First Look – TaylorMade TP Red Collection Putters
Putters

First Look – TaylorMade TP Red Collection Putters

First Look – TaylorMade TP Red Collection Putters

When TaylorMade launched the Ghost line of putters, it had a story. The offering was something totally different. With input from optical experts, as well as putter guru Dave Stockton, the company claimed its Ghost putters were scientifically proven to be easier to line up. The putters were white because of science. The new TP red putters are red because well, Jason Day said make me a red putter.

Forgive us if we sound a bit cynical, but the red putter trend and the layers of plagiarism upon plagiarism in the putter category are boring. Jason Day asked for a red putter because red is his favorite color, and so red putters became a thing.

Sergio finally won the Masters using a red Spider, one of approximately 212 different putters he has used this season, while Jon Rahm has also looked like a superstar holing putts for fun with his Spider.

tm-red-sitewide

Professional golfers are a funny bunch, and some equated Jason Day’s success with his red Spider and borrowed inspiration from it. What everyone seems to forget is all the success Day had with his dinged-up Ghost White Spider (incidentally he’s recently been seen testing a new version of that one). Jason Day is one of the finest putters of his generation. The fact he was putting well with a red flatstick had nothing to do with it being red, but it was easy to spot, and golfers seemed to take to it, and so now we have an entirely paint-driven putter trend.

Putter innovation being what it is, Odyssey quickly launched its own range of Works Red putters, including their now ubiquitous #7 Fang model. Turnabout being proverbially fair play, TaylorMade has launched its own version of the Fang in – you guessed it, red. Perhaps uninspired, perhaps an overt middle finger pointed in Odyssey’s direction; it certainly feels like TaylorMade is copying the copier.

So what new technology has TaylorMade brought to the party? Diddly Squat, if we’re being honest. All of the new putters feature the 6061 Aluminum Pure Roll insert used in the TP Collection. It’s a polymer filled groove design, not essentially different from what TaylorMade has been doing for the last ten years. Purportedly, the groove grips the ball to impart topspin and promote a faster time to roll. It feels soft and the roll is good, but with 3.5 degrees loft, there’s an argument to made that the company is a bit behind the curve for modern greens.

Each putter has movable/adjustable weights, which can be purchased separately, and come stock with a love it or hate it Super Stroke Pistol GTR 1.0 grip.

There are technically six new models in the new family. But really, there are a two and a half, with some variations.

TP Red Ardmore

tp-red-ardmore

First up is the Ardmore. A full mallet design, this is a classic shape, very much like an Odyssey V-Line. There is also an Ardmore CTR, a center-shafted design. While not generally a good fit for a majority of golfers, it’s good to see them in OEM lineups for those of you the design works for.

TP Red Ardmore 2

ardmore2

The Ardmore 2 pays homage to the Odyssey #7. Remove the center portion from the Ardmore, and voila you’ve got the Ardmore 2 – wings and all. Featuring a simple alignment aid; the Ardmore 2 is available in with a face-balanced, double-bend hosel and an Anser style L neck.

The Ardmore 3 features a single alignment line inside the cavity, and with the short heel hosel design most recently popularized by Jason Day, offers significantly more toe hang.

TP Red Chaska

tp-red-chaska

Finally is the Chaska. We understand golf brands follow naming conventions, and those designs undergo iterations, but an Anser will always be an Anser. So, we can’t quite understand why the Corza, a design that has been knocking about since 2010 is now called a Chaska.

 Bonus: TP Silver Collection

TM-TP-SILVER

Outside of the new TP Red line, there are two updates to the TP Silver Collection. Again, we have the Corza, sorry Chaska. And we also have the Balboa. Now that is a punchy name. Often called a No.9 now, following Odyssey and Phil Mickelson re-popularizing the heel shafted small mallet design, the connoisseur will know it’s actually based on the old TPA XVIII design from the 80’s that was originally a TaylorMade model.

These are by no measure, bad putters. In fact, the Ardmore models look particularly good at address. They’re just not particularly inspired. TaylorMade has been playing it safe for a long time with its putters, and frankly, we’d like to see them innovate beyond the paint can. With these likely being the last models of the TMAG era, perhaps the next putter release will offer more of a legitimate technology story.

Pricing and Availability

All putters retail for $219.99 with the Superstore grip, the TP Silver Chaska and Balboa are also available with a Lamkin grip for $199. Available now.

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      Daniel Claude

      7 years ago

      Horrible… as usual from Taylormade

      Reply

      George F Blackshaw IV

      7 years ago

      Finally!! A center shaft!

