Welcome to Bag Spy, a GOLF series devoted to understanding the crucial equipment choices that define a player’s bag. With the help of players and/or their expert fitters, we dig deep beyond the photos to examine setups, specs and the thinking behind them. In this installment, GOLF Associate Equipment Editor Jack Hirsh takes you inside Michael Thorbjornsen’s bag and equipment setup for 2026.
***
Michael Thorbjorsen is a classic example of a talented player evolving into a complete one once on the PGA Tour, and his equipment shows it.
The former Stanford standout earned his way onto the PGA Tour by finishing No. 1 in the PGA Tour U Ranking in 2024 and has shown steady improvement throughout his career, earning two runners-up finishes so far and a spot in the final pairing on Sunday at the Players Championship last month.
But the PGA Tour and NCAA are completely different animals for the 2018 U.S. Junior Amateur champion.
Previously, he could rely on simply being the longest guy in any given event and just overpowering golf courses. That doesn’t cut it on the PGA Tour.
Together with TaylorMade Tour rep Adrian Rietveld and the rest of his team, they’ve worked to give Thorbjorsen new weapons and a more complete game.
“He turned up on the scene as an extremely powerful golfer who didn’t need to be more than one-dimensional because of how talented he is,” Rietveld said. “You have to evolve on the PGA Tour. You have to adapt. And then there’s certain things where the equipment can certainly play its part.”
Keep reading below to dive into the bag of one of the PGA Tour’s rising stars.
Breaking down every club in Michael Thorbjornsen’s bag
Ball
Thorbjorsen is now playing his third different golf ball in just over a year. During his rookie season last year, he and Rietveld decided to make a similar change to Rory McIlroy and move from the TP5x to the softer TP5.
Like McIlroy, Thorbjorsen is one of the longest players on the PGA Tour, so the extra distance of the firmer TP5x isn’t necessarily what he needed. Raw distance can get you a lot of places in the amateur game, but now he needed to prioritize control, and that’s what the spinnier TP5 did for him.
“The main reason for that is to start to learn how to hit these off-speed shots,” Rietveld said. “I thought that’s actually a better golf ball for him through the bag. And he should be able to incorporate more of these off-speed shots and should be able to incorporate a wedge game that’s required for a top-10 player in the world.”
While Thorbjorsen is a high-speed player, with an average clubhead speed of nearly 120 mph, Rietveld said he’s not an overly high-spin player, making the switch much easier.
He changed again when the new 2026 TP5 came out on Tour late last season after a testing session revealed the ball had a much more consistent flight.
“The wind didn’t move it as much, and even 5 yards of difference there is huge,” Rietveld said.
TaylorMade 2026 TP5 Golf Balls
View Product
ALSO AVAILABLE AT: PGA Tour Superstore, TaylorMade
Driver
Specs
TaylorMade Qi4D LS 9.0
Actual Loft: 9.75°
FCT Setting: 1 click higher (1˚ degree sleeve)
TAS Weights: 3g front, 8g Back
Lie: 58.5°
Face: W/ Fiducials
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black Velo+ 7X
Length: 45.25″ EOG
Tipping: 1″
Swingweight: D4
Thorbjornsen’s best weapon is his driver. As a rookie, he ranked 7th in SG: Off the Tee, 6th in distance (318 yards) and 48th in accuracy.
He was previously in the Qi35 LS last season and has stayed in the model family with the Qi4D LS this year. One of the reasons he continues to use the most compact model in TaylorMade’s lineup, despite being a draw player, is the increased spin retention from the tighter roll radius on the Qi4D.
“He hits a draw, and I think that tautness of the spin tolerance that we’re getting out of the face now gives him the confidence to turn it over where the ball’s not going to drop,” Rietveld said. “When you get into that 2000 and less, that can cause what I think is a big miss.”
The TAS weights on his driver are fairly neutral, with just 3g forward and 8g back, but that gets his typical spin window in the 2350-2400 rpm range, which is where his best dispersion is.
TaylorMade Qi4D LS Custom Driver
View Product
ALSO AVAILABLE AT: PGA Tour Superstore, TaylorMade
Mini Driver
Specs
TaylorMade R7 Quad Mini 13.5˚
Actual Loft: 13.5˚
FCT Sleeve setting: Standard (1.5˚ sleeve)
Front Weights: 5g Toe, 7g Heel
Back Weights: 10g Toe, 10g, Heel
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus TR Blue 8-X
Length: 44″ CUT
Tipping: 1.5″
Swingweight: D4.5
The mini driver has become a core part of Thorbjorsen’s identity, and it’s a big reason his accuracy stats are so much better than those of many other high-ball-speed players.
The club gets a lot of use when there are holes that are too short for his regular driver and this week at Harbour Town is going to be one of those weeks.
“Being a 180-plus ball speed guy, the mini driver is kind of a safety for that,” Rietveld said. “When he doesn’t feel comfortable with driver, it becomes almost like a 300-yard club to get him in play and keep him in the tournament.”
For a lot of players, the mini driver is like a safety valve for when a shot can’t be hit as far, but the can still swing just as freely as they do with a driver. That’s the case for Thorbjornsen.
TaylorMade R7 Quad Custom Mini Driver
View Product
ALSO AVAILABLE AT: PGA Tour Superstore, TaylorMade
7-wood*
Specs
Qi4D 21˚
Actual Loft: 20˚
FCT Setting: 1 Click Lower (1.5° sleeve)
TAS Weight: 8g
Lie: 58.5˚
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus TR Blue 9-X
Length: 41 3/8’’ CUT
Tipping: 2″
Swingweight: D5
This season, Thorbjorsen added a 7-wood for most courses to better bridge the gap between his irons and mini driver. He still uses a P770 3-iron for drier courses or windier days, but the 7-wood is getting the bulk of the reps this year.
