T for Everyone

Titleist’s new T Series offers a set of irons suitable for any golfer

By Tony Dear

A review of every equipment page in 2025 reveals that, while we have certainly featured a few products aimed at game improvers, whether drivers, irons, wedges, or balls, there has been a slight bias towards gear for better players.

Titleist T350

T-Series irons (T00, T150, T250, T250 High-Launch, T350) first appeared in 2019 and have been updated every two years since. The lower the number the more accomplished the golfer, meaning the T350 is for higher-handicappers who are looking for extra distance and forgiveness rather than control and the ability to work the ball.

As we’ve mentioned numerous times in recent years, game-improvement clubs don’t look like they used to. This category of irons has traditionally never been shy in showing the numerous bells and whistles that helped newer, older, slower golfers get the ball airborne and flying an acceptable distance and relatively straight, even when contact was poor. But manufacturers realized these golfers wanted a sophisticated-looking club too, and they got good at making them.

Now a lot of game-improvement clubs look similar to better-player clubs…at least from a distance.  

Glance at the T350 for a moment and you see no garish graphics or deep cavity, and your immediate impression might be that it’s suited to a low-ish handicapper. The plastic badge of the 2023 model is gone, the word ‘Forged’ is inscribed into the hosel, and the all-over Brushed Chrome finish looks sober and smooth.

Closer inspection, however, reveals the clubhead is a little larger than that of its siblings, the top-line a little thicker, the sole a little wider, and the offset more generous – all things that will make the 15-20 handicapper feel more comfortable when addressing the ball.

Inside the hollow, steel body, plenty is going on to help you out – a circle of polymer behind the clubface (Max Impact Technology) acts like a trampoline, enabling it to flex upon contact and give your ballspeed a little boost. Tungsten weights in the heel and toe increase the club’s MOI and lower the Center of Gravity, which helps you launch the ball higher and quicker.

The face grooves have been designed with steeper walls to limit short-iron fliers and even though the lofts are aggressive, you’ll have little problem getting the ball in the air thanks to all the tungsten at the edges and low in the head. The forged L-face insert not only makes contact sound and feel good, it’s also designed to flex a little more when you make contact near the bottom of the face, helping shots that might otherwise have turned out badly get off the ground.  

Titleist T350

Lie angles can be adjusted from two degrees flat to four degrees upright (in increments of one degree), lofts can go from two degrees weaker to one degree stronger, and the clubheads can be made six grams lighter.

$1,505 (steel); $1,605 (graphite) for seven clubs.
Lofts – 4-20˚, 7-29˚, PW-43˚
Shafts – True Temper AMT Tour Red/White/Silver/Black (steel); MCA MMT AMC Red/Blue (graphite)
Available for online fittings now, and at retail on August 21st.
Right and left-hand.
titleist.com

 


Colorado AvidGolfer Magazine is the state’s leading resource for golf and the lifestyle that surrounds it, publishing eight issues annually and proudly delivering daily content via coloradoavidgolfer.com.

Tony Dear is a former teaching professional and First Tee coach, now a freelance writer/author living in Bellingham, WA. He can be reached at [email protected] 

Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram

GET COLORADO GOLF NEWS DIRECTLY TO YOUR INBOX