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Golf365
The 51 professional golfers who use a Titleist driver – including four of the world top 10
By James Richardson,
2024-05-30
Ludwig Aberg uses a Titleist TSR2 driver
Some of the best players in the world favour Titleist clubs, but it might surprise you just how many top players use a Titleist driver.
Over 50 players active on the professional tours use some variation of a driver from the maker.
Titleist currently sell four drivers, with many of them falling under the blanket of the TSR brand, but they still market the former flagship TSis and even have one professional still using a TS3.
Strangely enough, Patrick Cantlay went back to the TS3 as recently as January 2024, with Titleist making a variety of head options available to its professional staffers.
However, the most popular head on tour belongs to the TSR3. It’s designed for players who sport a consistent impact pattern around the centre of the face.
As a result, the face features a special variable-thickness pattern that emphasises the best performance for centre strikes.
Unsurprisingly for a professional-favoured driver, the TSR3 has a more compact size, but it also adds a movable weight that allows players to shift the centre of gravity slightly. While this helps somewhat with draw or fade preferences, mostly it’s designed for lining up the CG with where a player is making their impact with the ball.
The result is better energy transfer although not every player yields the same results from that transfer of energy.
“[When] I switched to the TSR3, it had a touch more ball speed and a little more spin for me, which was huge,” said Wyndham Clark. “And then I was able to keep it straighter. I sometimes tail it off too much with fade. And so … we did some fittings and, honestly, that was one of the biggest keys.”
The TSR4 hasn’t really caught on with tour players, although South African up-and-comer Garrick Higgo and South Korea’s Byeong Hun An have adopted the club.
With the TSR4 playability has been improved from past versions by changing the face design.
Its variable-thickness pattern calls back to the TSR2, with the result being a little more forgiveness on off-center hits.
Though low spin is its hallmark, the sole weights (one heavier, one lighter) can be flipped around to dial in the ideal spin reduction for the individual golfer.
The TSR2 remains popular as the most forgiving and welcoming shape in the range.
It features a larger face area and most importantly a unique face-thickness pattern that emphasizes performance on mis-hits.
That is further enhanced by the larger footprint that makes for the most stable head in the TSR line.
The sleeker external lines and curves make the larger shape sail through the air a bit smoother to allow players to generate more clubhead speed.
Ludwig Aberg and Jordan Spieth are notable professionals who use the TSR2.
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