Mizuno MP-7 Driving Iron (Assembled)

$145.00

Mizuno MP-7 Driving Iron (Assembled)

Listing Details:

*FULLY ASSEMBLED*

Head: Mizuno MP7 3 iron (21*)

Head Finish: Purple Haze (raw) by K Uselton

Shaft & Grip: Original Temper S200 in mint shape & Tour Velvet with Mizuno branding in mint shape

Ferrule: BBFCO

Loft and Length: at 21* a modern driving iron loft, and so we also went with a tad longer 2 iron ish length shaft.

The Mizuno MP-7 was introduced in the late 1980s as part of the company’s early MP (Mizuno Pro) lineage—a period when Mizuno was refining the modern forged blade that would come to define its reputation. 

The MP-7 (and TP-9 which is very similiar) sat between the better-known MP-5 and MP-9 models in both shape and playability: compact and traditional at address, but with slightly softened edges and a touch more sole width to make it usable for skilled amateurs as well as tour professionals.

Besides the hornback muscleback style!, the profile is understated: thin top line, minimal offset, square toe, and restrained branding. 

It is the kind of iron that looks right in the bag of players who care a lot about the shape and trajectory and feel of their shots and hence Nick Faldo’s first mizuno move was the nearly identical TP-9.

While never a large-volume release, as the Mizuno Pro stamping morphed into MP North American branding, the MP-7 does still reflect a golden period when Mizuno was establishing traits you all know well and  remain at their core design vocabulary.

The model’s geometry and dense feedback, along with its turf interaction profile made it a great candidate for a bespoke driving iron release and it took some digging, but we got there. 

Mizuno MP-7 Driving Iron (Assembled)

Listing Details:

*FULLY ASSEMBLED*

Head: Mizuno MP7 3 iron (21*)

Head Finish: Purple Haze (raw) by K Uselton

Shaft & Grip: Original Temper S200 in mint shape & Tour Velvet with Mizuno branding in mint shape

Ferrule: BBFCO

Loft and Length: at 21* a modern driving iron loft, and so we also went with a tad longer 2 iron ish length shaft.

The Mizuno MP-7 was introduced in the late 1980s as part of the company’s early MP (Mizuno Pro) lineage—a period when Mizuno was refining the modern forged blade that would come to define its reputation. 

The MP-7 (and TP-9 which is very similiar) sat between the better-known MP-5 and MP-9 models in both shape and playability: compact and traditional at address, but with slightly softened edges and a touch more sole width to make it usable for skilled amateurs as well as tour professionals.

Besides the hornback muscleback style!, the profile is understated: thin top line, minimal offset, square toe, and restrained branding. 

It is the kind of iron that looks right in the bag of players who care a lot about the shape and trajectory and feel of their shots and hence Nick Faldo’s first mizuno move was the nearly identical TP-9.

While never a large-volume release, as the Mizuno Pro stamping morphed into MP North American branding, the MP-7 does still reflect a golden period when Mizuno was establishing traits you all know well and  remain at their core design vocabulary.

The model’s geometry and dense feedback, along with its turf interaction profile made it a great candidate for a bespoke driving iron release and it took some digging, but we got there.