These gorgeous Mizuno Masters Editon irons aren’t for you (unless you live in Japan)
Irons

These gorgeous Mizuno Masters Editon irons aren’t for you (unless you live in Japan)

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These gorgeous Mizuno Masters Editon irons aren’t for you (unless you live in Japan)

Today, we are all left-handed golfers.

At a minimum, we’re all getting a real sense of what it’s like when you see a golf club you desperately want, only to find out they don’t make it for you.

I don’t like how it feels.

Such is the case with these stunning Masters Edition Mizuno Pro S-1 irons and T-1 wedges. I mean, just look at the ferrules (among other things).

Officially licensed

As you may have pieced together by now, official Masters licensing is harder to come by than a Sunday pin sheet. It’s why the early April flood of green and yellow Limited Edition “Augusta,” “1st Major,” and “Season Opener” gear has become a tradition absolutely unlike any other.

How many ways are there to say “The Masters” without saying “The Masters”?

Way more than most of us would have thought.

What you may not know is that Mizuno does have licensing rights and is one of the few companies that is allowed to produce merch that features the Masters logo in all of its yellow paint-filled glory.

The caveat in all of this is that Mizuno is only authorized to sell official Masters gear in Japan. While I’m reasonably confident none of this stuff is available for lefties, I’m 100% positive Mizuno isn’t going to sell it in the USA (or anywhere else that isn’t Japan).

Thanks for nothing, Augusta National.

If there’s any upside in this geographic gatekeeping, the release of the Masters Edition Mizuno Pro S-1 likely signals that Mizuno will release an “Azalea Edition” of the same irons when next April rolls around.

It’s the same thing, yet very much not the same thing.

The Mizuno Pro S-1 Masters Edition comes in 4-PW with a street price of roughly $2,100 US. Let’s call it $300 per iron—which is almost reasonable until you remember you can’t actually buy them here.

An azalea-themed True Temper DG S200 shaft and a theme-matched Golf Pride MCC grip complete the package.

Masters Editon Mizuno Pro T-1 Wedges

The matching Masters Edition T-1 wedges are offered in a set consisting of a 52-10 S Grind and 58-10 V Grind. It’s not exactly the full custom experience, but I’d wager a healthy percentage of those buying these have absolutely no plans to play them.

Then again, it’s the Japanese market, so who knows?

Mizuno Masters Edition irons and wedges are available for pre-sale now (at least in Japan). Pre-sale runs through September 21, and it’s more than likely the irons will be long sold out before the pre-sale period ends.

The actual shipping date is scheduled for late March of 2026, which is roughly when I’d expect Azalea Edition irons to ship (assuming this story is enough to manifest them into reality).

Is it everything we wanted? Probably not, but at least you have something new to drool over—from a distance of approximately 6,000 miles.

Plan B

For those of you who aren’t taken in by a splash of color and a fancy logo, Mizuno Pro S-1 Irons are shipping soon and Mizuno Pro T-1 wedges are available now, and they’re both plenty awesome without the green finish.

For You

For You

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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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      The Artful Duffer

      10 months ago

      The Azalea edition 241’s looked so much better than these.

      Reply

      mg

      10 months ago

      Two friends that are great amateur golfers purchased Mizuno irons this year. Heads flew off and the loft and lies were all over the place. Keep Mizuno in Japan.

      Reply

      OpMan

      10 months ago

      Yeah the workers in Georgia are not doing a good job of building things on spec, and clearly the final inspection guy isn’t even looking at the work before packing them in boxes.
      Every year I’ve ordered the shaft labels are crooked as are grips. I have no idea how Mizuno continues to allow this to happen, but obviously they are afraid of backlash if they fire the workers in the state of Georgia fearing prejudice so they are stuck with inferior American labour.

      Reply

      OpMan

      10 months ago

      Cheesy
      They love cheesy things in Japan

      Reply

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    News
    Jun 16, 2026
    One Simple Change That Will Fix Your Bunker Distance Control
    Best player's distance irons of 2026 Best player's distance irons of 2026
    Buyer's Guides
    Jun 15, 2026
    Best Player’s Distance Irons of 2026
    First Look
    Jun 15, 2026
    TaylorMade drops anchor for the U.S. Open with the Sailor’s Point Collection