| D416670 | Golf shoe outsole | November, 1999 | Singer | D2/955 |
| D420209 | Golf shoe outsole | February, 2000 | Singer | D2/951 |
| D420496 | Outsole for golf shoe | February, 2000 | Singer | D2/951 |
| 6023860 | Athletic shoe cleat | February, 2000 | McMullin | 36/127 |
| D424288 | Portion of a sole for a golf shoe | May, 2000 | Erickson et al. | D2/960 |
| D430388 | Shoe sole | September, 2000 | Dittrich et al. | D2/959 |
| 6161315 | Shoe outsole having a stability ridge | December, 2000 | Dalton | 36/134 |
| 6289611 | Golf shoe outsole with bio-mechanically positioned wear bars | September, 2001 | Patterson et al. | 36/127 |
| D455543 | Sole adapted for a golf shoe | April, 2002 | Feeney et al. | D2/953 |
| D468515 | Outsole for a golf shoe | January, 2003 | Lane et al. | D2/951 |
| D483175 | Golf outsole | December, 2003 | Robinson et al. | D2/954 |
| D483555 | Golf shoe sole | December, 2003 | Robinson et al. | D2/954 |
| D487332 | Golf shoe outsole | March, 2004 | Robinson et al. | D2/957 |
| D487333 | Pair of athletic shoe soles | March, 2004 | Laska | D2/958 |
| D487615 | Golf shoe outsole | March, 2004 | Erickson et al. | D2/955 |
| 6817117 | Golf shoe outsole with oriented traction elements | November, 2004 | Campbell | 36/127 |
| D507398 | Shoe sole | July, 2005 | Recchi | D2/957 |
| D507401 | Footwear sole | July, 2005 | Sedlbauer | D2/959 |
| D509948 | Golf shoe outsole | September, 2005 | Robinson et al. | D2/953 |
| D510796 | Golf shoe outsole | October, 2005 | Erickson et al. | D2/954 |
| 20060090373 | Removable footwear traction plate | May, 2006 | Savoie et al. | 36/67D |
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a golf shoe outsole showing our new design;
FIG. 2 is a front view thereof;
FIG. 3 is a rear view thereof
FIG. 4 is a bottom plan view thereof.
FIG. 5 is a top plan view thereof.
FIG. 6 is a left side elevational view thereof; and,
FIG. 7 is a right side elevational view thereof.
The broken lines showing a shoe upper in FIGS. 1-7 represent the portions of the design that form no part of the claim. The circular shapes shown as broken lines in FIGS. 1 and 4, define the boundaries of the design; with the broken lines themselves and the areas within them, forming no part of the claim.