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The top 10 gear stories of 2022 (so far): Where do Tiger’s FootJoy shoes rank?

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When Tiger Woods showed up on Monday at Augusta National for the 2022 Masters, he did so in a pair of FootJoy Premiere Packard golf shoes. As a Nike athlete for his entire professional career, Woods’ choice of shoes was shocking, and GolfWRX forum members were appropriately buzzing with their takes.

But, was it the biggest gear story of the year thus far?

On GolfWRX’s recent Two Guys Talkin Golf podcast (TG2), Brian Knudson and myself (Andrew Tursky) ranked our top-10 equipment stories of 2022 to see where Woods’ shoes landed on the list.

Below are the top-10 gear stories from 2022. Let us know in the comments what we missed, or where we messed up.

10) Paul Casey claps back at GolfWRX commenters

For years, Paul Casey has used the same Scotty Cameron prototype putter with a smooth sole (pictured on top). Come 2022, however, Casey switched into a nearly identical version (pictured on the bottom), except he had Scotty Cameron add a weight port in the heel.

Since Casey didn’t speak out on the minor change originally, GolfWRX commenters speculated in our forums that Casey was reducing weight in the heel.

When I asked him for his explanation on the change, Casey hilariously corrected the wrong takes.

“People have no idea, it’s quite funny. I read a post the other day, some guy claiming he knew what was going on.

“There’s a post on there, the guy is like, ‘Oh, he drilled it out and he removed weight from the heel.’ 

“First of all, no.

“So what you got to remember is – go ask Scotty – every time you see a plug, it’s adding weight, it’s not removing weight. If you remove weight, you just grind it off. You never see it. To remove weight, you just shave the bottom.

“So that plug is… he drilled a hole. You lose about 6 grams. That plug is about 12-13 grams. That gives you about a net gain of about 6-7 grams. Adding the weight to the heel is like adding weight to the heel of a driver. It makes the toe lighter, and it makes the toe faster. In other words, it makes the putter rotate more.

“My tendency through the years, and why I went cross handed a while ago, is that I tend to – I don’t shut the blade going back, but it’s probably shut to the path. I don’t rotate the putter. I don’t open the putter as much as I’d like to. So that weight in the heel and lightening the toe allows the putter to rotate better… Look, everybody’s an expert, but I know why I did it.”

Click here for the full story

9) High lofted fairways continue their takeover

Many amateur golfers assume that pros use unforgiving long irons at the top end of their setup instead of high-lofted fairway woods or hybrids. While maybe that used to be the case in PGA Tour player’s bags, it’s becoming more and more common for even the best players in the world to use 5, 7, and even 9 woods.

Fairway woods, compared to hybrids and long irons, can help golfers achieve more launch, speed and forgiveness, helping golfers hit shots that fly higher, farther, and land softer.

As pictured above, long-hitting Dustin Johnson currently uses a TaylorMade Stealth 7-wood that has 21 degrees of loft. Additionally, 2022 Players Champion Cam Smith recently spoke with our TG2 podcast about the value of using 7-woods out of the rough to advance the ball further toward the green.

If you’re struggling hitting long irons and not achieving enough height or distance, conducting some of your own experimenting with high-lofted fairways from various lies.

8) GolfWRX’s Best Driver list

Your driver is arguably the most important club in your bag, but finding the right driver for your game isn’t easy. There are so many options and head styles, so it’s important to conduct your own testing, and ideally see a professional fitter to get their advice.

To help get consumers started in the right direction, GolfWRX compiled an expert panel of master fitters nationwide to provide their takes on all of the current drivers on the market, and figure out which driver technologies best suit the swings of various golfers.

While there’s no “best” driver, because every golf swing is different, there is a “best for you.” Hopefully this driver list helps you in your driver search.

Click here for the full story. 

7) Webb Simpson finally upgrades his driver

Webb Simpson isn’t big on making changes to his gear setup. He still uses a Titleist TS2 3-wood that was released in 2018, a Titleist 913F.d 18-degree wood and a 913H.d 20-degree hybrid that were both released in 2013, and a 915 H.d 23.5-degree hybrid came out in 2014.

Until recently, he was also still using a Titleist TS3 driver, which hit retail in 2018, rather than switching into the popular new TSi3 version that players such as Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth are using.