      Reply

      Kevin

      7 years ago

      Consumers buy what they like. Not all golfers read MGS or buy because something improves their game. They buy because player X uses it, it looks good at address, it sounds good, it feels good, it’s their favorite color, they feel excited about having something new, they get attention showing off their new club, it makes their buddies jealous.
      When it comes to selling a company can either create demand for a new product or market a product for an existing demand. A whole industry exists because selling to a known and proven demand is easier, less risky and less expensive than creating new demand. The “bottom line” (pun intended) is TM sees an opportunity to part some consumers with their cash. Why red? Who cares? It sells. You may laugh now but TM will have the last laugh; all the way to the bank.

      Reply

      Simms

      7 years ago

      that other then making the tee time is the most fun in golf, playing with the equipment you like (and can afford)…lot of Red Putters on Ebay next year…

      Reply

      Thomas

      7 years ago

      No different than the auto industry
      Company’s must remain profitable to stay ahead. It’s all about customer perception new models generate interest = demand =.growth = profit

      Reply

      Travis Eckard

      7 years ago

      They look cheap. And like toys. But I guess some people like them so what ever floats your boat

      Reply

      Dave Sanguinetti

      7 years ago

      You don’t have to defend yourself Tony – MGS for most of us has grown into the most trusted voice in the game since it’s inception. Idiot remarks don’t sway us, or even bother us much as it’s is easy to spot a poser/phony , whether they are swinging a club or typing a comment!!! Just keep up the good work.

      Reply

      Jarrod Cochoy

      7 years ago

      They look like Wal-Mart putters, with a Taylormade logo

      Reply

      Rish

      7 years ago

      WOW! Red how different!! nuff said!!!

      Reply

      FTWPhil

      7 years ago

      Awesome! SO many red putters now, but who cares! Let’s have cool looking equipment that promotes performance enhancement.

      Reply

      Artie1

      7 years ago

      It is possible that the color provides better depth perception which might make for more consistent strokes. In theory blue and green are better colors for male depth perception. In conclusion, tail lights are the wrong color?

      Reply

      nakman7

      7 years ago

      My face gets red when I see the price

      Reply

      Andrew

      7 years ago

      Chaska MN has some of the finest golf around. Maybe that’s why….

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      7 years ago

      That’s maybe half the explanation, the other half…worth noting that former TM guy, Sean Toulon names all of his putters after cities/towns with ties to the golf world. Again, there’s a lot of less than subtle middle finger wagging around this red putter thing, and the rivalry between TM and Callaway. My guess is it’s all related.

      Reply

      txgolfjunkie

      7 years ago

      Oh, more options for the average golfer? I’m all for it. What I’m not all for is people bashing companies for giving us more choices when it comes to equipment. Most of these putters have been validated on tour and now we get to benefit from it. Don’t like it? Don’t buy it. Simple. Me? I’ll spend a couple hours at a PGA SS sampling the latest from TM. Thanks MGS.

      Reply

      Craig Konkle

      7 years ago

      Taylormade keep changing the same s***

      Reply

      xjohnx

      7 years ago

      Taylormade makes the ugliest putter ever>TaylorMade paints ugly putter red and it blows up>Odyssey makes their putters red because too many people think the Taylormade putter is ugly>Taylormade copies the shape preferred by the Odyssey bunch but makes sure it’s still red.

      Reply

      Regis

      7 years ago

      I have a garage full of putters and I love them all. I remember the story of the MacGregor Response putter which Jack used to win the 86 Masters. MacGregor was a dying brand. But after the Masters the demand for the Response was 5 times their marketing projections. So MacGregor had to open up 2 or 3 additional factories that operated round the clock to meet the demand. Sometimes the heart wants what the heart wants

      Reply

      Old Redtop

      7 years ago

      If the magic in the color, then everyone should have their putters painted Bullseye brass. No glare, no paint chips and slowly gets darder with age. My 60+ year old Bullseye rolls the ball as well as any insert. It’s magic! :-)

      Reply

      Tom Noel

      7 years ago

      Jack Nicklaus’s wife did that. Painted his Bullseye putter white to knock down the glare. He went on to win the 67 US Open with that putter called “White Fang”

      Reply

      Gary

      7 years ago

      Evnroll from Guerin Rife

      Reply

      Scoot24

      7 years ago

      I can never understand why people pay as much for their putter as they do for irons and drivers. The important part is to find a style you are comfortable with and then use it. All the different insert materials etc. is just hype to have you spend more money. An older man I golf with is a <5 handicap and has been playing golf for more than 50 years used an brass putter that is more than 30 years old and almost never 3 putts. He frequently says that putting is about feel, similar to shooting a basketball, and anyone who is a good putter will be good with any club as long as they practice with it.

      Reply

      Jerry

      7 years ago

      Ask a hundred golfers probably get a hundred answers. If I had a solid reason for good putting days it would be for two factors; closer to the hole with approach shot, and speed of the greens. Speed is a preference thing but when they are rolling at a speed you like your confidence is higher and you putt better with second putt tap in’s on miss’s. I cannot say my putting game has improved after buying a new putter. 8-handicap.

