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Tour Tech Rundown: A TaylorMade ride or die does it

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Sunday is giving Saturday a run for its money as Moving Day, at least on the PGA Tour. The numbers posted at Pebble Beach were stunning in the depths that they reached. Scottie Scheffler made three eagles and a birdie on the par-five holes, shot 63, and didn’t win. Among the players in the top five, their ringer score for the front nine was 26. The only hole that none birdied was number nine. The back nine played a bit tougher. 27 was the best ringer score that they could compile. Hole 12 held firm against the birdie barrage, while 14 did not surrender an eagle (even to Scheffler). A new reality with classic golf courses is that they no longer hold up against today’s talent, strength, and equipment. We should love them for what they were and are, but they will not be the standard for par, at least at the professional level.

That cornucopia of themes brings us to this week’s Tour Tech Rundown. Winners raised trophies in California, Florida, Riyadh, and Adelaide. Their equipment choices ranged from one brand to four brands, with certain selection similarities and other option differences.

PGA Tour @ AT&T: It’s Collin’s time!

For a decent amount of time, after Akshay Bhatia lost his lead, Sam Burns stepped up to make a run at the top spot. At the same time, Scottie Scheffler was on a tear. The world number one stood seven-under after seven holes, but then cooled off. Scheffler managed a tie for fourth, courtesy of his day-four 63. He was one shot behind co-runners up Sepp Straka and Min Woo Lee, and two behind the victor. Bhatia had another chance to take the next step and win against proven champions, but a missed, six-feet putt for birde at 16 extinguished the flickering candle of hope for the young Wake Forest native.

The man of the hour was Collin Morikawa. The two-time major champion had not won since 2023, when he triumphed at Zozo. Morikawa notched birdies at 15 and 16 to take a lead, but nearly threw the tournament away with a 17th-hole double cross. His patented fade never materialized at the famous par-three hole, and Morikawa nearly went down the cove by the penultimate green. He was able to pitch onto the putting surface, but his putt for par drifted off.

At the final hole, Morikawa split the fairway with his driver, but erred in therough near the green. His pitch for three was a gem, rolling out to mere inches. With the tap-in birdie, Collin Morikawa was able to secure a seventh tour title and re-establish himself as a contender.

Collin’s Gear Bag

Much like Charley Hull (see below) Collin Morikawa has Taylor Made as his ride or die through the bag. Every club and his golf ball are TM. Morikawa begins with a Qi4D LS, and pairs it with Qii4D Tour 3 and 5 fairway metals. Beneath the iron covers, Morikawa mixes in three different models. His four-iron is a PDHY. He adds in two P7CBs in the 5 and 6 slots. The set concludes with the P730 model for his 7iron through the pitching wedge. Morikawa closes his bag with three MG5 wedges, at 5o  (SB09), 56 (LB08) and 60 degrees (TW). Along the ground, Morikwa trusts his TP5x ball to a Spider Tour X putter.

PGA Tour Champions @ Chubb Classic: Toms’ sandy wins the day

Put a wedge in David Toms’ hands and something special might happen. Toms’ only major victory on the regular tour came courtesy of an up-and-down from 100 yards at the 18th at Atlanta Athletic Club. On Sunday at Tiburon, Toms made every mistake he could conjure, leading to two doubles and two bogeys. Despite those missteps, Toms jarred a massive, twenty-feet save for par at 17. He came to the par-five, 18th hole, in a tie for the top spot, still hopeful for a win in regulation time. Already in the clubhouse were Boo Weekly and Justin Leonard. Both had a chance to reach 13-deep, but neither could make four at the final hole. With no holes left, the duo could simply wait, watch, and wonder. Then came Toms.

The LSU alumnus took two shots to reach the left greenside bunker. Faced with a lengthy sand shot, Toms played it to perfection. He landed it partway to the hole, then let it run out to within inches of the flagstick. The birdie tap-in was the clinching shot, moving him one ahead of the runners-up, into a fifth senior title, and first since 2023.

David Toms Gear Bag

It’s tricky keeping up with PGA Tour Champions golfers and their current equipment lineup. As recently as 2024, Toms was gaming Callaway driver and fairway metals, Srixon hybrids and irons, and Cleveland wedges. A Scotty Cameron putter and a Titleist ProV1 golf ball rounded out the utensils. Clearly a guy at a point in his career that plays what he wants to play, and not what will put food on the table.

Ladies European Tour: One Hull of a day for Charley

At the close of play on Saturday, ten golfers at within two shots of the lead. Korea’s Hye-Jin Choi had reached 15-under par, but had little time to relax. On her heels at -14 was Japan’s Rio Takeda, followed by an octet of challengers at 13-deep. There would be no holding on, no preservation of a lead. Sunday would be a barnburner, a shootout, and one golfer would emerge with the title at Riyadh Golf Club.

