Titleist TSi2 Hybrid: Key Specs
- Category
- Game Improvement
- Adjustable
- No
- Loft options
- 17 to 25 degrees
- Model year
- 2021
Hybrid Options & Stock Shafts
| Hybrid # | Loft | Shaft | Flex | Weight | Kick Point | Swing Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2H | 17.0° | - | - | - | - | - |
| 3H | 19.0° | - | - | - | - | - |
| 4H | 22.0° | - | - | - | - | - |
| 5H | 25.0° | - | - | - | - | - |
Game Improvement Hybrid
The TSi2 is Titleist's forgiveness-first driver from the TSi generation, built for golfers who want the Titleist look and feel without needing a tour swing to get value out of it. It launches high, holds its line on mishits, and rewards the kind of swing most amateurs actually have. If the TSi3 is the driver you fit to your exact ball flight, the TSi2 is the one that just works for a wider range of players.
The headline change from the old TS2 was the face. Titleist switched to ATI 425 aerospace titanium, a material strong enough to let them build a thinner, more uniform face across a larger area. That means more of your strikes come off a hot part of the clubface, not just the dead center. Combine that with a deep, low center of gravity and you get a ball that gets up quickly and carries.
This is a Game Improvement driver in the honest sense. It won't spin the ball down for you or shape shots on command, but it will keep your bad drives in play and your good ones flying a long way. For a mid to high handicapper chasing more fairways and a few extra yards, that trade is exactly right.
- Mid to high handicappers who lose distance and accuracy on off-center hits and want a head that forgives them
- Moderate swing speed players who need help getting the ball up in the air with plenty of carry
- Anyone who likes the Titleist look and sound but doesn't want to fight a low-spin, low-launch head
- Players coming off an older TS2 or a game improvement driver from another brand looking for more ball speed on mishits
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the difference between the TSi2 and the TSi3?
- The TSi2 is the more forgiving of the two. It has a deeper, lower center of gravity for higher launch and a higher MOI, so it's more stable on mishits. The TSi3 adds a movable weight track (SureFit CG) that lets you fine-tune your ball flight bias, and it produces slightly lower spin. If you're a mid or high handicapper, the TSi2 is usually the better fit. Better players who want to dial in a shot shape tend toward the TSi3.
- Is the TSi2 good for slower swing speeds?
- Yes. The high launch, deep CG, and larger effective face make it one of the easier Titleist drivers to hit for moderate and slower swings. You'll get the ball airborne without having to swing out of your shoes, and the carry distance holds up well even when you don't catch it flush.
- Does the TSi2 spin too much?
- It spins more than the TSi3, which is by design. The extra spin helps slower and moderate swingers keep the ball in the air and carry it farther. If you have a fast swing and already generate plenty of spin, you might find the TSi2 balloons a little, and the TSi3 or a lower-lofted setup would suit you better.
- The TSi2 came out in 2021. Is it still worth buying?
- For the money, yes. It's several years old now, so you can find it well below the price of the newest models, and the 425 titanium face still delivers strong, consistent ball speed. Newer drivers have edged forward on adjustability and marginal ball speed gains, but the TSi2 remains a genuinely good forgiving driver that most amateurs will play just fine.
- What loft should I get in the TSi2?
- Most players do well with 10.5 degrees. If your swing speed is on the slower side or you struggle to get the ball up, 11 or 12 degrees gives you more launch and carry. Faster swingers who want to keep flight and spin down can go to 9 or 9.5. A proper fitting is the surest way to land on the right number for your delivery.
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