      Reply

      Steven T.

      7 years ago

      I alternate between old and new- 25+ years old brass Ping Zing and TM OS Monte Carlo.

      Reply

      Steve S

      7 years ago

      After a mostly horrible summer of putting using different mallets, center shafts, even an old Roger Evans “stand up” putter, I was ready to go side saddle. Then, about 4 weeks ago, while rummaging thru the garage I found my very old Odyssey DXF6600 blade. Thinking “what the heck” I took it out and had no 3 putts and made a couple 8 footers. I broke 80 one time from March to late August. Since using the old stand by I’ve broken 80 four times and had 3 near misses(80).

      Bottom line is that my putting works with that putter and I can’t remember why I switched other than I was enamored with “new”.

      Reply

      bobbyk

      7 years ago

      I still love my Manta Ghost. They should make a red one and call it “Aghast.”

      Reply

      Stuart Burley

      7 years ago

      Having trouble putting? Buy a red one!

      Style over substance

      Reply

      Nouke DeWales

      7 years ago

      Breaking News! Red lipstick on a sounder of swine!

      Reply

      Kelly Thompson

      7 years ago

      Over ten years ago, when I designed/developed a putter, red was the most popular of the colors. My favorite as well.

      Reply

      S Bogey

      7 years ago

      This must be the weekly anti-Taylormade article. I’d love to see this site get back to it’s roots, when it used to post spy pics and we came here for breaking equipment news.
      Now it’s a constant rip of Titleist & Taylormade and a PXG love fest. Somehow, Callaway is somewhere in between.

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      7 years ago

      As much as I love a ridiculous comment with zero factual basis, I’m going to go ahead and call you out on your horseshit nonsense.

      Let’s start with Titleist – Gotta be close to half a dozen Titleist articles in the last 2 months alone (they’ve been busy). Off the type of my head, JP wedges, 718 Iron, 818 Hybrids, Q2 Results/Brand Future, and most recently AVX ball. Could you kindly direct me to the one where we ripped on them?

      Moving on to TM – TM products had strong finishes in several MW tests this year. It’s been mostly quiet lately, but I do recall, P790 irons and M CGB Irons. Again, point me to the one where we ripped them.

      This one…some ripping perhaps, and that’s because it’s kinda lame. I suspect if ad dollars were not in play elsewhere, the stories would be mostly similar. Red paint on largely existing product. My 2 cents- the most endearing thing about this release is the Ardmore 2 and that’s only because I believe it is an FU at Callaway over its line of equally as unnecessary red putters. All’s fair, I suppose.

      As for PXG, we’ve certainly viewed their entry into golf as a disruptive force in a generally positive light, but I think a good bit of what we’ve said and predicted (the PXG Effect) has been validated. You have nearly everybody playing in the premium market now (some with real tech, others with paint and repurposed parts), and you have its technology trickling down to the degree that it believes TaylorMade has over-stepped. I’d also point out that PXG is the only OEM I’m aware of that’s donated (now 2 million) to hurricane relief, and as a guy with a young daughter, I applaud its efforts to create balance across men’s and women’s collegiate teams. If that rises to the level of love fest, then cool. But in reality, PXG is more difficult to work with than most (try getting anything but the company line from them or gear for testing), but since its every move is scrutinized (often by people with little comprehension of the actual facts), with every PXG story someone always assumes a motive. I will say that its one of my favorite brands to write about because the response while often ridiculous is also entirely predictable.

      Bottom line, as we always have, we call it like we see it. We’ve never wavered in that. Those are our roots. We’ve never left, so there’s nothing to go back to. The only thing that changes is the response. Readers have favorite brands, and some OEMs don’t handle criticism particularly well (or at all). In those cases, the response to MGS change with each new article.

      Mike Wales

      7 years ago

      The only reason I like the red is because of the contrast with the alignment aids. As I’ve played around with more putters, I find that a darker face with a light alignment aid is just easier to dial in than the opposite. That could be personal preference. I’m not a huge fan of the insert on these putters after I’ve played around with the milled faces. I completely agree with the article stating that not much has change with them and that they are behind in this category.

      Reply

      Marcelo Quinones

      7 years ago

      What’s next, Green? Nike did that for a season so it would blend in with the putting surface!

      Reply

      Christopher

      7 years ago

      They blended well with bushes too, so you had to be careful were you hurled them after three-putting!

      Reply

      Georges Poulin

      7 years ago

      Not a fan of TM but I think they look great

      Reply

      Peter Weisel

      7 years ago

      Those putters have a really busy look to them. So many different shapes and lines.

      Reply

      Mark Stanek

      7 years ago

      Another flavor of the month….gotta keep selling clubs

      Reply

      Oscar Johansson

      7 years ago

      They are way different than the excisting TP-putters. You dont have to buy them.

      Reply

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