BREAKING: Tiger Woods announces Sun Day Red apparel partnership with TaylorMade
Golf Apparel

BREAKING: Tiger Woods announces Sun Day Red apparel partnership with TaylorMade

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

BREAKING: Tiger Woods announces Sun Day Red apparel partnership with TaylorMade

Shortly after finishing a 27-year run of wearing NIKE gear, Tiger Woods has decided on his next apparel landing spot.

Woods has announced an expanded partnership with TaylorMade, a brand set to make its first meaningful entrance into the apparel space. The 15-time major champion has played TaylorMade clubs dating back to 2017—now he will be the face of its new Sun Day Red apparel line

The line will launch on May 1.

“It’s the right time in my life,” Woods said Monday at an unveiling party. “It’s transitional. I’m not a kid any more. I want to have a brand I’m proud of going forward.”

According to TaylorMade CEO David Abeles, the new brand is a separate vertical within TaylorMade’s holding company. It is based in San Clemente, California, rather than TaylorMade’s Carlsbad headquarters, and will have its own staff.

“This brand stands alone,” Abeles said. “It is independent of TaylorMade… we are going to sunrise a brand tonight that will live with us, our lives, our families, everybody for generations to come.”

The announcement was made this evening as tournament week at the Genesis Invitational has commenced. Woods, host of the event, is making his first official PGA Tour start since last year’s Masters.

Last month, four trademark applications for a new Sun Day Red brand were submitted to the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) by TaylorMade Lifestyle Ventures LLC. The primary logo in the application was shared widely on social media, and that was indeed the logo that came to light Monday. There are 15 stripes in the logo to represent each major victory in Tiger’s career.

Woods’ famous “TW” logo will not be a part of the brand, he confirmed.

“I don’t want it back, I’ve moved on,” Woods said.

During a media event in Los Angeles, a range of apparel—from polos to hoodies—was on display.

When Woods signed with TaylorMade seven years ago, the deal included an ownership stake in the company. Abeles called this latest venture with Woods, “a full-blown unequivocal partnership.”

It’s been a poorly kept secret that TaylorMade, a longtime equipment manufacturer since 1979, would enter the apparel market. Signs became more obvious in recent months as job postings popped up for positions in their new apparel division. 

Brad Blankinship, who previously led lines such as Quiksilver and RVCA, has been appointed president of Sun Day Red.

Woods had worn NIKE apparel since turning pro in 1996. He made a reported $500 million throughout the life of the deal, including $200 million in his 10-year contract renewal that began in 2013.

That deal expired last month as Woods and NIKE opted to go separate ways. It was one of most iconic athlete-brand relationships in sports history. 

Woods played NIKE equipment from the early 2000’s through 2016 when the company left the hard-goods business. That opened the door for Woods to sign with TaylorMade. Other than his Bridgestone golf ball and Scotty Cameron putter, Woods has used TaylorMade gear since 2017. 

TaylorMade has a very limited apparel presence with athleisure items on their website, but they have not been producing meaningful on-course apparel. Adidas acquired TaylorMade in 1997 but sold the company off to KPS Capital Partners in 2017.

Prior to 2017, NIKE golfers wore NIKE apparel and TaylorMade golfers wore adidas apparel—but the sale opened the door for crossovers, allowing Woods to wear NIKE apparel while playing TaylorMade clubs. 

Now Woods will have TaylorMade clubs and apparel. He will debut the new threads at Riviera Country Club this week.

“I have learned so much over the years and have a lifetime of experience adjusting my apparel and footwear to help me play better based on the way it was constructed,” Woods said in a release. “There are things that I could tell you that no one knew I was doing over the years. I’m ready to share those secrets with the world. Sun Day Red will embody a love of playing and competing, and we are for people that share those values, whether it’s on the course, or in life. We will be anchored to putting the athlete first in the product decisions we make.”

There are several other notable TaylorMade athletes who wear NIKE apparel, including Rory McIlroy, Tommy Fleetwood, Scottie Scheffler and Nelly Korda. 

There is speculation NIKE could be getting out of the golf apparel space entirely. Jason Day, a longtime wearer of NIKE, recently left the Swoosh to sign with Malbon. NIKE recently announced plans to cut $2 billion in costs over the next three years, which would include layoffs of hundreds of employees.

For You

For You

News
May 6, 2024
We Asked 100 Golfers If Golf Shoes Make a Difference
Golf Apparel
May 6, 2024
PUMA goes Patriotic with 2024 VOLITION AMERICA Collection
News
May 6, 2024
The Best Golf Hats to Top Off Your Tee Time Ensemble
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 8 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife and dog (of course the dog's name is Hogan).

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      Cecil Jansen

      3 months ago

      Don’t understand the two word “Sun Day”. Really? He wore red on Sunday. Why not just have the tiger’s head – as perhaps based on his driver cover? No charge guys………..

      Reply

      HikingMike

      3 months ago

      I think the logo is cool. It’s pretty different, even different from the other cat logos out there. But Sun Day Red I am not a fan of. I get it’s nice 3 words of 3 letters, some kind of symmetry. But it bothers me, lol. But Sunday Red is a ok name for the brand.

