Latest news with #T250

USA Today
10-07-2025
- Automotive
- USA Today
Titleist T350 irons deliver more distance and forgiveness in a sleeker 2025 design
The 2025 T350 irons are Titleist's most forgiving set, delivering fast launch, more stability and a sleeker, better-blending look for combo sets. Gear: Titleist T350 irons (2025) Price: $1,499 (7-clubs) with True Temper AMT Tour Red shafts and Titleist Universal 360 grips. $1,599 with Mitsubishi MMT graphite shafts Specs: Hollow-body stainless steel construction with forged L-shaped face insert, internal Max Impact technology, progressive grooves, and split tungsten weighting. Available: July 10 (pre-order and fittings), August 21 (in stores) Who it's for: Golfers who want maximum distance, forgiveness, and high launch in a clean, confidence-inspiring head that can still blend well into a composite set. What you should know: The T350 is the largest and most forgiving iron in the Titleist T-Series lineup. With a hollow-body chassis, a fast face and modern tech under the hood, the T350 is a true game-improvement iron dressed in a player-friendly design. The Deep Dive: While the Titleist T350 is not a club that screams 'super game-improvement', if you're looking for Titleist's most forgiving and longest iron, the T350 is where your search stops. This is the most approachable iron in the updated T-Series family, yet it benefits from many of the same technologies that power the sleeker T150 and T250. Yes, the updated T350 is the largest iron in the T-Series, featuring a longer blade length, thicker topline and more offset than the T250, but with the target group of golfers being players who struggle with consistency and distance, that extra size is reassuring, not off-putting. The T350 features a hollow-body, stainless steel chassis with a forged L-shaped face insert. The face is designed to allow the hitting area to flex more efficiently at impact, especially on low-struck shots, to protect ball speed. To further assist golfers in achieving greater distance, Titleist retained the internal Max Impact technology found in previous T350 irons. It's a polymer piece that acts like a trampoline, compressing behind the face at impact, then springing back into place to make the hitting area even more efficient. The added ball speed benefits from tungsten weights in the heel and toe that lower the center of gravity—which results in a higher launch angle—and increases the moment of inertia (MOI) so the T350 irons are more stable and twist less on off-center hits, especially in the long irons. Spin control also gets an upgrade in the T350. Like the rest of the 2025 T-Series, the T350 now features progressive grooves, with steeper walls in the short irons to help reduce fliers and improve greenside control from less-than-ideal lies. The lofts remain aggressive in the T350: the 7-iron is 29 degrees (compared to 30.5 in the T250 and 32 in the T150). However, thanks to the deep CG and high face flex, getting shots high in the air should not be challenging for players with moderate to slower swing speeds—or those who just want to make golf a little easier. Here's where the T350 fits in Titleist's updated T-Series iron family: Compared to the 2023 T350, the new T350 is sleeker, sounds better, launches higher, and delivers more consistent spin. It also fits more naturally with the rest of the T-Series, making it easier to build a combo set or transition between iron types as your game evolves.


USA Today
10-07-2025
- Automotive
- USA Today
Titleist's 2025 T150 irons blend Tour precision with added speed and higher launch
The 2025 T150 irons offer more launch and speed than the T100 while preserving the forged feel and compact look skilled players prefer. Gear: Titleist T150 irons (2025) Price: $1,499 (7-clubs) with True Temper AMT Tour Silver shafts and Titleist Universal 360 grips Specs: Forged multi-material head with dual-cavity construction, improved muscle channel, variable thickness face and progressive groove design. Available: July 10 (pre-order and fittings), August 21 (in stores) Who it's for: Skilled players who want the look and feel of a compact iron with a little more speed, forgiveness, and height than a traditional blade. What you should know: The T150 sits between the T100 and the new T250 in Titleist's updated T Series, offering a higher launch and more distance than the T100 while maintaining a forged feel, compact profile and clean looks preferred by skilled players. The Deep Dive: In Titleist's updated T-Series iron lineup, the T150 continues to fill the space between feel-driven Tour precision and modern performance. While the new T100 irons prioritize control and workability, and the all-new T250 brings speed and forgiveness to the player's-distance category, the T150 lands in the sweet spot for golfers who want a little extra help without giving up traditional shaping or forged feel. The T150 was introduced in 2023 as a replacement for the T100•S, but it quickly established its own identity. For 2025, the design team didn't change the formula too much, but did mirror what we see across the entire T-Series—higher launch in the long irons, improved distance control in the scoring clubs, and tighter spin consistency throughout the set. To do that, the T150 uses a refined muscle channel in the 7-iron and up to lower the center of gravity and boost launch, especially on lower-face strikes. A Variable Face Thickness (VFT) hitting area now helps to preserve ball speed on mis-hits, and just like the new T100, the T150 adds more aggressive, steeper-walled grooves in the 7-iron through pitching wedge to help maintain spin from the rough and in wet conditions. What separates the T150 from the T100 is its slightly larger head, stronger lofts, and a touch more offset. Those attributes should make T150 a better fit for players who want a little higher launch and more ball speed—particularly in the long irons—without moving into full player's-distance or game-improvement territory. Compared to the new T250, which has a hollow-body construction and a much thicker topline, the T150 still looks every bit the player's iron. But make no mistake: the T150 is built to enhance speed. The lofts in these irons are all 1 degree stronger than the lofts of the T100, putting the 5-iron at 25 degrees, the 7-iron at 32 degrees and the pitching wedge at 44 degrees. A 48-degree T150 wedge is also available. T150 vs. T100 vs. T250 Think of the T150 as the middle sibling in the updated T-Series family: For golfers who need help launching the ball in the longer irons or who want a few more yards across the board—without giving up the forged sound, feel and shape—this version of the T150 is likely going to be the best fit in the T-Series family.


