After Sun Day Red announcement, fans were not feeling Tiger Woods’ new clothing brand

Reviews were mixed, to say the least.

Seeing Tiger Woods in something other than the Nike swoosh was always going to be weird.

Woods and TaylorMade partnered to launch a new premium active-lifestyle apparel and footwear brand. Woods debuted the new line, called Sun Day Red, on Monday evening in California ahead of his first start in the 2024 season at the Genesis Invitational.

After Monday’s announcement of Sun Day Red, golf fans had some opinions on social media. While there were some positive comments, a majority of the initial feedback related to the logo, apparel and more was not great.

It’s going to take time to get used to Sun Day Red and the new look, but here’s a look at some fan reactions to the announcement.

Sun Day Red: Check out Tiger Woods’ new lifestyle and golf brand launched alongside TaylorMade

Tiger Woods and TaylorMade launch Sun Day Red, a new golf and lifestyle brand.

PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. — Tiger Woods was never going to be a free agent for long.

A few days after the confetti was swept from Times Square, an announcement was made that turned a rumor into reality: Tiger Woods and Nike were parting ways after 27 years. The 15-time major winner and the Swoosh were nearly synonymous, with Woods not only wearing the company’s footwear and apparel but also using Nike clubs and balls until the brand left the equipment world in 2016.

Monday evening, 35 days after parting ways with Nike and just a few miles from Riveria Country Club where he will be hosting the Genesis Invitational and making his 2024 PGA Tour debut this week, Tiger Woods, alongside TaylorMade CEO David Abeles, announced the creation of Sun Day Red, a new lifestyle and golf brand.

Sun Day Red will be under the umbrella of TaylorMade, but is going to operate as a completely separate, stand-alone business. It will have its own designers, staff and headquarters. Brad Blankenship, formerly of Quicksilver and RVCA, has been named the brand’s president. 

“We organized a completely separate vertical that is not based in Carlsbad (California, where TaylorMade’s headquarters is located),” Abeles said. “This new brand is not based in Carlsbad. It’s in San Clemente.” Abeles went on to say that there is no influence from TaylorMade on Sun Day Red, and it will have its own identity.

Erin Andrews, Tiger Woods and David Abeles
Erin Andrews, Tiger Woods and David Abeles Monday at the Sun Day Red launch. (David Dusek/Golfweek)

Asked by host Erin Andrews why he chose to take on this project, Woods said, “It’s the right time. It’s the right time in my life. I’m no longer a kid anymore. I have kids, and this is an important transitional part of my life. I can have something that I can be proud of, a brand that I can be proud of going forward.”

Woods’ fans and the golf industry had a strong hint this was coming when word got out on January 20 that three trademarks for a “Sunday Red” were registered through the United States Patent and Trademark Office by TaylorMade Lifestyle Ventures LLC. Woods has been using TaylorMade clubs and has been a partner of the brand since 2017.

Tiger himself teased the announcement and creation of the brand on Saturday, posting a photo on social media on Saturday that was captioned, “A new day rises. 2.12.24”

Throughout the hour-long presentation on Monday evening, Abeles and Woods repeated the idea that Sun Day Red plans to be more than a golf brand. Yes, the company is going to sell polo shirts, pants and hoodies that can be worn on the course. Many of those products were on display Monday night, as were prototype golf shoes, rain jackets, golf gloves and accessories, but Woods and Abeles said many products will be at home at the gym, like the tee shirts, shorts and other pieces of workout apparel shown Monday night. There will be cashmere pieces, shorts and other things that can be worn around town as well.

Asked what the Sun Day Red team has started to do that has Tiger excited, Woods replied, “The way it fits, the way it feels the way it moves. It’s uninhibited, that’s one of the things that I have conveyed to the entire staff. What’s the best garment to play in, well, that’s no garment at all. No seams, nothing restricting you. That’s the way our pieces should fit.”

Sun Day Red will start selling gear to consumers in the United States and Canada beginning May 1 at sundayred.com, with plans to expand to other markets later. Sun Day Red also plans to carry women’s apparel and footwear, followed by boys’ and girls’ products in the future.

