Let’s get some of the most important stuff out of the way.
TaylorMade’s Tour Response is the company’s softest and lowest-spinning urethane-covered golf ball. It’s also their most affordable offering in the urethane space although I suppose there’s a case to be made that, at 43 bucks, we’re playing fast and loose with the concept of affordability.
Tour Response has carved a niche among golfers inclined towards alignment aids and I’d wager that when most golfers think Tour Response these days, they think Stripe.
The point is that Tour Response is perhaps the one ball where you could make a strong case that TaylorMade shouldn’t bother making it in white. Yet, they do.
Trickle-down tech
Case in point: Speed Wrapped Core technology which debuted in the 2024 TP5. Speed is, of course, always the thing in golf but more than anything else, Speed Wrap is a sound-dampening technology that works to decouple feel from speed or, more accurately, feel from compression. TaylorMade says Speed Wrapped Cores make for balls that feel softer than their compression value suggests.
As all of this relates to Tour Response? The new ball maintains the same compression (TaylorMade’s number is 70) but with the addition of a Speed Wrapped Core, it should feel softer than the previous model.
Soft feel has consequences but you knew that.
TP5’s Tour Flight Dimple pattern is also part of the Tour Response Package. You can expect high flight i part to offset the lower spin rates.
It’s all about the Stripe
The stripe itself is 22 millimeters wide. TaylorMade describes it as encircling the ball’s center and while that’s mostly true, we have seen some instances where the Stripe was less than perfectly centered. Hopefully, those issues have been addressed with the new ball.
With that said, the most exciting part of the new TaylorMade Tour Response story might be the enhancements to the Stripe itself. TaylorMade worked with leaders in ink and print technologies to develop new more vibrant inks.
The result is what I’d describe as an even bolder Stripe. Seriously, guys, can we put this stuff on TP5?
While I’m not sure why, Tour Response is also available in boring white and uninteresting yellow. Those adjectives may not be entirely TaylorMade-approved.
Availability and pricing
For more information, visit TaylorMadeGolf.com.
The post TaylorMade Changes Its Stripes With New Tour Response Golf Ball appeared first on MyGolfSpy.