USA Today
10-07-2025
- Automotive
- USA Today
Titleist T250 irons replace T200 with more speed, higher launch and improved control
Replacing the T200, Titleist's 2025 T250 irons offer more speed, launch and spin control in a sleeker, better-player-friendly design. Gear: Titleist T250 irons (2025) Price: $1,499 (7-clubs) with True Temper AMT Tour Black shafts and Titleist Universal 360 grips. $1,599 with Mitsubishi MMT graphite shafts Specs: Foted, hollow-body construction with L-shaped face, internal tungsten weights, and progressive grooves. Available: July 10 (pre-order and fittings), August 21 (in stores) Who it's for: Golfers looking for more ball speed, height and forgiveness than a traditional player's iron delivers, but who still want a compact, clean-looking head. What you should know: Replacing the T200, the new T250 irons are faster, more consistent and deliver higher launch and improved spin control in a sleeker, all-steel chassis. Positioned between the T150 and the game-improvement T350, the T250 is Titleist's modern take on the player's-distance iron. The Deep Dive: The Titleist T250 irons may be new by name, but the design lineage traces directly to the T200 irons that have been a favorite among amateurs and recreational players for the past several seasons. The T200 was already one of Titleist's most tech-forward irons, but for 2025, the company took everything that worked — and then reshaped the rest to fit more cleanly within its streamlined T-Series lineup. The multi-material backplate on the T200 gone and in its place is a clean, all-steel back that helps the T250 visually blend better with the T150 and T350 for players building composite sets. Beneath that cleaner exterior, the T250 is packed with performance-enhancing technologies. At the heart of the T250 is a forged, face insert that has an L-shape that allows it to hinge and flex across a larger portion of the hitting area. That results in increased ball speed and a higher launch, especially on thin strikes. That face is supported by Max Impact technology, carried over from the T200 but now refined to offer more consistent energy transfer across a wider portion of the hitting area. Titleist has also kept the internal tungsten weight weights in the heel and toe areas that add forgiveness and to lower the center of gravity (CG). That should help golfers hit shots with a higher launch and a more-vertical angle of descent, which means improved stopping power on the greens. One subtle but significant design update is in spin control. Like the other 2025 T-Series irons, the T250 uses progressive grooves with steeper walls in the scoring clubs to reduce the chance of fliers and deliver more reliable spin, even from wet or rough lies. In addition to the added stability, higher launch and increased flex in the face, Titleist also strengthened the lofts of the T250. While the T150 7-iron has 32 degrees of loft, the T200 7-iron has 30.5 degrees. The T250 is offered in clubs ranging from an 18-degree 2-iron through a 43-degree pitching wedge and a 48-degree gap wedge. At the same time, the T250 has a relatively-thin topline, its sole is wider than the T100 and T150, but it's not chunky, and while it has more offset than those two clubs, it can still comfortably be classified as a better-player's distance iron. If you're trying to decide which T-Series iron might be for you, here's where the T250 fits in Titleist's revamped iron family: If you liked the 2023 T200 for its blend of speed and control, with the T250, Titleist is trying to offer everything you liked—but with a better look, improved launch and spin, and more consistency across the face.


USA Today
19-05-2025
- Automotive
- USA Today
Titleist brings 2025 T Series irons to the Charles Schwab Challenge
Titleist brings 2025 T Series irons to the Charles Schwab Challenge In 2024, Titleist released the GT drivers and fairway woods at Memorial. This week in Forth Worth, the company is showcasing the new T Series irons. Last year at The Memorial Tournament, Jack Nicklaus's event at Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio, Titleist brought its GT family of drivers and fairway woods to the PGA Tour for the first time. On Monday at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, the company has brought its next generation of irons -- the T Series -- out to the PGA Tour for the first time so players can test them and potentially put them in play at the 2025 Charles Schwab Challenge. While Titleist has not released any details about the clubs, including when they will be made available to the public or their price, there are four irons in the 2025 T Series -- the T100, T150, T250, and T350. There are also two utility woods being released alongside the irons, the T250•U and U•505. The T100 has been the most-played iron on the PGA Tour since it debuted in 2018, and in 2023 the T150 took the place of the T100•S in Titleist's lineup. The T150 has a size and shape that is nearly identical to the T100, but the lofts are 2 degrees stronger to help golfers generate more distance. In the past, the T100 and T150 have been dual-cavity designs that feature a cavity-back shape with a metal cap on the back of each head. Inside the caps, Titleist typically adds large blocks of tungsten in the heel and toe area to increase perimeter weighting and stability without making the heads larger. Browse all Titleist 2025 T Series irons Interestingly, the hollow-body T200 appears to have been replaced by the T250. Historically, the higher the number assigned to a Titleist iron, the more forgiving and distance-oriented the club, so by shifting the T200 to T250, Titleist could be indicating that the T250 will be slotted more to the game-improvement side instead of the better-player's distance category. The T200 and T350 irons released in 2023 are hollow-body designs, created to enhance ball speed, while also housing tungsten in the heel and toe areas. It is also worth noting that cosmetically, the T100 and T150 appear to be very similar, while the T250 and T350 appear to be very similar. On the PGA Tour, it is very common for players to blend different clubs to create a combo or blended set of irons, and Titleist appears to be making that visually easier. An accomplished golfer might opt for T150 long irons and T100 short irons, while mid- and higher-handicap players might explore mixing T350 long irons with T250 mid- and short irons. Shop Titleist 2025 T Series irons