Like many players, his 7-wood is set lower on the FCT sleeve to not only bring down flight a little, but also open the face angle to guard against a left miss.
“Anytime you’re taking loft off in woods, you’re trying to help encourage better shot dispersion. For him, it just complements everything around it,” Rietveld said. “That 7-wood is quite versatile. It retains his spin beautifully for a high-ball hitter and allows him to be more aggressive in that regard.”
*The 7-wood is switched out with the 3-iron (or potentially a 2-iron this week) based on course/conditions.
TaylorMade Qi4D Custom Fairway Wood
View Product
ALSO AVAILABLE AT: PGA Tour Superstore, TaylorMade
Irons
Specs
TaylorMade P770 (3)*, P7MC (4-PW)
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold X7 (3), X100 (4-PW)
Lofts: 21/24/28/32/36/40/44/48
Lies: 60/60.5/61/61.75/62.75/63/63.5/64
Length: 1 1/4″ long (38 1/4″ 7-iron)
Irons are perhaps where Thorbjorsen has made some of the biggest changes since turning professional.
He’s stayed in the TaylorMade P7MC head despite many players on the PGA Tour moving on to the newer, slightly larger and more forgiving P7CBs, but he’s completely changed his loft spec since he started working with Rietveld about a year ago.
“I think he was two degrees strong, one and a half degrees strong when I got hold of the irons. And once I had finished with them, I really had put them all back to traditional blade lofts,” Rietveld said. “That was probably the most significant change, because you’re not just tweaking the irons. You’re moving them a lot. He’s going to see a new window, a new spin profile.”
It wasn’t that someone had made a mistake with Thorbjorsen’s irons before. Rietveld said it’s not all that uncommon for standout college players to make pretty significant spec changes once they arrive on the PGA Tour.
They now have access to stay on top of their specs every week that they didn’t have while in college when they only saw their rep a few times a year, if that.
Adding loft back onto the irons also improved Thorbjorsen’s turf interaction because of the added bounce.
You’ll also notice Throbjorsen uses irons 1 1/4″ longer than standard length to account for his height. His irons are fairly standard lie angles, getting a bit more upright in the mid- and short irons.
The P770 3-iron he has and still uses for tighter tracks (like potentially this week) is not only built with a steel shaft, but it’s built with a Dynamic Gold X7 steel shaft that’s heavier and stiffer than the X100s in the rest of his set.
“The 3-iron has just been a club that he’s grown to love,” Rietveld said. “We have tried to put it in an X100 and it’s not been as good. It must be something to do with these bigger heads in the long irons.”
Thorbjorsen and Rietveld worked on a 2-iron to potentially use this week and it is once again shafted up with an X7.
*The 3-iron is switched out with the 7-wood (or potentially a 2-iron this week) based on course/conditions.
TaylorMade P7CB Custom Irons
View Product
ALSO AVAILABLE AT: PGA Tour Superstore, TaylorMade
Wedges
Specs
TaylorMade MG5
Lofts/Grinds: 52 SB, 56 SB, 60 SC
Shafts: KBS Tour V 120 X
Lie: 63.5˚
Length: 36 5/8″, 36 5/8″, 36 1/4″
With the golf ball change, Thorbjorsen moved the lofts on his wedges a degree to a degree and a half weaker to take advantage of the extra spin he could now generate.
What has changed is the grind of his MG5 lob wedge, moving from the TW-grind to the SC, and it’s coincided with a dramatic improvement in his play around the greens. In 2025, Thorbjorsen was 159th in SG: Around the green. This season, he’s all the way up to 34th, a difference of nearly half a stroke.
“We’ve been testing 60-degree wedges since Phoenix,” Rietveld said. “Just kind of making multiple options and him taking them on to the golf course, a real kind of like trial-and-error situation. Every week you’ve got different sand and different run-offs and just trying to figure out what variety of shots he’s comfortable hitting and which grind helps him the most.”
Uniquely, Thorbjorsen plays the softer and lighter KBS Tour V in his wedges simply because he prefers the feel. His clubs are longer than standard which also makes them heavier, so there isn’t much of a concern with them being too light.
TaylorMade Milled Grind 5 Tiger Woods Custom Wedge
View Product
ALSO AVAILABLE AT: PGA Tour Superstore, TaylorMade
Putter
Specs
TaylorMade Spider Tour
Loft: 1.75˚
Lie: 70
Length: 35.5″
Hosel: Short Slant
Alignment aid: Back T w/ True Path
Insert: 80/20 Pure Roll
Swingweight: E7.5
Grip: SuperStroke Pistol Tour
One thing that Thorbjorsen hasn’t changed much in his setup is his Spider Tour putter. During his college days, he was in the more compact Spider Tour X but has been in the larger profile Spider Tour since 2024.
He takes advantage of all the tech TaylorMade has to offer with the highest MOI Spider head, plus a unique “Back T” with TruePath alignment aid. His Spider has the 80/20 Surlyn/aluminum insert that has become by far the most popular Spider insert.
While the putter hasn’t changed much in his time on Tour, what Rietveld says has changed is his approach to putting.
“You can see how structured his practice is now; the drills, the process,” he said. “He’s gone from a talented putter to more of a student of the game.”
TaylorMade 2025 Spider Tour Black Custom Putter
View Product
ALSO AVAILABLE AT: PGA Tour Superstore, TaylorMade
Extras
Grips: Golf Pride MCC
The author welcomes your comments at Jack.Hirsh@golf.com.
Want to overhaul your bag in 2026? Find a club-fitting location near you at True Spec Golf.