On day four, every golfer in contention had stumbled at least twice. Some made bogeys, others a double, and for the majority, a stumble meant not enough birdies. England’s Charley Hull had a pair of bogeys on her card. She also counted seven birdie and an eagle, to go with eight pars. Hull signed for the day’s low round with 65. No one else in contention was lower than 67. One of those golfers, Akie Iwai of Japan, began the day one shot clear of Hull. Iwai played a marvelous round, including fashioning a birdie at the last.

The problem for Iwai was, that birdie came on the heels of a bogey at 17, one of two that she made over the closing six holes. Hull’s last bogey came at the 10th, and she followed that with four birdies and an eagle over her final eight holes. The clubslingers laid it all out on the final day, and in the end, Charley Hull stood tallest.

Charley’s Gear Bag

Leave it to Charley to keep her equipment the only boring thing about her. The woman who once took up vaping to kick a tobacco habit, runs driver to putter with TaylorMade gear. The Qi4D driver gets her down the fairway, and Qi35 hybrids at 17 and 19 degrees move her deeper along the void. For irons, Hull emulates many of her long-hitting peers with a special driving iron, in this case, a P770 4 iron. She rounds out the lofters with P7MB five iron through pitching wedge. Inside of 100 yards, Hull relies on three Milled Grind 3 wedges, set at 48, 54, and 60 degrees. The rock that she rolls, a Taylor Made TP5x, gets its bump from a Soto TP Hydro Blast putter.

LIV Golf: It’s been a minute, AK

Anthony Kim played the role of Larry Mize of Sunday’s final trio at The Grange. Long ago, Mize faced off in a Masters playoff with Greg Norman and Seve Ballesteros. In the most unlikely of scenarios, Mize dispatched both to win his only major title. Not nearly as mild as the Augusta native, Kim was still a distant third in the betting, with Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau as much clearer favorites.

All the odds shifted as Rahm struggled with the flat stick, and DeChambeau struggled with his other sticks. Rahm posted minus-one on Sunday, while BDC struggled to +2 on the fourth day. For their efforts. Rahm earned a solo silver medal, while DeChambeau tied for third spot with Tyrrell Hatton and Peter Uihlein.

How Anthony Kim was on the 2026 LIV circuit, merits our attention. After 2025, he was relegated to non-status, and had to reclaim a place via the qualifying tournament. He did so by two shots, placing third to claim the recently-added opportunity. When Patrick Reed left LIV in January, to return to the DP World Tour and, perhaps one day, the PGA Tour, Kim was awarded Reed’s spot on the 4Aces squad.

On day four Kim was nearly flawless. He posted zero bogeys over the course of 18 holes, an unlikely feat along Australia’s sand belt. His final-round 63 brought him from five shots in arrears to a three-shot win over the field. Much will be said and written across the socials and the webs and the office spaces, about the American’s resurgence. A kid from Los Angeles, who found a collegiate home at the University of Oklahoma, Kim simply went away from the PGA Tour and professional golf, as rumors of his downs and downs swirled. Fans with long memories remembered the street baller who could make a golf ball obey and dance. He was the future of every Team USA, until he no longer was.

On Sunday in Grange, Kim went out in four-under figures. LIV gambled on the individual winner coming from the final two groups, and sent both off from the first tee, in its shotgun format. While his playing partners struggled, Kim gained momentum. He came home in five-under 31, to post nine-under for the round. There is no telling if Kim will preserve his new-old self, and there is no guarantee that he will provide similar performances down the road. Like Tiger in 2019, we saw what we once considered standard and expected, and for that, we should be grateful.

Kim’s Gear Bag

Despite gaming a Titleist GT3 driver in January’s circuit qualifier, Kim trusted his long ball to a Callaway Quantum Triple Diamond Max at Seaton. He also had Callaway fairway metals from the Paradym Ai Smoke and Elyte Triple Diamond lines in his bag. For irons, Kim opened with a Titleist T150 4-iron, then concluded with the TaylorMade P7TW line for five iron through pitching wedge. The winning wedge configuration included new 50 and 54 degree Titleist Vokey SM11s, while the 58 degree saucer was a holdover, a Vokey WedgeWorks model. On the greens and surrounds, Kim rolled his Titleist ProV1 with a Scotty Cameron prototype putter, known among friends and family as a Scotty Cameron TourType Timeless GSS tour prototype.

Ronald Montesano writes for GolfWRX.com from western New York. He dabbles in coaching golf and teaching Spanish, in addition to scribbling columns on all aspects of golf, from apparel to architecture, from equipment to travel. Follow Ronald on Twitter at @buffalogolfer.

