Titleist Announces New Tour Soft and Velocity Golf Balls
Golf Balls

Titleist Announces New Tour Soft and Velocity Golf Balls

Titleist Announces New Tour Soft and Velocity Golf Balls

For 2018, Titleist is launching a new ball that skews towards feel-driven golfers, and no, it’s not the AVX. The new ball is called the Tour Soft, and according to Titleist, it’s the softest feeling ball in its category.

For the sake of clarification, that category is golf balls that sell for between $30 and $40. As a general rule, consumers who shop within this range tend to be distance-centric but also value soft feel a bit more than users of tour-level balls might.

It’s a category that includes Bridgestone’s E-Series (the Tour Series too if you factor in promotional pricing), a good bit of the Srixon lineup, and before this week, Callaway’s Chrome Soft as well.

tour-soft-sitewide

What makes Tour Soft a curiosity is that despite its lower price, 2-piece construction, and lack of a urethane cover, Titleist believes the new ball is longer and better than any of the balls listed above, and TaylorMade’s TP5 too.

That’s bold talk right there.

Given the 2-piece construction, it shouldn’t come as any surprise when I say that the relevant performance features lie in Tour Soft’s core and its cover.

The Core

The headline here is that the Tour Soft features the largest Titleist core ever. To get the speed and soft feel characteristics Titleist wanted, it had to push itself beyond what it previously accepted as the maximum possible core size. That added size allowed Titleist to lower core compression (soft feel) without compromising speed. That’s a point of emphasis here – Tour Soft is long, even for higher speed players.

The Cover

Given the limitations on golf ball size, if you’re going to make the core bigger, you’ve got to make other layers thinner. And when you’re only working with two layers, a larger core necessitates a thinner cover.

For Tour Soft, Titleist is using an ultra-thin 4CE grafted cover with TCU Process Technology. It’s a mouthful, so let me translate the relevant bits. That 4CE stuff refers to the fact that Tour Soft’s cover is made from four different materials. Two of them are ionomers (common 2-piece cover material), while the other two are proprietary to Titleist. That blend along with the TCU process (thin cup uniformity), allowed Titleist to make Tour Soft’s cover thinner than many of its competitors’ urethane covers.

According to Titleist, that’s what gets you the spin characteristics that allow Tour Soft to hold its own against more expensive offerings.

Consistent Aerodynamics

Rounding out the story is a new spherically-tiled 342 cuboctahedron dimple design. Yup, another mouthful. What that really boils down to is a series of repeating dimple patterns overlaid in such a way as to eliminate any visible seam while ensuring consistent aerodynamic performance regardless of how the ball is oriented.

The pattern itself is engineered to produce a lower, penetrating ball flight.

null

Hmm…

While we can rattle off a long list of balls in the $30-$40 range, it’s a reasonable assumption that Callaway’s Chrome Soft is the one in the crosshairs.

To be sure, with 2-layers of construction and a urethane cover’s worth of difference between them, the two balls aren’t exactly in the same category, and that may be the point. It’s at least possible that Titleist believes the success of Chrome Soft isn’t just about soft feel, but rather soft feel at a price point. If that proves to be the reality, there’s an opportunity for a softer, less expensive ball to succeed, especially with both the cost and compression rating of Chrome Soft on the rise.

The reality of the Chrome Soft feel story, at least as far as the compression rating is concerned, ain’t what it used to be.

It’s also worth considering that Titleist’s soft feel tour-level ball, the AVX, is likely to see full distribution in the coming months. The initial response to the AVX has been overwhelmingly positive, and should it hit retail, it would give Titleist a second avenue from which to try and reclaim share from Callaway’s flagship ball. The likelihood is that Titleist is just a few months away from having two balls on the shelves that rival Chrome Soft for both feel and price, and it will have them both without making any risky modifications to the Pro V1 brand.

The ball market remains volatile, but every indication is that Titleist is beginning to adapt.

Beginning today, the Titleist Tour Soft is available in White and Yellow for a retail price of $34.99.

New Velocity

veclocity-web

Also introduced today is the next generation of Velocity golf balls. If you’re not familiar with the Velocity, it’s one of the lower priced balls in the Titleist lineup. It’s designed for distance, and also distance, and then some distance. It’s not a ball I play, but I’ve got a good friend who habitually puts them in play when he wants just a little bit more off the tee.

While it won’t be mistaken for the Pro V1, Velocity is one hell of a scramble ball.

So with that in mind, it shouldn’t surprise you that the finer points of the new ball are almost entirely distance-centric.

Let’s run through the highlights:

  • A softer, LSX core provides greater initial velocity with low spin on full shots.
  • A new NaZ+ cover contributes to higher ball speeds.
  • A spherically-tiled 328 dimple design (that’s a mouthful), optimizes aerodynamics, producing a higher ball flight, and…wait for it…longer carry (with a softer landing).

As I said, with Velocity, it’s all about distance. If Titleist can make it a little softer (both in feel and with respect to the way it lands off the short irons), all the better, but it’s not a ball you play if you’re looking for outstanding feel and greenside control.

New Color Options

velocity-hivis

This time around, the Velocity will be offered in four colors.

