


I had plenty to compare it to when hitting the Speedzone meaning I could answer two big questions: Should you be adding the Speedzone Drivers to your test lists and arguably more importantly, do you need to spend £500 on a driver for it to perform well in 2020? What's It All About? I got my hands on this driver a little later than I would have liked, however this meant that I had the perspective of testing other drivers it was going up against in the market: Mavrik, SIM, G410, and the Titleist TS drivers. I don't think I'd be alone in saying that when I heard about the 2020 Speedzone driver, I thought to myself: “How can they improve on last year?” and “Due to their success, surely the price will go up?” Losing the 'F9' name, keeping the 'Speed' and adding in the 'zone' (or should I say 'zones'). Still, there are worse problems to have when producing golf clubs.įast forward to early 2020 and true to Cobra's consistent year-on-year release schedule, the evolution of the Speedback arrived. Rumours even circulated that the only reason it didn't then go on to become the best selling driver of 2020 was due to the fact that Cobra couldn't make them fast enough to meet the demand. It performed brilliantly well, went down well with the media, received tour validation and most importantly for you, sold at an RRP of around £150 cheaper than other leading manufacturers' offerings - the TaylorMade M5 and M6 and Callaway Epic Flash. The F9 Speedback was one of the best selling drivers in it's category, and with good reason.
