It’s an idea I’ve loved for a long time. Two-time Masters champion Rory McIlroy and World No. 5 Tommy Fleetwood playing a three-hole match is always going to be great content, but swapping bags? Now we’re cooking. That’s what TaylorMade did in a video released just a couple of days ago.
I think it’s fair to say both players have had their bags covered often this year, but what I find most compelling about the video is watching world-class players adapt to other equipment and essentially making it work. I think back to my days at Callaway when I would see Jon Rahm grab some random club off a fitting cart between filming sessions. He’d hit one, get a feel for it and then bang ball after ball — making the club do what he needed like it was his gamer. It sounds simple in practice but was on a completely different level.
Here are three interesting nuggets from Rory vs. Tommy TaylorMade video:
1. Your clubs are indeed a reflection of YOU: Swing weights, lie angles, offset, etc. It’s all so personal and in a few spots in the video you hear both players call out what seems so foreign to them. For example, Fleetwood plays a softer shaft than Rory (PX 6.5 at 125 grams vs. PX 7.0 at 130 grams) and has very flat lie angles in his irons. So what does Rory do? He starts aiming left to combat the ball going too far to the right. It also happens with the opening tee shots. Rory plays a low lofted, open faced, back weighted Qi4D core model vs. Tommy’s lofted up, upright, front weighted Qi4D LS driver. These drivers not only fly differently but the look is quite a contrast as well. Even the faces look different with Rory’s light gray face vs. Tommy’s darker one. At their core the drivers they play (and the shafts) are MILES apart.
Right on cue, Rory hit Tommy’s driver left and Tommy hit Rory’s driver right. Clubs, like humans, have a DNA, and pretty strict bias. The best players in the world have clubs that are tuned in to their swing DNA. Wanna know the fun thing? You can do that too!
2. Another man’s trash is another man’s treasure: Watching Tommy coax Rory into hitting the 9-wood on every shot was a real treat. If there was ever a player who wouldn’t be caught dead with a 9-wood, it’s Rory McIlroy. For good reason though, it makes no sense for a player with his speed and delivery. But for Tommy, who is an “on top of it” golfer who tends to play with north-to-south launch at his whim, it’s a no brainer. (Almost cheating, if I’m being honest.) It goes back to my tools analogy — some players can use tools that others won’t yet they still achieve the same result. I’ve heard TaylorMade’s Adrain Rietveld call the 9-wood a 230-yard pitching wedge. I need that in my life.
3. Every player will react to the wrong club (some better than others): This is the best part of this video and it’s a testament to 1) How dialed in each player is with their own bag — thanks to Adrian Rietveld — and, 2) How unbelievably talented both players are to react and adapt to golf clubs that have no business being in their possession and still making it work. It’s even with the Spider putters they use. To a normal person they may seem basically the same, but they are polar opposites of each other in terms of how they feel, look and perform. Rory’s is longer, heavier and with less loft. Tommy’s is light, has unique alignment aids and has more loft. I don’t advise swapping sticks with your Saturday morning group, but there is something to be said for learning how to manufacture shots under any circumstance. This video is kind of that idea on steroids. I wish it was an 18-hole match, although I also think the PGA Tour team event in New Orleans could really shake it up with this idea.
Here is my bag-by-bag breakdown of Rory and Tommy:
Rory McIlroy
Driver:
Head: Qi4D 9@8 (2 lower on 1.5 sleeve)
Face: Grey face w/ top line and fiducials
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black OG 6X (Tipped 1)
Length: 45 5/8 Cut
Swingweight: D5
Weighting: 4G Front/11G back
Fujikura Ventus Black Wood Shaft (Previous Gen)
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3-wood:
Head: Qi10 15@14
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black OG 8X (Tipped 1.5)
Length: 42.5 Cut
Swingweight: D4
5-wood:
Head: Qi4D 18@17
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black OG 9X (Tipped 1)
Length: 41.5 Cut
Swingweight: D4
TaylorMade Qi4D Custom Fairway Wood
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Irons:
Head: (4) P760 (5-9) RORS Proto
Shaft: PX 7.0
Length: Std
Lie: Std
Swingweight: D4
Lofts: 23/26/30/34/38/42
Wedges:
Head: MG5 46 SB, 50SB, 54SB, 60LB@61
Shaft: PX 6.5 (46/50/54) PX 6.5 wedge (60)
Length:STD
Swingweight: D4
All lie angles: STD
Putter:
Head: Spider Tour X Slant TORCHED
Shaft: Black Stepless steel
Alignment: Full line
Length: 34.5
Loft: 2
Lie: 69
Face: Pure Roll
Toe Hang: 30 degrees
Grips:
Golf Pride MCC Ribbed Black/White (1+1)
Golf Pride MCC Grip
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Ball:
TP5
Tommy Fleetwood
Driver:
Head: Qi4D LS 9@9.75 (Upright plus .75 on 1.5 sleeve)
Face: Dark face w/ top line and fiducials
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Blue TR 6X (Tipped 1)
Length: 45 5/8 Cut
Swingweight: D4
Weighting: 15G Front/7 G back
TaylorMade Qi4D LS Custom Driver
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Mini Driver:
Head: R7 13.5@12.5 (Upright minus 1 on 1.5 sleeve)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Blue TR 6X (Tipped 1)
Length: 43.5
Swingweight: D4
5-wood:
Head: Qi35 18@17.75
Shaft: Mitsubishi Chemical Kuro Kage XTS 8TX (Tipped 2)
Length: 42
Swingweight: D4
9-wood:
Head Qi4D Bonded 24@22
Shaft: Mitsubishi Chemical Kuro Kage XTS 8TX (Tipped 2)
Length: 41.5
Swingweight: D4
Irons:
Head: (4) P770 (5-PW) P7TW
Shaft: PX 6.5
Length: Std
Lie: 1 flat
Swingweight: D3
Lofts: 23/26/30/34/38/42/47
Wedges:
Head: MG5 52 Hi-Toe, 56SB, 60SB
Shaft: PX 6.5
Length:STD
Swingweight: D4.5
All Lie Angles: 2 flat from STD in short irons
Putter:
Head: Spider Tour X Slant
Shaft: Black Stepless steel
Alignment: Custom
Length: 34
Loft: 2.5
Lie: 69
Face: Pure Roll
Toe Hang: 30 degrees
TaylorMade Spider Tour X Custom Putter
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Grips:
Golf Pride Tour Velvet BCT Woods/Wedges, Iomic Sticky @12:30 4-PW
Ball:
TP5X PIX
TaylorMade 2026 TP5x Golf Balls
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I’d love to see more of this in the future, and it’s always interesting to learn from how players hit shots with a tool that wasn’t meant for them. It’s just another display of talent at its highest level. As an idea, at least from where I sit, there is so much fun to be had with this platform. For example, I’d love to see players like Jon Rahm and Rickie Fowler switch clubs. From a fitting perspective they are on different planets but watching them “make it work” would be quite the case study.
Can you imagine if Jack and Arnie would’ve swapped sticks at some point? Or Snead and Hogan? Gear-junky heaven is what I call that.