Titleist TSR2 Driver: Key Specs
- Category
- Players Distance
- Head size
- 460cc
- Adjustable
- Yes
- Loft options
- 9 to 12 degrees
- Model year
- 2022
- MSRP
- $649
Loft Options & Stock Shafts
| Loft | Shaft | Flex | Weight | Kick Point | Torque |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9.0° | Mitsubishi Diamana D 60 | Stiff | 60g | Mid | 4.0° |
| 10.5° | Mitsubishi Diamana D 60 | Stiff | 60g | Mid | 4.0° |
| 12.0° | Callaway RCH 55 | Regular | 55g | High | 5.7° |
Technology
Players Distance Driver
The TSR2 is the driver most golfers should look at first in Titleist's 2022 lineup. It sits in the middle of the TSR family, below the more adjustable TSR3 and the low-spin TSR4, and it does the job the widest range of players actually need. High launch, plenty of ball speed across the face, and forgiveness that holds up when you catch one off the toe. Titleist calls it a Players Distance driver, and that is fair. It gives you real distance without asking you to have a tour swing to unlock it.
The 460cc head is the full legal size, so you get the biggest footprint and the deepest margin for error Titleist allows. Inside is a redesigned variable-thickness face and a center of gravity pushed low and back, which is what produces the higher launch and the extra stability on off-center hits. If you played the TSi2 or an older TS2, this is the same idea moved forward. It is the everyman driver in a lineup that also serves better players, and it does not try to be a niche club.
Where the TSR2 earns its keep is consistency. Two swings that feel identical to you but catch the face a groove apart will finish closer together than they would with a smaller or lower-spinning head. That is the whole point of this model. You give up a sliver of shot-shaping control for a driver that keeps loose drives in play and turns average contact into a usable result.
- Mid and higher handicaps who miss around the face and want those misses to still find the fairway.
- Players with moderate swing speed who need help getting the ball up and carrying it, since the low-back CG and high-launch build add height without extra effort.
- Anyone coming off an older Titleist driver like the TS2 or TSi2 who wants the same easy-to-hit feel with a faster face and a bit more ball speed.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the difference between the TSR2 and the TSR3?
- The TSR2 is the more forgiving, higher-launching head with a fixed low-back weight, so it is set-and-forget. The TSR3 adds a movable weight track that lets you shift the CG heel to toe to fight a hook or a slice, and it generally spins a touch less. Most golfers who are not chasing precise shot shaping are better off with the TSR2.
- Is the TSR2 a good driver for a high handicapper?
- Yes. The full 460cc head, the low and back weighting, and the higher launch all work in favor of players who do not catch the center every time. It is one of the easier drivers in the Titleist line to hit well, and it does not demand a fast or consistent swing to get results.
- What lofts does the TSR2 come in, and can I adjust them?
- The TSR2 is offered in 8, 9, 10, and 11 degree heads, and the SureFit hosel lets you adjust loft and lie from whatever you buy. That means the printed loft is a starting point, not a fixed number, so you can raise or lower launch to fit your delivery.
- Does the TSR2 spin too much for faster swing speeds?
- It launches high and spins more than the TSR3 or the low-spin TSR4, which is exactly what a lot of players need. If you already generate high speed and spin and see your drives balloon, the TSR3 or TSR4 will bring the numbers down. For everyone else, the TSR2 spin is a feature, not a problem.
- How does the TSR2 compare to the older TSi2?
- Same mission, newer execution. The TSR2 keeps the forgiving, high-launch character of the TSi2 but adds a more aerodynamic head shape and an updated face for a little more speed. If you liked your TSi2, the TSR2 will feel familiar with a modest gain, not a dramatic reinvention.
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