TaylorMade pledges allegiance with the Americana 250 collection
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TaylorMade pledges allegiance with the Americana 250 collection

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TaylorMade pledges allegiance with the Americana 250 collection

Wedges, a putter, balls and a pair of headcovers, all wrapped in eagles, flags and a little “We the People.” The 250th bandwagon is getting crowded, but TaylorMade dressed for the occasion.

America turns 250 next week, and the golf industry has decided that’s reason enough to bury everything in red, white and blue. You didn’t think TaylorMade was going to sit this one out, did you? The Americana 250 collection covers MG5 wedges, a Spider ZT putter, TP5 and TP5x balls, and two headcovers, all of it leaning on the usual patriotic shorthand: flags, eagles and some “We the People” for good measure. From what I gather, this stuff tends to sell, so the formula isn’t exactly a state secret. Pick the theme, commit to it, make it look good. On that last part, TaylorMade mostly delivers. The catch, as always with limited edition anything, is that it’ll cost you.

The wedges

The MG5s are where I’ll do my nitpicking, so let’s start there. Three lofts (52, 56, 60), three different engravings: a bald eagle on the 52, the “We the People” preamble on the 56 and the Statue of Liberty on the 60. The details go all the way down, with red, white and blue ferrule rings, a matching Golf Pride Z grip and a shaft label that spells out the 250th anniversary in case anyone needed the reminder. I genuinely like the blue, and giving each wedge its own design instead of stamping the same eagle three times is the right call.

Here’s my gripe, and it has nothing to do with the paint. A 52/56/60 setup in 2026 is a dated spec. Lofts have crept stronger across the bag for years, and a lot of golfers would be better served by something closer to 50/54/58. I get that plenty of people still buy 52/56/60 out of habit, and maybe TaylorMade’s sales data says exactly that. Doesn’t mean I have to love it. Boo. But it is what it is.

The putter and the headcovers

The Spider ZT brings TaylorMade’s Zero Torque platform into the collection, dressed in red, white and navy, with True Path alignment and a Pure Roll insert doing the actual work underneath the paint. It ships with a matching Americana headcover.

The standalone covers are the showcase pieces. Lady Liberty holds her torch against the flag on the driver cover, and a bald eagle stretches across the mallet over the stars and stripes. Two covers, two icons you’ve seen on roughly every patriotic golf release ever made, but the execution here is clean.

The balls

The TP5 and TP5x get the MySymbol treatment, with “1776” sitting below the TaylorMade logo and an American flag side stamp. (1776 plus 250 lands you on 2026, for anyone scoring at home.) Same tour ball you’d play anyway, now in costume.

The bottom line

None of this is complicated. The 250th only comes around once, and if you’re going to mark it, you mark it like this, which means committing to the theme and sweating the details. TaylorMade did both.

The only thing standing between you and the collection is the price. Everything here carries a premium over the standard versions. That’s the cost of admission on limited edition anything, and whether the eagles and flags are worth it is a you question, not a me question. If patriotic isn’t your thing, the regular MG5s, Spider ZT and TP5s aren’t going anywhere.

Specs, pricing and availability

The Americana 250 collection is available now. The Spider ZT putter is $649.99 and the Americana 250 wedge set is $750. On the headcover side, the driver cover is $89.99 and the mallet cover is $79.99. The TP5 and TP5x balls are $62.99 per dozen.

For more information, visit TaylorMadeGolf.com.

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Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony is the Editor of MyGolfSpy where his job is to bring fresh and innovative content to the site. In addition to his editorial responsibilities, he was instrumental in developing MyGolfSpy's data-driven testing methodologies and continues to sift through our data to find the insights that can help improve your game. Tony believes that golfers deserve to know what's real and what's not, and that means MyGolfSpy's equipment coverage must extend beyond the so-called facts as dictated by the same companies that created them. Most of all Tony believes in performance over hype and #PowerToThePlayer.

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey





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      Ivo

      11 hours ago

      Wow, that is ugly

      Reply

      Sean

      1 day ago

      Just hideous

      Reply

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