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Titleist TSR3 Hybrid

2023TourFrom $299.99

Titleist TSR3 Hybrid: Key Specs

Category
Tour
Adjustable
No
Loft options
17 to 19 degrees
Model year
2023
MSRP
$299.99

Hybrid Options & Stock Shafts

Hybrid #LoftShaftFlexWeightKick PointSwing Weight
2H17.0°-----
3H19.0°-----

Tour Hybrid

The TSR3 is Titleist's driver for players who want to steer the ball, not just hit it far. It sits in the middle of the TSR family, more compact and workable than the forgiving TSR2 but easier to launch than the low-spin TSR4. If you shape shots on command and want a driver that reacts to what your hands are doing through impact, this is the one Titleist built for you.

What sets it apart is the SureFit CG track on the sole. A small weight slides across five positions so you can dial in a draw or fade bias, or center it for a neutral flight. Most adjustable drivers only let you move loft. This one lets you shift the actual center of gravity, which changes where the face wants to close at impact. That is a genuine tuning tool, not a marketing gimmick.

The flight is penetrating and a touch lower-spinning than the TSR2, so it holds its line in wind and rewards a clean strike. It is not the most forgiving driver in the bag on a mishit, and it does not pretend to be. This is a better-player's head, and it plays like one.

  • Better players and low-to-mid handicaps who want to work the ball both directions and control shot shape
  • Faster or well-timed swings that spin the ball too much with a standard players' driver
  • Anyone who wants to fine-tune draw or fade bias with a movable CG weight instead of just adjusting loft

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between the TSR3 and TSR2?
The TSR2 is bigger, rounder, and more forgiving, built for stability and easy launch. The TSR3 is more compact, spins a little less, and adds the SureFit CG track so you can move the center of gravity for draw or fade bias. If you miss the center often, the TSR2 protects you more. If you strike it well and want control, the TSR3 is the better fit.
How does the SureFit CG track work?
A small weight rides on a track in the sole and slides across five positions. Move it toward the heel for a draw bias, toward the toe for a fade bias, or leave it centered for neutral. Because it shifts the actual center of gravity, it changes how the face wants to close through impact rather than just the loft and lie numbers on the hosel.
Is the TSR3 forgiving enough for a mid handicapper?
It can work for a mid handicapper who strikes the ball fairly consistently, but forgiveness is not its priority. Off-center hits lose more ball speed and wander more than they would with the TSR2. If your misses are scattered across the face, look at the TSR2. If they stay tight and you want shot control, the TSR3 is reasonable.
What loft should I get in the TSR3?
It comes in 8, 9, and 10 degrees, and the SureFit hosel adjusts each roughly 1.5 degrees up or down. Faster swings that spin too much often start at 8 or 9. If you want more carry or help getting it airborne, 10 is the safer starting point. Get fit if you can, because CG position and shaft choice matter as much as the stamped loft.
Is the TSR3 still worth buying in 2026?
Yes, if you find it at a fair price. It was a top players' driver at launch and the fundamentals still hold up: adjustable CG, a penetrating flight, and a clean compact shape. Newer models add small ball-speed and forgiveness gains, but for most golfers the difference is marginal. A well-fit TSR3 will not hold your game back.

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