I’ll say this up front, my golf game is in serious decline. No sense in trying to play it up. It’s a train wreck.
The cause isn’t hard to identify: I’m 48, father of two young boys, travel 120-plus days a year and a living proof that people in my line of work — brace yourselves! — actually don’t play a lot of golf. If I get in 20 rounds a year with maybe three or four range visits, I feel like I’ve hit the lotto. Keep in mind that testing equipment and creating content around equipment is not playing golf. They are short bursts of energy that are a blast and also fundamental to educating the masses about the nuances of golf clubs, but those creation sessions are not a recipe for playing great golf.
The last six years have been grim: ball-striking, speed, you name it, all going the wrong way. Making matters worse, I have developed a ton of bad habits over the years that have led me down this path . (Also…golf is hard.) The cool thing is this, though, even despite the dumpster fire that is my game, sometimes (maybe four or fives times per year) the old Johnny magically reappears and my sticks, my ball and I become a happy family again.
My 2025 journey to building the best brand-agnostic bag for my game was an interesting one. But first an important disclosure: For those who don’t know my background, until recently I was a Callaway staffer. In my new position as GOLF’s director of gear, it’s, of course, essential that I remain impartial and unbiased, so for the purposes of this bag-building exercise I excluded Callaway from the mix (with the exception of my 3-wood; sorry, couldn’t be avoided!).
This wasn’t easy, given I’ve grown to absolutely love Callaway’s clubs, but this this year I decided to wean myself off of their gear to make room for new information. Also, please none of what you’ll read below or watch above is an endorsement for what should go in your bag; these are simply choices that worked for my game.
Here are my 4 biggest takeaways:
1. With age comes wisdom: My handicap is 0.8, but I cannot play to that day in and day out. I don’t have my fastball anymore, and that’s perfectly fine. No use pretending I’m something I’m not. I used to be a great long-iron player; I’m not anymore. That’s why you see a 4-hybrid, 5-hybrid and more forgiving driver. I used to have great hands around the greens, meaning low bounce wedges were a no brainer — not anymore. Now, bounce is my friend. You see where I’m going here?
2. Loft is good for me: I learned this from Lucas Bro, a fitter at the Titleist Performance Institute. My path to consistency demands that I lean more into control and miss mitigation than trying to hit my 7-iron 180 yards. This is why the lofts on my irons live closer to my 1998 specs than ever before.
3. I’m not as fast as I was, not even close: I was never modern fast, never a 175-mph guy, maybe never even clipping the 170 mark. But I was always in the 165+ range and cruising with killer launch conditions: 13 degrees at 2,100 RPM of spin slightly right-to-left. . .all day long. I played that way for years and could always rely on my driver as a weapon. Over the past few years, however, my swing has slowed down and occasionally gets crooked. The first piece of gear that I felt could get me back to where I was: the Titleist GT2 driver, which offers an attractive combination of a neutral CG, fast face and cleverly designed chassis. I now feel that slowly but surely this setup can get me back to a place where the driver is a stroke-gainer and not a decliner.
Scottie Scheffler’s clubs: Inside his Open Championship-winning setupBy: Jack Hirsh
4. There’s a reason Pro V1X is on top: Of all my learnings, this was by far the biggest surprise. Yes, I know Titleist balls reign supreme by every metric, but I was convinced for years that the Callaway ball I was married to was the greatest thing since the John Wick franchise. I wasn’t wrong. I tested every major brand’s balls over the years, and in the air my old ball stacked up as one of the best I’ve ever played. It did everything I needed and then some. But Pro V1x 2025 was an eye-opener. It wasn’t the speed, spin, launch, etc., that caught my attention — all the top-shelf balls I tested deliver across those categories.
It was the feel that grabbed me. The feel off of a wedge with Pro V1x is unique to that ball; there is nothing like it. It’s that sensation that the ball is sticking to the face just a hair longer, providing an extra millisecond of control that other balls don’t match. The upside? Well, for me, it inspires greenside confidence and, most important, recreates that feel I had chipping balatas around Rainier G&CC in Seattle when I was a teenager: that click followed by a rip of spin that you get from that first bounce. Hard to articulate in written form but for any Pro V1x player out there, you know what I’m talking about. Typically balls that provide that kind of feeling make you sacrifice something else. This ball does not. It’s special.
The goal now is to take this new bag of goodies and start to rebuild my game. I want to play the best golf of my life in my 50s, and step 1 was accepting that I’m not a kid anymore and, yes, there will and always be limitations, be they physical or logistical. I can get there, though. My biggest priority now is raising my floor to where my worst golf is still pretty damn good. The good days will show up sometimes, but trying to guess when those days might come is a futile tactic.
I have logged 12 rounds in 2025: a 71, two 74s, a 75, a 76, three 77s, two 78s, an 81 and an 83. Truth be told, the sub-75 rounds were blind luck; I just happened to roll outta the right side of bed those mornings. There was no evidence to suggest those kind of scores were possible, considering how bad my ball-striking has been. But that’s golf.
But, what the hell…let’s give it another shot, shall we?
OK, here we go. My own personal WITB bag for 2025:
Ball: Pro V1x 2025
Pro V1x 2025
Driver: Titleist GT2 9@8.25 (D1 setting, D3)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Red Velo+ 6X (Tipped 1, 45.25)
Titleist GT2 Custom Driver
View Product
Also available at: PGA TOUR SUPERSTORE
3-Wood: Callaway Ai-Smoke TD T 14@14.5 (D3)
Shaft: Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Red Velo+ 7X (Tipped 1, 42.75)
Carry (Stock 80%): 250
Fujikura Ventus Red Wood Shaft
View Product
5-Wood: TaylorMade Qi35 18 (D3)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 8X (Tipped 1, 41.5)
Carry (Stock 80%): 230
TaylorMade Qi35 Custom Fairway Wood
View Product
Also available at: PGA TOUR SUPERSTORE
Hybrids: Ping G440 4H, 5H (D4)
Shafts: Graphite Design AD DI HY 95X
Lofts: 22/25
Carry (stock 80%): 4H (215) 5H (200)
PING G440 Custom Hybrid
View Product
Also available at: PGA TOUR SUPERSTORE
Irons: (6-PW) Titleist T150 (6) T100 (7-PW)
Shafts: Nippon Pro Modus3 120S (Std Lie, D4)
Lofts (Stock 80%): 29/34/39/43/47
Carry: (6-LW) 185/170/155/140/125/115/105/80
Titleist 2025 T100 Custom Irons
View Product
Also available at: PGA TOUR SUPERSTORE
Wedges: Vokey SM10 50/12F, 54/08M, 60A+
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 (D4)
Titleist Vokey SM10 Raw Custom Wedge
View Product
Putter: Odyssey JailBird DBL (36 inches, 600G, 3 loft, 70 lie)
Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet Align 1+1