      Reply

      Dusty

      3 months ago

      Logo looks good to me. Just interested in the material and fit. Price is a little high but all these performance attire cloths are. Travis Matthew clothes are terrible looking and the polos material sucks but they charge 100 dollars per polo and people love that hot garbage. If it’s truly innovative it might work, if they are just like the rest it’s overpriced garbage as well.

      Reply

      Sandy

      3 months ago

      The logo is terrible 😣, the brand name is lame, the apparel shown is bland, pricy and unimaginative. As great as Tiger was, he is obviously past his prime. I’m sure the monetary reward for him is astronomical, but I think it will be a costly bust for TaylorMade.

      Reply

      Fairway Fred

      3 months ago

      If Nike offered Tiger a pike of money he would have taken it! He wasn’t a “child” for the past 27 years. Basically, could care less what he or any pro wears!

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      3 months ago

      bleccccch. vomit in my mouth.

      Reply

      bob

      3 months ago

      I look at these clothes, think of Tiger, take in that logo, imagine what I will be thinking when I see someone wearing one of these shirts on the course and I won’t be thinking ‘Sun-Day-Red’ my mind will be saying ‘Duh-Bull-Bogey’.

      Reply

      Shaun R

      3 months ago

      I cannot accept this. Might as well have taken on a sponsorship with Bonefish grill.

      Where is the modern, fresh, aggressive logo?! I can’t even.

      Reply

      elvis14

      3 months ago

      Swing…and a miss. Sorry but this is not a good thing for poor Tiger. I just read all the other comments and every single one is negative because they didn’t get it right. The logo is ridiculously bad, the products are overpriced and Tiger is not the draw he used to be. Let’s us all know that it was Nike and not TW that designed the sharp look over the years. And Sunday is one word, not two

      Reply

      Mike Powers

      3 months ago

      Time will tell if the player marquee is the lasting value of the brand.

      Golden Bear apparel stood on its own with a great logo and brand recognition that lasts until now.

      Palmer goods with the multi colored umbrella seem to have faded from popularity.

      Norman’s Shark logo apparel did very well and is still around.

      Reply

      Jim

      3 months ago

      Looks like the logo is OB to me…..Am I buying? Nada!

      Reply

      Marc

      3 months ago

      Reply

      Thomas A

      3 months ago

      Those polos and sweatshirts actually look good. I would wear them to troll Tiger on the course. Some young buck should sign with LeTirge, the Original Tiger!!

      Reply

      WYBob

      3 months ago

      What I am waiting to see is the quality and performance of the clothing (plus the associated pricing). Pictures don’t provide that kind of information so it will be May before we know if S-D-R is worthy of consideration. I’m not overly concerned about the logo as long as it’s small and discreetly positioned on the clothing. Logos get refined or modernized all the time, and I suspect something similar will take place to S-D-R. I just hope Tiger and S-D-R have more luck with TailorMade than Ashworth ended up having. Fortunately for Ashworth it was spun off 4 years ago and “Golfman” has seen a bit of a revival over the past 2 years. The question is has TailorMade learned anything about the golf apparel business since they darn near killed off one of golf’s iconic brands?

      Reply

      CryptoDog

      3 months ago

      Seen the prices??? Polos at $125.
      And them shoes are literally Pimp style out of the 70s. He really wants to rep Ho’s. LMAO
      Ridiculous
      But I’m glad.
      Higher they come harder they fall

      Reply

      burke lake pro

      3 months ago

      Huh. Bad name, worse logo. Is that supposed to be a Tiger, or is it an x-ray of Tiger’s tibia post-crash? Just all-around bad.

      Reply

      UK MG

      3 months ago

      no no no no! who designed that logo it looks like Ron Burgundy’s broken down moustache!!!!

      Just plain weird

      does clothing brands of golfers ever work?
      Greg Norman – No!
      Nick Faldo 6 brand No!
      any others??????

      Reply

      CryptoDog

      3 months ago

      Golden Bear (But that 8am Milstein clown nearly ruined that too)
      Arnie’s Umbrella

      That’s about it

      Reply

      Midwestern Golfer

      3 months ago

      No. Meh at best and will likely be premium priced. A double bogey. Hopefully he gets a breakfast ball to redo this.

      Reply

      Marc Hurwitz

      3 months ago

      I love TIger. This is MID at best. My goodness. Sunday is one word…So disappointing.

      Reply

      CryptoDog

      3 months ago

      Somebody stop him, please stop him, take him to the side and tell him how bad, childish and amateurish that tiger logo is. OMG!!!
      But it’ll give us a good laugh to see overweight bozos wear that shirt with sweat dripping from his chest LMAO

      Reply

      Mike

      3 months ago

      It’ll be the same overweight bozos who bought all the Nike & TW shirts over the past 20 years. Incredible markup on golf clothes. All the tiger-lovers already have hard-ons just thinking about going out & buying his new brand.

      Reply

      CryptoDog

      3 months ago

      But they’re so overweight they can’t feel or see their little boners over their beer bellies LMAO

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    News
    May 6, 2024
    We Asked 100 Golfers If Golf Shoes Make a Difference
    Golf Apparel
    May 6, 2024
    PUMA goes Patriotic with 2024 VOLITION AMERICA Collection
    News
    May 6, 2024
    The Best Golf Hats to Top Off Your Tee Time Ensemble