
Check out the newest Titleist GT golf clubs, including Justin Thomas' RBC winning driver
Check out the newest Titleist GT golf clubs, including Justin Thomas' RBC winning driver
Titleist GT 1 driver
The GT1 represents the biggest technological leap ever in Titleist driver design
Shop at PGA TOUR Superstore
Justin Thomas won the 2025 RBC Heritage in dramatic fashion on Sunday, holing a 21-foot birdie putt to win the tournament in a playoff.
While it was his first win in three years, JT has been playing great golf so far this year, with five top-10 finishes.
One of the reasons for Thomas improved play is a swap to the new Titleist GT2 driver.
The GT2 is one of four drivers released by Titleist in 2025. The GT1 adds peak forgiveness, the GT2 maximizes stability, the GT3 aids left-right adjustability and the GT4 is for golfers who need a low-spin driver.
Per Golfweek equipment guru David Dusek from his original club review earlier this year,
For the past several generations of woods, Titleist has kept to the same naming conventions and made it very easy for golfers to get a good sense for what each driver is about. Clubs that end with a 2, like the recently released GT2, are designed to deliver a blend of stability and distance, while 3 clubs, such as the GT3, are made to blend left-and-right adjustability with enhanced ball speed. Clubs that get a 4 designation, such as the GT4, are low-spin offerings.
But Titleist didn't stop with drivers, also releases three new accompanying GT hybrids in 2025. Per Dusek, "Players seeking high-launching, forgiving hybrids with lightweight configurations (GT1); golfers who want maximum forgiveness and stability (GT2); and advanced players who value workability and a compact, iron-like design for shaping shots (GT3)."
Take a look at all the new Titleist GT drivers and hybrids to see which could be right for your game.
Shop Titleist GT golf clubs at PGA TOUR Superstore
Titleist GT drivers
Titleist GT1 driver
The Titleist GT1 is the most forgiving of the new Titleist drivers and retails for $649.99.
Titleist GT2/3/4 drivers
The other new Titleist drivers provide golfers different solutions including more stability, enhanced ball speed and low-spin offerings.
Titleist GT2, GT3, GT4 drivers
Shop all new Titleist GT drivers at PGA TOUR Superstore
Shop Titleist GT drivers
The GT1 features heavier weight in the front, causing the launch angle to decrease and ball speed to increase. The GT2 is slightly smaller and is the most forgiving of the three. Finally, the GT3 is the smallest of the bunch and crafted for the higher-level golfer. For a deeper dive into Titleist GT hybirds, check out David Dusek's full review.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
a day ago
- Forbes
German Golf Ball Brand Snyder Eyes Slice Of U.S. Market
Backed by Porsche-country engineering and a grassroots-first mindset, Snyder seeks to carve out its own path in the crowded U.S. golf ball market. Germany successfully launched Vice Golf across the pond ten years ago, but Snyder sees a fresh opening by bringing a very different playbook to the table to make it fly. The official dimpled sphere of the Deutsche Golf Verband (Deutschland's equivalent of the USGA), Snyder launched stateside earlier this year after establishing a presence in their home country over the past half decade. Increased participation has emboldened expansion, but finding a niche in the $540 million U.S. golf ball market—dominated by Acushnet's Titleist with Callaway, Bridgestone, Taylormade and Srixon also commanding sizeable share—is no simple task. Vice may have paved the way for German ball brands in the U.S., but it also set a high bar. The slick, Munich-based DTC disruptor has long owned the top step of the podium and now boasts a significant green grass retail presence to go with its entrenched online clout. Whereas Vice built buzz with bold colors, graphics and irreverent digital marketing, Snyder is banking mostly on technical credibility coupled with a very ground-up approach to connecting with golfers. Over 70% of PGA Tour players use Titleist's Pro V1 and Pro V1x models and the trickle-down impact on the recreational golf market is massive. Snyder hopes to make inroads by targeting the game's junior ranks along with under-resourced collegiate programs, niches often overlooked by the sport's biggest brands. "I've helped build U.S. sports in football, basketball, lacrosse and hockey and I always start with the youth,' Emmanuel Brown, Snyder's vice president of marketing, said. 