After extensive testing, though, Simpson finally made a permanent switch into the new TSi3 technology at The 2022 Players Championship.

“(The TSi3 driver release) came at a time when I was driving it well,” Simpson told GolfWRX. “I didn’t really want to fiddle with it. Then I got to a point where I saw how many guys were using it and I knew it was faster…it just took time for me to get the spin right because the new driver spins less for me. I like to hit lower tee balls, and the lower ones I wasn’t getting enough spin, but we finally got the combination right.”

Ultimately, Simpson said he gained 2-3 mph of ball speed by finally making the upgrade.

Click here for the full story. 

6) Tom Hoge’s custom 1-of-1 putter has a wild backstory

Tom Hoge won the 2022 Pebble Beach Pro-Am this year using a 1-of-1 Odyssey White Hot OG 2-ball putter with a plumber’s neck.

Struggling with his alignment on the greens, Hoge was testing various putters at the beginning of 2022. His caddie, Henry Diana Jr., employed the services of Odyssey Tour rep Joe Toulon to develop a custom 2-ball to help fix Hoge’s issues.

The prototype putter was delivered to Hoge during a practice session ahead of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, and he went on to win with it.

That’s only half of the story, though. Diana Jr. actually suggested a 2-ball putter because he had success with a similar design in the past. His father, Henry Diana Sr., was a tinkerer and a club maker, and he designed a 2-ball style putter before the famous Odyssey 2-ball ever even existed.

“My dad used to be a tool and die maker but he made putters,” Diana Jr. told GolfWRX. “When I was playing professionally I was having a hard time with alignment, so in the mid-90s he made a 2-ball putter. I was using the Pelz putter, but I was aiming too far left. I didn’t like the Pelz putter. He’s like, ‘Well, hell, I’ll make you a putter. I think three is too many, I’ll make you a putter with two…that was 5 years before the Odyssey 2-ball came out.”

With Hoge winning the event, the 2-ball putter officially came full circle for Diana Jr.

Click here for the full story. 

5) Alan Morin’s mind-blowing bag setup

Alan Morin is a dominant PGA professional in the South Florida PGA section who’s won its Player of the Year honors 11 times. He also recently qualified to play in the 2022 Honda Classic, where we got a look into his golf bag.

As it turns out, Morin uses one of the most interesting bag setups we’ve seen for a professional golfer.

The 52-year-old was spotted with a TaylorMade RBZ fairway wood from 2012, three TaylorMade Rescues from 2011, a set of TaylorMade Tour Preferred irons from 2011, and new Cleveland RTX ZipCore wedges with ports in the back cavities for weighting purposes. He also uses an Odyssey Versa 7 putter that’s stacked with lead tape.

With years worth of technological advances available on the market, it’s incredible that Morin stays dominant with a set of clubs from last decade.

Click here for the full story. 

4) Scottie Scheffler signs an equipment deal

Fresh off winning twice on the PGA Tour as an equipment free agent in 2022, Scottie Scheffler announced that he signed an equipment deal with TaylorMade.

The signing didn’t slow Scheffler up at all, though, and he won the 2022 WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play as a TaylorMade staffer.

After signing with the company, Scheffler kept his bag setup mostly the same, but he did switch out his 11-year-old Nike VR Pro Limited fairway wood for a new TaylorMade Stealth 3HL 16.5-degree wood. Here’s why:

“The benefits of the 16.5-degree head are that he can hit it much higher and farther if he wants to but also match the previous conditions, which were lower and feature more spin,” said TaylorMade senior tour representative Todd Chew. “The 16.5-degree Stealth head is more of a weapon because of the added distance and height capability he can get when he wants it. That is the benefit of taking a lot of the spin out of the head and being able to use more loft compared to older technology. With the previous club, you wouldn’t want to launch it higher in the air because it would spin too much. With today’s technology taking so much spin out of the club, you can use more loft which makes the club so much more playable and versatile.”

Click here for the full story. 

3) The 48-inch driver ban

In the last couple years, various professional golfers were testing the merits of using 48-inch drivers to see if they could gain a distance advantage off the tee. In response, the USGA put in an optional local rule that would reduce the maximum allowable club length to 46 inches, instead of the previous 48-inch maximum.

