Tour pros change equipment all the time. But every once in a while, a player does something much bigger. They change almost the entire bag.
If you’ve ever done this yourself, you know it’s not as simple as pulling the plastic off a new set of clubs and playing better the next day. You have to learn new carry numbers, figure out feel and build trust.
The question I started to wonder about is how much this impacts professionals who do the same thing.
They have the best fitters, launch monitors, club reps and practice facilities in the world. If anyone should be able to make a full equipment switch look easy, it should be them.
So we looked at recent Strokes Gained data from two players who made major equipment changes: Max Homa’s move from Titleist to COBRA in 2025 and Aldrich Potgieter’s move from Titleist to PXG in 2026.
The sample size is small so we’re not pretending this is a scientific rule but it still brought up some interesting results.
The two clearest examples: Homa and Potgieter
The clearest recent examples are Max Homa and Aldrich Potgieter because both made significant equipment switches involving most of their bags.
| Player | Year | Switch | Type of Change | Early Pattern | First Clear Turnaround |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Max Homa | 2025 | Titleist to COBRA | Full equipment switch | WD, T53 and three missed cuts in his first six events | T12 at the Masters |
| Aldrich Potgieter | 2026 | Titleist to PXG | Full equipment switch | Four straight missed cuts | 5th at Genesis, T14 at Cadillac |
The situations were not identical but the pattern was similar.
Both players struggled early after the switch. Both showed stronger results after a few months.
Max Homa: The driver got better but the scoring clubs took time
Homa’s move to COBRA in 2025 was a major reset.
He had been with Titleist dating back to his amateur days so this was a significant change after a 2024 season that was already below his usual standard.
| Tournament | Result | Takeaway |
|---|---|---|
| The Sentry | T26 | Decent first event with COBRA, gaining +1.09 total strokes |
| Farmers Insurance Open | WD | Approach play struggled badly, losing -2.55 strokes on approach |
| AT&T Pebble Beach | T53 | Made the cut but approach play was still an issue |
| WM Phoenix Open | CUT | Another poor approach week, losing -2.45 strokes on approach |
| Genesis Invitational | CUT | Continued struggles, losing -1.70 total strokes |
| Arnold Palmer Invitational | CUT | No clear turnaround yet, with SG: Approach at -1.57 |
| THE PLAYERS Championship | CUT | Another missed cut, losing -2.77 total strokes |
| Masters Tournament | T12 | First major sign of recovery, gaining +1.21 on approach and +2.33 total |
| John Deere Classic | T5 | Stronger confirmation, gaining +1.07 on approach and +2.11 total |
The Masters was the first real turning point.
That came about three months after the COBRA switch. Homa gained strokes on approach, finished T12 and later added a T5 at the John Deere Classic.
Aldrich Potgieter: The distance stayed but the results took time
Potgieter switched from Titleist to PXG in January 2026. The first thing to know is that his speed did not disappear.
Potgieter remained one of the longest players on Tour. His off-the-tee numbers were still positive. The problem was the scorecard.
After the switch, he missed four straight cuts. The early data suggests he was still powerful off the tee but needed time to settle in with the rest of the bag.
Potgieter’s early PXG results
| Tournament | Result | Takeaway |
|---|---|---|
| Farmers Insurance Open | CUT | Early missed cut after the PXG switch |
| WM Phoenix Open | CUT | Second straight missed cut |
| THE PLAYERS Championship | CUT | Total SG: -2.23 despite positive off-the-tee play |
| Arnold Palmer Invitational | CUT | Total SG: -4.63, with SG: Approach at -1.48 |
| Genesis Invitational | 5th | First clear turnaround, gaining +3.30 total strokes |
| Cadillac Championship | T14 | Strong follow-up, gaining +1.59 total strokes |
| PGA Championship | T35 | Another positive total SG week at +1.36 |
Genesis was the first clear turnaround.
Potgieter finished fifth and gained +3.30 total strokes. He followed that with a T14 at the Cadillac Championship and a T35 at the PGA Championship. From the switch date to the first strong result, the adjustment period was roughly six to eight weeks.
The trend: There may be a 60- to 90-day adjustment window
When you put Homa and Potgieter side by side, the trend is simple.
| Player | Early Struggle | First Clear Recovery Sign | Approximate Adjustment Window |
|---|---|---|---|
| Max Homa | WD, T53 and three missed cuts in first six events | T12 at the Masters | About three months |
| Aldrich Potgieter | Four straight missed cuts | 5th at Genesis | About six to eight weeks |
Justin Rose is worth mentioning
Rose did not make a full-bag switch. He changed into McLaren irons in May 2026 while keeping the rest of his setup more stable.
That makes it less useful for the main comparison but still interesting because of the timing.
Rose was playing very good golf before the switch. He had won twice, finished T3 at the Masters and had been strong with his approach play. According to the research notes, he was ranked seventh on Tour in approach before moving into the McLaren irons.
Rose’s first three events with McLaren Irons
| Tournament | Result | SG: Approach | SG: Around the Green | Total SG |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cadillac Championship | T65 | -0.00 | -0.96 | -0.91 |
| Truist Championship | T45 | +0.11 | -0.27 | +0.38 |
| PGA Championship | T10 | +1.01 | +1.17 | +2.36 |
The PGA Championship result was encouraging but three events is not enough to draw a firm conclusion.
Rose’s situation is better viewed as a case to watch. It supports the idea that changing scoring clubs is not simple but it should not be treated the same as a full-bag switch.
Final thoughts
New equipment takes time to adjust to, regardless of who you are. That’s especially true when you replace most of the bag at once. For professionals, it’s not just a contract announcement or a new logo on the staff bag. It’s a serious performance decision that can take weeks or months to settle in.
For the rest of us, the lesson is pretty simple. If you’re excited to head to the range with a brand-new set of clubs, don’t be overly discouraged if the first few rounds aren’t great. New gear can work. It just may not work immediately. And at least you’re not missing cuts on the PGA Tour while you figure it out.
Peter
1 minute ago
How about looking at Brooke Henderson and Nelly Koorda when they switched to TaylorMade a few years ago?