Copying A Tour Winner’s Bag Is Usually A Bad Idea. This Isn’t.
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Copying A Tour Winner’s Bag Is Usually A Bad Idea. This Isn’t.

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Copying A Tour Winner’s Bag Is Usually A Bad Idea. This Isn’t.

MyGolfSpy’s Tour coverage goes beyond leaderboards and headlines, combining reporting, equipment expertise, and industry insight to explain what the biggest moments in professional golf actually mean for everyday golfers.

I’ve been tracking every golf bag that has won on the PGA Tour in 2026.

There’s a lot of good information there. I like looking at the trends and seeing what players keep in the bag, what they change, what new gear shows up and what old clubs refuse to leave. It’s interesting.

That does not mean I think amateur golfers should blindly copy what Tour players use.

Most of the time, that’s a bad idea. With lower-lofted drivers, heavy shafts and player’s irons, it’s often a mistake to blindly copy what the professionals play.

But there is one trend from the 2026 winning WITBs that regular golfers probably should pay attention to.

More than 30 percent of winners had this one club

Of the 28 winning WITB entries I’ve tracked so far this year, nine included a 7-wood.

That’s more than 30 percent.

We’ve seen it from Scottie Scheffler, Justin Rose, Jacob Bridgeman, J.J. Spaun, Alex Fitzpatrick, Kristoffer Reitan, J.T. Poston, Wyndham Clark and Chris Gotterup.

That’s a pretty wide mix of players, speeds, swings and setups.

A 7-wood can launch higher than a long iron. It can land softer than a lot of hybrids. It can be easier to hit from the fairway than a low-lofted fairway wood. For Tour players, that matters when they are trying to hit long approaches into firm greens.

For amateurs, it may matter even more.

Which 7-woods are they playing?

Here are the 7-woods that showed up in the winning bags I’ve tracked.

PlayerEvent7-Wood
Scottie SchefflerAmExTaylorMade Qi4D 7W
Justin RoseFarmersTaylorMade Qi4D 7W
Jacob BridgemanGenesis InvitationalTaylorMade Qi4D 7W 21°
J.J. SpaunValero Texas OpenTaylorMade Qi10 7W 21°
Alex FitzpatrickZurich ClassicTaylorMade Qi4D 7W 21°
Kristoffer ReitanTruist ChampionshipPING G440 Max 7W 21°
J.T. PostonMemorial TournamentTaylorMade Qi4D 7W 21°
Wyndham ClarkU.S. OpenPING G440 Max 7W 21°
Chris GotterupJohn Deere ClassicTaylorMade Qi4D 7W 21°

The TaylorMade part is hard to ignore.

Seven of the nine 7-woods in this group were TaylorMade. Most were Qi4D models with Spaun using a Qi10 7-wood. PING also showed up with the G440 Max 7-wood in Kristoffer Reitan’s and Wyndham Clark’s winning setups. TaylorMade fairway woods have been in 23 of 28 winning bags in 2026.

This isn’t just a “forgiveness club”

The 7-wood still has a reputation problem.

A lot of golfers think of it as a senior club, a high-handicap club or something you only add when you can’t hit a long iron anymore. The Tour setups tell a different story.

Chris Gotterup is a good example.

Earlier in the season, his winning bags had a 5-wood in that spot. By the John Deere Classic, that spot had become a TaylorMade Qi4D 7-wood at 21 degrees. He still had a low-lofted PING G440 LST driver, a mini driver and Bridgestone Tour B 220 MB blades from 4-iron through 9-iron.

The 7-wood was there because it gave him a specific ball flight and distance window.

Alex Fitzpatrick is another good example. His winning Zurich setup had a 7-wood and a 9-wood.

Why a 7-wood might make sense for amateurs

Most amateurs do not need to copy a Tour player’s driver loft or shaft. But the 7-wood is different because it solves a very normal problem.

The top end of the amateur bag is often a guessing game.

The 7-wood gives you more loft than a 5-wood. It usually has more shaft length and speed than a hybrid. It can create a higher flight without asking you to make a perfect long-iron swing.

The real value is not just distance. It’s usable distance.

A 7-wood that carries a predictable number and lands soft is more valuable than a 4-iron that occasionally goes farther but rarely holds the green.

Final thoughts

Copying a Tour winner’s bag is usually a bad idea. But if more than 30 percent of the winning bags I’ve tracked have a 7-wood, this might be the exception worth testing.

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Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





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