TaylorMade’s partnership with Oracle Red Bull Racing is back for another lap and this time around the collection is taking a more measured approach to the checkered flag.
The latest collaboration between the golf giant and the Formula 1 powerhouse drops the high-octane driver that headlined previous releases, opting instead for a more comprehensive lineup of accessories and apparel that should appeal to racing enthusiasts who aren’t necessarily looking to overhaul their entire golf bag.
The absence of a driver makes perfect sense when you consider TaylorMade’s upcoming Qi4D launch. Still, as well-rounded as this offering is, the absence of the driver makes me feel like just a little something is missing.
MG5 wedges: The main attraction
With no driver in the offering, the centerpiece of this collection is a three-piece Milled Grind 5 wedge set priced at $750. Before you start calculating cost per wedge, understand what you’re getting: 52-, 56- and 60-degree forged heads finished in a racing-blue base with red and white paint-filled logos that create a little extra pop.
The attention to detail is where things get interesting. Each wedge features colored rings on the hosel that correspond to Formula 1 tire compounds—white for hard (52 degree), yellow for medium (56), and red for soft (60). It’s the kind of nerdy crossover detail that makes you appreciate when someone actually thinks these things through (even if they have to explain it to most of us).

The challenge, of course, is that $750 buys you a very specific set of wedges with no options for different lofts or grinds. If 52-56-60 happens to match your setup and you’re either a collector or someone who simply doesn’t sweat the technical details, it’s a well-executed, though perhaps a bit busy, offering.
For everyone else? Well, there’s always next year’s collaboration.
Apparel that actually makes sense

Here’s where TaylorMade deserves credit: they’ve put together an apparel collection that goes beyond the typical polo-and-hat combo that dominates most golf collaborations.
The T-shirt selection includes four distinct designs from the Racing Line tee with checkered logos and tire track graphics to the Circuit Links shirt that cleverly incorporates a racetrack-inspired golf hole design. I’m genuinely glad to see golf brands offering T-shirts—it happens far too infrequently—but $60 for a cotton tee feels a bit like a Kia at BMW pricing.

The hoodies build on the racing theme. The Final Lap design features a golf hole-inspired racetrack with a flagstick on the green while the Box at the Turn hoodie showcases a golf cart equipped for a pit stop complete with stacked tires and a TaylorMade golf bag. At $130, they’re not cheap, but the design work justifies the premium better than the T-shirts do. While $130 isn’t cheap, it’s also not criminally insane by current market standards.
The supporting cast

The collection rounds out with the kind of accessories that make these collaborations viable for the average golfer. A Tour Preferred glove in team colors runs $35 which puts it in reasonable territory for premium golf gloves. The microfiber towel ($30) features a checkered pattern that’s bold without being too obnoxious.
There’s also a three-piece marker set that again features tire compound colors (red, yellow, white) with both TaylorMade and Oracle Red Bull Racing logos for $45. It’s the kind of detail-oriented accessory that works whether you’re a racing fan or just someone who appreciates well-designed golf accessories. I’d also argue that by today’s standards, three not entirely off-the-rack ball markers for $45 feels like a steal.
The bottom line

This latest Red Bull Racing collaboration feels more mature than its predecessors. Even if I kind of miss it, by stepping away from the driver-centric approach and focusing on a broader range of accessories and apparel, TaylorMade has created a collection that’s more accessible to the average golfer while maintaining the visual identity (and premium placement) that makes these partnerships work.
The pricing remains aggressive across the board but that’s increasingly the norm for limited-edition golf gear. Whether it’s worth the premium depends largely on how much you value the crossover appeal and collectible nature of the collaboration.
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