'Those big brands all invest in the youth and Snyder is going to do the same thing. We're going to go after being the high school golf ball of choice or the smaller DII and DIII college players who don't get much support from their golf programs. We want to be there to support them along their journey,' added the exec, who previously worked at Nike and Adidas. Snyder Golf currently offers six ball models, all manufactured in Taiwan, ranging from $29.99 for a box of low-compression beginner balls to the $49.99 Pro X aimed at low-handicappers—that comes in a few bucks below a box of Pro V1s. Pricing may eventually shift though, depending how tariffs shake out. For comparison, Titleist's premium balls are made in a plant in Fairhaven, Massachusetts and in Thailand, though the Asian facility primarily serves markets outside the U.S. Metrics nerds can glean robot testing results performed at Golf Laboratories Inc. in San Diego on the DTC brand, which puts Snyder largely in line with the established players when it comes to ball speed, spin rate and carry distance. While there has been plenty of opposition chatter, as of now the USGA and R&A are still going ahead with the planned ball flight rollback. The rule, which will trim 13–15 yards off driver shots of the game's longest hitters, is set to take effect in 2028 for pros and will affect amateurs in 2030. Though many recreational players may not even notice as at lower swing speeds the new ball will only lose five yards or less off the tee with distance loss becoming imperceptible from 4-iron on down. "Golf courses aren't getting any longer and guys are just hitting them out of the park,' Brown said, adding that 'our balls are already there from an innovation standpoint,' which he believes will give them a bit of an edge when the equipment change goes into effect. Snyder USA is also planning to roll out a ball fitting tool to help golfers choose the appropriate sphere for them, a 'prescribed for you' model that could, in effect, end up being along the lines of Bridgestone's digital tool. Asked if price was not an object and they could get any pro to play their balls, Brown doesn't even hesitate for a nanosecond when posed the question. 'Bryson DeChambeau. Bryson understands the science behind what is going on in the game these days and he would appreciate the craftsmanship, detail, innovation and the stewardship around the game that we put into our balls. I can see him appreciating the nuance of detail. He's the same kind of person and would be likeminded as far as where we are going with the future of the game.' But the days of a notable pro playing Snyder on tour are not the immediate horizon. Currently they are engaging up and coming influencers to grow the brand. They are in talks with Gavin Parker and Gary Carey and exploring a deal with an APGA Tour player in an effort to connect with the next generation of golfers. Snyder's aim is squarely on golf's next chapter—youth-first, data-driven, and less beholden to the old guard. Whether that spin translates into enough golfer mindshare to keep the mission rolling remains to be seen. But by locking in on overlooked segments they could chip their way into one of the sport's most brand-loyal markets.

Associated Press
3 days ago
- Associated Press
See how players qualified for the US Open at Oakmont
OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) — The field for the 125th U.S. Open on June 12-15 at Oakmont Country Club. Players listed only in the first category for which they are eligible. The USGA is holding back six spots for anyone getting in through the top 60 in the world ranking after this week: U.S. Open champions (10 years) Bryson DeChambeau, Wyndham Clark, Matt Fitzpatrick, Jon Rahm, Gary Woodland, Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson, Jordan Spieth. Top 10 and ties from the 2024 U.S. Open Rory McIlroy, Patrick Cantlay, Tony Finau, Matthieu Pavon, Hideki Matsuyama, Russell Henley, Xander Schauffele, Sam Burns, Corey Conners, Davis Thompson. 2024 U.S. Senior Open champion Richard Bland. 2024 U.S. Amateur champion and runner-up a-Jose Luis Ballester, a-Noah Kent. 2024 U.S. Junior Amateur champion a-Trevor Gutschewski. 2024 U.S. Mid-Amateur champion a-Evan Beck. Masters champions (5 years) Scottie Scheffler. PGA champions (5 years) Justin Thomas, Phil Mickelson. British Open champions (5 years) Brian Harman, Cameron Smith, Collin Morikawa. 