Below are several items featured at Monday evening’s launch event.

Tiger Woods, TaylorMade officially launch Sun Day Red. Could a TaylorMade IPO be far behind?

“I’m not a kid anymore. I want to have a brand I’m proud of going forward,” Woods said.

PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. – The worst-kept secret in golf was officially unveiled – Tiger Woods and TaylorMade have partnered to launch a new premium active-lifestyle apparel and footwear brand.

“We’re going to sunrise a brand,” said TaylorMade CEO David Abeles at a launch party on Monday evening, announcing an extended partnership with Tiger to launch Sun Day Red as a standalone business.

Tiger ended his 27-year relationship with Nike at the end of 2023. On Thursday, he is scheduled to tee it up at the Genesis Invitational wearing Sun Day Red.

“It’s the right time in my life,” Tiger said. “It’s transitional. I’m not a kid anymore. I want to have a brand I’m proud of going forward.”

Given his existing relationship with TaylorMade and its investment last year in PopStroke, a mini-golf entertainment and dining venue owned in part by Tiger, it’s a natural progression for TaylorMade and Tiger to get further into bed together. It’s unclear how much of a stake, if any, Tiger has in the new brand but he’s more than just an endorser.

“Let me be very clear, what we’re doing with Tiger, this is no endorsement,” Abeles said. “This is a full-blown, unequivocal partnership.”

Asked after his presentation to elaborate on Tiger’s stake in the new standalone brand, Abeles said, “We don’t disclose economic provisions within how we put things together but we are intimate partners. We are partners in every sense of the word.”

Pressed further, he would only add, “We are great partners.”

Casey Alexander, senior vice president for Compass Point Research and Trading and the longest-tenured golf analyst on Wall Street, sees another reason why TaylorMade would be motivated to create more growth outlets.

“I don’t know if TaylorMade is going to do an IPO this year, next year or at all but if they were going to this would be an association that would make sense to create some juice around it if and when they were going to do a deal,” he said.

Tiger’s use of Nike clubs and balls failed to make its equipment an authentic brand with golfers and it eventually opted to exit the golf equipment business in 2016. But there’s no denying that Tiger elevated Nike to the premiere golf apparel brand during his prime. What will that mean for Sun Day Red?

“He’s a different guy now,” Alexander said. “His game is in a different place and his life is in a different place so we’ll see whether or not he can still move the needle on the apparel side.”

Sun Day Red will begin selling apparel to men on May 1 as a digitally native company initially via Sundayred.com, which has already gone live. Over time, Sun Day Red will expand its availability in key markets outside of North America, at retail, and broaden its product offering to include footwear, women and kids’ lines. Abeles said footwear will lag behind with a target of early 2025. Asked when Tiger will begin wearing the brand’s shoes, he said, “We are working on it right now. We fully anticipate him wearing it in spring or summer, if not sooner.”

Abeles, who started his third stint with TaylorMade in 2015, said that signing Woods to an equipment endorsement deal in 2016 was the first part of “the dream” to have the best player ever to play the game – his words – using the company’s clubs. The second part of “the dream” took shape at St. Andrews in 2021 over cold bagels and coffee with agent Mark Steinberg, who subtly intimated that Tiger might consider expanding his relationship with the company.

TaylorMade had been part of Adidas for 20 years before being sold in 2017 and becoming a privately-held vertical. They still have plenty of staff with experience in the footwear and apparel business.

“We have always had a perspective that at some point in time we’d approach adjacencies in our business and logical and rational adjacencies in our business are apparel and footwear,” Abeles said. “We have inherent knowledge of how to do it and we also believe that these markets, multi-billion-dollar market places, need a new brand, a fresh approach for apparel and golf and a fresh approach to apparel and lifestyle and the connection of the two.”

As a result, they created a separate vertical within the TaylorMade holding company, which is based in San Clemente, California, in Orange County, not the company’s longtime headquarters in Carlsbad, near San Diego. There is a separate leadership team that stands alone from TaylorMade.

“A lot of companies make the mistake of integrating brands into the big mothership and you lose your own identity. This brand will have its own identity when we launch it tonight and its own identity 20 years from now.”

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