Joining white are three high-visibility options: VISI-White, Velocity Orange, and Velocity Pink.

VISI-White is notable for its orange sidestamp and double-digit player numbers (00, 22, 77 and 99). That may seem like an odd combination, but they were selected based on their popularity among Team Titleist members. Kudos for giving the people what they want.

The Titleist Velocity has a retail price of $26.99. Available now.

For You

For You

Golf Wedges
Apr 16, 2024
Vokey WedgeWorks Low Bounce K Grind Wedge
News
Apr 16, 2024
It Was A Masters To Forget For LIV Golf
Golf Apparel
Apr 16, 2024
adidas Pioneers Next Generation of Lightweight Golf Garments
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





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

      Spider Dubiel

      6 years ago

      I tried a couple of rounds with the new Tour Soft. I really like the way they feel and I played great with them. Local shop is getting good feed back on these as well. I was really happy.

      Reply

      AugustaGolfer

      6 years ago

      So its a two piece ball with a larger core for $34.95. I can buy the Calloway Supersoft for $19.95 a dozen and I’ll bet it will be within 2-3 yards different on any shot. I would never pay that. Just for the sake of it, I play the MG C4 three piece urethane ball and its as good as the Pro V and they are $23.99 including shipping.

      Reply

      Gorden

      6 years ago

      $34.95 a dozen, Three piece Srixon Q-Star tour is $29.95 with a Urethane cover, others like Snell offer cheaper price balls with Urethane covers…how is it Titleist can not afford a Urethane cover on its cheaper ball ? This is just a new NXT S with a new box and new selling points…$34.95 a dozen, anyone wonder why Costco’s Kirkland ball at $29 for two dozen was such a steel…..

      Reply

      mark

      6 years ago

      Until Titleist fixes 24% margins for retailers, mine will stay hidden on the shelf behind callaway, srixon, bridgestone and I don’t know, any ball from anyone else. It is really quite ridiculous.

      Reply

      Terry M McDowell

      6 years ago

      What is the margin for Callaway, srixon, bridgestone, etc?

      Reply

      Matt A

      6 years ago

      Same Question as Terry – what is the margin for the other manufactures?

      Reply

      Ryan B

      6 years ago

      Interesting decision here by Titleist. I remember the ball testing by Crossfield last year and he said he didn’t see much a difference for him between the DT Trusoft and the ProV1. Perhaps that led to the decision to bring the Tour Soft out. May be worth a try.

      Reply

      ole gray

      6 years ago

      I like that blue box. I like it alot. Hell I’d buy a dozen just to get one of those blue boxes! I think the box will do really well in the big box stores and if the ball is as good as the box, they’ll have a winner.

      Reply

      Soren Hansen

      6 years ago

      As a golfer who has been playing for a century I get so confused with all these different balls. They all claim to go further, more feel, great softness etc. But which ball is for me? I know the answer that they will provide, play them all and decide which ball is best for you!

      Sure, but I would appreciate if the told me at what club speed do the different balls perform best, which ball is best for spinning around the greens and so on.

      Come on ball producers. Give me more guidance on choice off ball.

      Reply

      Golfzilla

      6 years ago

      Surprised it took Titleist so long to get a clue.

      Reply

      NormW

      6 years ago

      Velocity. Add yellow or forget it.

      Reply

      Terry McDowell

      6 years ago

      Why yellow?

      Reply

      Nocke Chiangmai

      6 years ago

      Chrome Soft has Urethane cover, Callaway 1 up.
      AVX will be higher priced, Callaway 2 up.

      Reply

      aburtonky

      5 years ago

      Well this comment didn’t age well. RIP ChromeSlow.

      Reply

      Terry M McDowell

      6 years ago

      I can’t wait to get some pink!!!

      Reply

      Thomas Murphy

      6 years ago

      the great thing with Callaway finally getting something viable and the rise of the DTC companies is it is pushing Titleist to deliver a better consumer experience. And it is kind of funny that it is the “Tour Soft” borrowing the naming convention. My question as they have this line expansion is how you really “differentiate” and specific to their historic line where does the NXT fit? Has been their “aspiring” player ball but it seems a bit lost. Could this really have been positioned as the next gen NXT Tour S but they decided they needed “something bigger” ie a new brand that emphasizes Soft?

      Reply

      TR1PTIK

      6 years ago

      NXT Tour and NXT Tour S are going bye, bye. So the range will more or less be the same as it has always been with the addition of AVX.

      Reply

      Golfinnut

      6 years ago

      Excited for Titleist to be getting back in the game against the Chrome Soft

      Reply

    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.

    Golf Wedges
    Apr 16, 2024
    Vokey WedgeWorks Low Bounce K Grind Wedge
    News
    Apr 16, 2024
    It Was A Masters To Forget For LIV Golf
    Golf Apparel
    Apr 16, 2024
    adidas Pioneers Next Generation of Lightweight Golf Garments
    ENTER to WIN 3 DOZEN

    Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls

    Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls
    By signing up you agree to receive communications from MyGolfSpy and select partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy You may opt out of email messages/withdraw consent at any time.