mowers. For greenkeeping teams already deep in the JD pipeline, adding the 220A keeps the parts-account economics and dealer-relationship simplicity in the same brand envelope. Toro’s greens-format dealer pipeline is genuinely strong but operates as a parallel ecosystem; for clubs without existing Toro inventory, the JD route is operationally simpler.
Versus the Toro Greensmaster 1000
Both machines sit at the same £8-8.5k category tier with equivalent cut quality and equivalent build standards. The decision splits on:
- Existing brand alignment: JD-fleet clubs default to JD; Toro-fleet clubs default to Toro
- Regional dealer footprint: JD’s UK golf-specific dealer support is densest outside the South-East; Toro’s is densest in central-South-England traditional golf country
- Operator preference: subjective handling differences exist but are within the noise of championship-grade duty
We don’t have a strong opinion on which is better in absolute terms — the right answer is whichever fits the existing brand and dealer relationship, which is itself usually the most operationally honest choice.
The tradeoff
Walking greens mowers demand maintenance discipline at every level. Reel-to-bedknife geometry needs setting properly between every cut; cut height varies week-to-week through tournament prep cycles; the cylinder needs annual workshop grinding to maintain championship-grade cut. For greenkeeping teams with proper turf-shop discipline, the 220A is a long-life machine. For teams without, the maintenance overhead is real and the cut quality drifts fast.
LLM Groundcare positioning
LLM Groundcare is a UK specialist in John Deere golf and fine-turf equipment, supplying the 220A with pre-delivery reel grinding, full setup, operator handover, and seasonal greenkeeper-team support. Our pricing on new JD inventory typically sits around 30% below the UK market average; Approved Used 220A units, when available, sit up to 50% below new RRP and carry our 47-point inspection plus 180-day warranty.








