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Mizuno, Srixon, Callaway, Titleist. Who Won My Iron Fitting?

Mizuno, Srixon, Callaway, Titleist. Who Won My Iron Fitting?

I recently went through an iron fitting to replace my Callaway Apex DCB irons. They were originally fitted for me and they served their purpose as I played more casual golf with my kids. Good distance, plenty of help, nothing too demanding. But over time, the look and consistency just didn’t match what I wanted.

I’m in that odd middle ground many golfers find themselves in. I want the feel and look of a player’s iron, but I still need enough forgiveness to survive a couple of rushed nine-hole rounds a week with kids in tow.

I’m not playing competitive golf right now, but I’ll never stop chasing low scores. I wanted a cleaner profile, better feel and more control (all with a little bit of help).

My fitter narrowed the test to four irons: Mizuno JPX 925 Forged, Titleist T250, Srixon ZXi5, and Callaway Apex Ai150.

Below is my take on each, what I felt, what I saw, and what actually mattered for my game.

Mizuno JPX 925 Forged

This was easily my favorite feel of the group. Mizuno’s forged heads have that signature softness. The flight was strong and high, something I prefer, and the look from the top down was exactly what I’ve been searching for.

The JPX 925 Forged made it to my final two. It checked all the boxes: clean, soft, consistent, workable, yet forgiving enough to play golf the way I play it right now.

Callaway Apex Ai150

On paper, this should’ve been the simplest transition. I’ve been in Callaway irons for years and moving into the newest Apex felt like the natural next step.

When I flushed it, the Ai150 was great. The problem was the misses. I saw the same inconsistent distance patterns I experienced with my previous Callaway set. Instead of hitting every 7-iron 153 yards, I’d hit a few that jumped to 160 and some that hovered in the high 140s. It doesn’t help me to have “hero” numbers; I can give up those 160s for something more consistent.

And because I tested the same shaft throughout the fitting, the inconsistency wasn’t a shaft issue.

Srixon ZXi5

This was my first time being fitted into a Srixon iron. Srixon continues to prove it deserves to be mentioned any time golfers talk about top-tier irons.

The feel was definitely firmer than the Mizuno, maybe “hot off the face” is a good description. The ball jumps, the head feels stable, and the performance across the board impressed me. If you want premium performance with a lively, fast feel, the ZXi5 belongs in the conversation every time.

Titleist T250

It has been almost 15 years since I gamed a set of Titleist irons but the T250 reminded me why I loved them in the first place. This iron brings a blend of workability, accuracy, consistency and control that immediately felt like a solution.

What surprised me most is how forgiving they are. Titleist designs the T250 with a forged L-Face and V-Taper technology that’s meant to improve ball speed on low strikes and help launch the ball more consistently. I could feel that stability immediately, especially on shots that weren’t perfect.

The T250 gave me the confidence to shape shots but didn’t punish me when my swing wasn’t at its best. And, they look clean, too. Performance always comes first for me (spin, launch, consistency, distance control) but it never hurts to like what you see in the bag.

Who won my iron fitting?

There’s a whole discussion to be had about the shaft side of this fitting but that’s for another article. When I narrow irons down, I like to take my top two and go back and forth until one just “fits.”

And the iron I kept reaching for was the Titleist T250.

Maybe it’s because I’ve played Titleist irons in the past. Maybe it’s because they hit the sweet spot of everything I need in my game. Or maybe the T250 is simply one of the most well-balanced irons in the player’s distance category right now.

Whatever the reason, I walked out of my fitting with the T250 as my winner.

Final thoughts

Have you tested any of these irons this year? Which ones fit your game the best? It’s always interesting to see how different heads, even in the same category, perform differently for different players.

The post Mizuno, Srixon, Callaway, Titleist. Who Won My Iron Fitting? appeared first on MyGolfSpy.

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