2024 Tour Championship field Sahith Theegala, Adam Scott, Sungjae Im, Shane Lowry, Viktor Hovland, Taylor Pendrith, Ludvig Aberg, Robert MacIntyre, Tommy Fleetwood, Keegan Bradley, Byeong Hun An, Aaron Rai, Akshay Bhatia, Chris Kirk, Sepp Straka, Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Tom Hoge. Points leader from the 2024 Korn Ferry Tour (regular season and postseason combined) Matt McCarty. The top 60 players from the May 19 world golf ranking Maverick McNealy, Harris English, Justin Rose, Tyrrell Hatton, Daniel Berger, J.J. Spaun, Min Woo Lee, Thomas Detry, Jason Day, J.T. Poston, Andrew Novak, Lucas Glover, Denny McCarthy, Nick Taylor, Stephan Jaeger, Tom Kim, Max Greyserman, Mackenzie Hughes, Jhonattan Vegas, Nico Echavarria, Ben Griffin, Davis Riley, Michael Kim, Patrick Reed, Nick Dunlap, Si Woo Kim, Joe Highsmith. Top 5 in the FedEx Cup on May 19 not already exempt Jacob Bridgeman, Ryan Gerard, Sam Stevens, Brian Campbell, Cam Davis. Top 2 players from 2024 Race to Dubai not otherwise exempt on May 19 Rasmus Hojgaard, Thriston Lawrence. Top player in the 2025 Race to Dubai, not otherwise exempt, on May 19 Laurie Canter. The top player not already exempt from the leading three players in the LIV Golf standings on May 19 Joaquin Niemann. 2025 NCAA champion a-Michael La Sasso. 2025 Latin American Amateur champion a-Justin Hastings. The top 60 players from the June 9 world golf ranking TBD on June 8. Sectional qualifying-Japan Yuta Sugiura, Scott Vincent, Jinichiro Kozuma. Sectional qualifying-England Jordan Smith, Joakim Lagergren, Guido Migliozzi, Frederic LaCroix, Sam Bairstow, Edoardo Molinari, James Kruyswijk, Andrea Pavan. Sectional qualifying Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, James Hahn, Adam Schenk, a-Lance Simpson, a-Cameron Tankersley, Carlos Ortiz, Johnny Keefer, Erik van Rooyen, Bud Cauley, Lanto Griffin, Justin Lower, Cameron Young, Zac Blair, Chris Gotterup, Roberto Diaz, a-Ben James, Kevin Velo, Niklas Norgaard, Matt Wallace, Thorbjorn Olesen, Mark Hubbard, Victor Perez, Emiliano Grillo, Ryan McCormick, Trevor Cone, Bryan Lee, Marc Leishman, Zach Bauchou, Alistair Docherty, Chandler Blanchet, Alvaro Ortiz, Emilio Gonzalez, Trent Phillips, a-Tyler Weaver, a-Jackson Koivun, Will Chandler, a-Preston Summerhays, Justin Hicks. Local and sectional qualifying Harrison Ott, Grant Haefner, George Duangmanee, Max Moldovan, James Nicholas, George Kneiser, a-Mason Howell, Jackson Buchanan, a-Matt Vogt, Brady Calkins, Riley Lewis, a-Zachery Pollo, Joey Herrera, Philip Barbaree Jr., a-Frankie Harris, Austen Truslow. ___ AP golf:


USA Today
3 days ago
- USA Today
Father's Day Gift Guide, Titleist alignment aids, TaylorMade zero-torque putters and more
Father's Day Gift Guide, Titleist alignment aids, TaylorMade zero-torque putters and more In this Get Equipped, we bring you Golfweek's 2025 Father's Day Gift Guide, new Titleist alignment aid balls and zero-torque TaylorMade putters. Not to look past this week's RBC Canadian Open, but next week, the game's best male players — along with some hearty souls who went through qualifying — will descend on Oakmont Country Club for the 125th U.S. Open. The course is insanely hard. It's long, the rough is thick, and the greens are diabolically fast. In case you've forgotten, Dustin Johnson won at Oakmont in 2016 with a score of 4 under, and Angel Cabrera won at Oakmont in 2007 at 5 over. Distance off the tee and driving accuracy will be important, but everyone in the field is going to miss greens, which means that wedge play will be critical. Pros often put new wedges in play at the Masters, having played a practice round of two with them to make sure they like the bounce and sole configuration while keeping the grooves sharp. While summer is just arriving in many parts of the United States, given the amount of time elite golfers put into their short game, many will repeat the exercise before they arrive and compete at the U.S. Open. In two months, grooves wear down, spin rates on chip shots and pitches can decrease, and control can be sacrificed. If you want to win a U.S. Open, that can't happen. On the other hand, some recreational golfers will use the same sand wedge and lob wedge for years and wonder why they can't make a chip shot spin or check up quickly at their local course. If you play 25 to 30 rounds a year and don't practice often, you can probably get two seasons out of a sand wedge or lob wedge before groove deterioration will rob you of enough spin to lower performance. The more you play and the more you use those clubs, however, the quicker the grooves can wear out. There are lots of great wedges out there now, from brands like Callaway, Cleveland, Cobra, Mizuno, PXG, Ping, TaylorMade, Titleist, Tour Edge and Wilson. If you're still carrying a 56, 58 or 60-degree wedge that was in your bag before the COVID-19 pandemic started, talk with a good custom fitter about new wedges and get ready to see your short game come back to life.