 Exploded view of TaylorMade R9 driver with its moveable weight in the sole and adjustable face technology through the shaft
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After the impressive user numbers among those on the PGA Tour including Sergio Garcia, Justin Rose and Darren Clarke nd Pat Perez’s victory at the Bob Hope Classic in January, it was obvious this driver, still two months shy of its official launch in the US and Europe, was something very special.
I loved the info-mercial we've seen on US golf channels with the TaylorMade R7 slowly changing into a TaylorMade R9 with a lot of clinking noises, but the point of the advertisement that said: ‘in 2004 TaylorMade optimized the driver and that in 2009 they were going to optimise me’ didn’t quite resonate.
Who, after all, were TaylorMade to tell me I’m not optimised already, or that if indeed I wasn’t optimised, a golf club was somehow going to finish the job? But I’m not going to lie to you. I ripped open that box like a hungry dog sniffing a bag of chocolate-covered meaty treats.
Not altogether surprisingly perhaps, my initial impression was that I had seen this club before. The head has a different shape to my old TaylorMade r7 425 and the 2007 TaylorMade Burner, both of which have more rounded crowns. But this more tapered, crown with a pointed end is certainly TaylorMade’s preferred shape just now.
I suspect is has something to do with improved aerodynamics and the fact it need accommodate only one MWT cartridge, as opposed to the two on my TaylorMade r7 Quad. Actually, I read that the head shape is referred to as ‘New Classic’ and that it’s a ‘pleasing cross between the TaylorMade r7 SuperQuad and the TaylorMade r7 Limited’.
I’d say it’s definitely more r7 Limited than SuperQuad and, if pushed, I’d opt for a more rounded crown. But it’s not a deal-breaker and the pointier end does have a certain sleekness about it.