1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Ronald

    Feb 16, 2026 at 9:06 am

    Mistake on the location of the LIV event. Making changes to the story as I type. Take care.

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GolfWRX’s Father’s Day Gift Guide (2026)

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A reminder from your friends at GolfWRX: Father’s Day is June 21. And as we do every year, we’re rounding up the best gifts for dad.

As we say every year, there’s no better golf-related Father’s Day gift than a round of golf with pops. Be it a country club or your favorite muni, take the time to get together to play 18 if you can.

Let’s get to the gifts.

Ghost Golf Qualifier Diamond Polo

We like the new polos that Ghost is offering, as the fabric and fit are so good. These new Qualifier Collection polos breathe well, are lightweight, stretch with your swing, and of course look great. You can wear them on the course, in the office, or just out at a casual event and they will fit right in.

Buy here.

STR8-Strip Grip Tape Remover

If your dad is an equipment aficionado and tinkers with his clubs, this tool works wonders. Removing grip tape has never been easier, just put a little head on the tape and the STR8-Strip peals it right off the shaft without any damage.

Buy here.

Why Golf: Putting Thing

When it comes to practice, it is good to have a purpose. This “Putting Thing” sure does it. We know from personal experience how challenging it can be and how rewarding it is on the practice green. This also provides some competition for your kiddo to see who will unload the dishwasher or do the next chore around the house.

Buy here.

OluKai Lae‘ahi Men’s Breathable Slip-On Shoes

Riding to and from the course in style and comfort is always a good thing. If you’re in a hurry, it’s a nice feature to slide into your shoes and get to the tee time. For the post-game shoe, at your locker or while putting your clubs away in the car. Nice to slide into a shoe that looks good anywhere. Pair that with meeting the family for dinner, no need to change!

Buy here.

Therabody Theragun Relief

A little wellness goes a long way. Keeping loose is a good way to go when it comes to the weekend game or treatment during the week. If there is a little ache or pain, the Theragun is there to help out. Help loosen up the back for a pre-game warm-up or cool-down. 

Buy here.

World Cup golf apparel

Something for the soccer dads. Embrace the World Cup fever this summer on the course with custom gear to support the nation of your choice.

Buy here.

FootJoy Pro SL spikeless golf shoes

Give the old man a break and save his feet with the Footjoy Pro SL Men’s Spikeless Golf Shoes for some added comfort on the course.

Buy here.

Bushnell Wingman 2 GPS speaker

Combine all the hits as well as some game improvement with the Wingman 2 Golf GPS Speaker by getting audible distance readings from 38,000+ courses worldwide through the Wingman 2 remote or speaker.

Buy here.

Personalized Titleist Pro V1 golf balls

The No. 1 ball in golf is a safe bet, and the Pro V1 fits the largest chunk of the bell curve if you don’t know what ball pops plays. Add personalization for a, well, personal touch!

Buy here.

 

  • GolfWRX may earn a commission for purchases made through links on this page, at no extra cost to you.

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Tour Photo Galleries

Photos from the 2026 OccuNet Classic

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With the PGA Tour across the border in Canada this week, GolfWRX Tour Photographer Greg Moore stayed stateside and headed to the OccuNet Classic presented by Amarillo National Bank in Amarillo, Texas.

It’s always interesting to see what the guys are playing on the KFT, and this week certainly hasn’t disappointed so far, with some incredible wedge stamping on display.

Check out links to all our albums below.

General Albums

WITB Albums

Pullout Albums

Luke Potter’s custom Cameron putter – 2026 OccuNet Classic (KFT)

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From the GolfWRX Classifieds: Scotty Cameron GOLO 6 with BGT Stability Tour2 2022 M Edition

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At GolfWRX, we are a community of like-minded individuals who all experience and express our enjoyment of the game in many ways.

It’s that sense of community that drives day-to-day interactions in the forums on topics that range from best driver to what marker you use to mark your ball. It even allows us to share another thing we all love – buying and selling equipment.

Currently, in our GolfWRX buy/sell/trade (BST) forum, @HuskerFlyer is sharing a Scotty Cameron GOLO with a BGT Stability Tour2 2022 M Edition shaft. While the putter is certainly enviable, the Augusta-inspired shaft is equally noteworthy.

 

From the listing:

Scotty Cameron Golo 6 with BGT Stability Tour2 2022 M Edition Scotty Headcover 34″ $375

To check out the full listing in our BST forum, head through the link. If you are curious about the rules to participate in the BST Forum, you can learn more here: GolfWRX BST Rules.

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