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Titleist
Titleist TSR2 3 Fairway Wood 16.5* Tensei Blue AV Series Xlink Tech Regular RH (E0MVZ72LD6DH)
Was: $395.99Now: $241.69 -
Titleist
Titleist TSR2 3 Fairway Wood 16.5* Tensei Blue AV Series Xlink Tech Regular RH (K5I5BL7PWA5V)
Was: $395.99Now: $241.69 -
Titleist
Titleist TSR2 3 Fairway Wood 16.5* Project X HZRDUS Red CB 5.5 60g Regular RH HC (EY04HOWU7IRX)
Was: $395.99Now: $241.69 -
Titleist
Titleist TSR2 3 Fairway Wood 16.5* Tensei Blue AV Series Xlink Tech Regular RH (AD9X9X4NM9ZF)
Was: $395.99Now: $241.69 -
Titleist
Titleist TSR2 3 Fairway Wood 16.5* Project X HZRDUS Red CB 5.5 60g Regular RH (I59RBE6UCHDE)
Was: $395.99Now: $241.69 -
Titleist
Titleist TSR2 3 Fairway Wood 16.5* Project X HZRDUS Red CB 5.5 60g Regular RH HC (GFHOYN6KV42W)
Was: $395.99Now: $241.69 -
Titleist
Titleist TSR2 3 Fairway Wood 15* Fujikura Ventus Red 7X Velocore Extra Stiff RH (HE8PMZ78XQXN)
Was: $609.99Now: $417.99 -
Titleist
Titleist TSR2 3 Fairway Wood 15* Even Flow Riptide 6.5 Small Batch XStiff RH HC (6REXDNU4VS8T)
Was: $329.99Now: $214.79
About the Titleist TSR2 Fairway Wood
When researching clubs to buy, I like to look for unbiased reviews. So I went out and found a few and I'm going to boil down what I read so that you don't have to:
- Review 1 - The low cg promotes higher launching shots. Easy to hit and versatile. Pretty to look at and sounds great, albeit quiet.
- Review 2 - Easy to hit and get a good amount of distance. Performs consistently on mishits. Good off the tee and on the fairway.
- Review 3 - One of the best looking, feeling, and sounding fairway woods of 2023. Mediocre accuracy, distance, and forgiveness amongst the other fairway woods of 2023.
- Review 4 - The TSR2 is better than my TSi2 but I'll be sticking with my TSi2 because the results on the trackman weren't so much better that I would buy a new club for an extra yard here or there.
It would seem to me that the results vary based on who you ask. There is a consensus that it's a beautiful club that sounds great. However when it comes to distance and forgiveness the people are split. There is so much variablity in peoples swings that perhaps it works better for people with higher swing speeds and worse for people with slower swing speeds. At the end of the day, if you are switching from a fairway wood that is 10 year old to a used tsr2 fairway wood, you are going to be a happy golfer. If you play a model that is only one or two generations older than the tsr2, maybe hold off if gaining two yards isn't worth it to you. Then again, this is golf and two yards could be the difference in winning and losing.