While this change didn’t affect most golfers who use drivers that measure less than 46 inches anyway, Phil Mickelson was not happy about the change, calling it “pathetic.” But, alas, the change stands.

So, in 2022, you’ll likely no longer see any 48-inch drivers on the PGA Tour. Is this the last of the USGA equipment rule changes regarding distance? We’ll see what the future holds, but this was the first rule adjustment in recent history.

Click here for the full story. 

2) The ongoing Adam Scott gear drama

Adam Scott, who’s been a full-time Titleist staffer for nearly his entire career, is now essentially an equipment free agent. While he still has a golf ball, glove and shoe deal with Titleist, he’s free to test and use any golf clubs he wants.

Since Scott had been using Titleist clubs for his entire career, it was interesting to see what changes Scott would make in 2022. We’re starting to get some answers.

While Scott has continued using his 1-of-1 Titleist 681.AS blade irons, and Vokey wedges, he’s made a number of changes including using a new custom L.A.B. Golf putter, and TaylorMade Stealth metalwoods.

Will he make any more changes in 2022? It’s clear that Scott is still testing new equipment, so we’ll keep an eye on Scott’s bag throughout the year.

Click here for the full story.

1) Tiger Woods wears FootJoy shoes at the Masters

In 1996, Tiger Woods signed a deal with Nike Golf, which completely changed the landscape of golf shoes and apparel. Woods and Nike helped changed the look and style for golfers, making shoes more futuristic, athletic and cool.

Since 1996, Woods has worn Nike golf shoes for every round of golf that he’s played – at least on TV. That changed at The 2022 Masters, though, when he showed up wearing FootJoy Premiere Packard shoes (pictured above).

Recovering from his surgically repaired right leg following a car accident in 2021, Woods says he needed more stability than Nike could offer with its shoes.

“I have very limited mobility now,” Woods said in a Masters press conference. “Just with the rods and plates and screws that are in my leg, I needed something different, something that allowed me to be more stable. That’s what I’ve gone to. Nike’s been fantastic over the years of providing me with equipment…and…we’ve been working on trying to find something to allow me to do this and swing again. We’re still going to continue doing it, and hopefully we’ll have something soon.”

The gear change was shocking, and is absolutely the top gear story of the year, if not the decade. It’s unfathomable the amount of money Nike pays Woods per year to wear its apparel, and on golf’s biggest stage, the 2022 Masters, with Woods making his highly anticipated comeback, he’s wearing FootJoy shoes instead of Nike.

It’s truly an unbelievable story.

To celebrate Woods’ choice of golf shoes this week, TG2 podcast co-host Brian Knudson had an idea for custom FootJoy Premiere Packard shoes, which are pictured below (the graphic images were made in Photoshop; they are NOT real!).

Do you think FootJoy should consider selling Tiger-striped golf shoes?

Click here for the full story. 

He played on the Hawaii Pacific University Men's Golf team and earned a Masters degree in Communications. He also played college golf at Rutgers University, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism.

2 Comments

2 Comments

  1. Garrett

    Apr 11, 2022 at 10:33 am

    FootJoy absolutely needs to capitalize on this moment. A Masters-green version with that tiger striped accent would sell like hotcakes.

    Now they have proof – when push comes to shove, the best players in the world use FootJoy. I am going to try these out myself.

    • Bunter Hiden

      Apr 12, 2022 at 11:51 pm

      I’m sure they’re working ’round the clock over in an alley in Shanghai right now on them.

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BK’s Breakdowns: Cameron Young’s winning WITB, 2025 Wyndham Championship

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Cameron Young’s WITB from his win at the 2025 Wyndham Championship. Cameron is a Titleist staff player but his bag is definitely filled with some unique clubs. Here are the clubs he used to secure his first PGA Tour win!

Driver: Titleist GT2 (9 degrees, A1 SureFit setting)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Tensei 1K Pro Orange 70 TX

3-wood: Titleist GT3 (15 degrees)
Shaft: Mitsubishi Tensei 1K White 80 TX

Hybrid: Titleist GT2 (21 degrees)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus HB Black VeloCore+ 10 X

Irons: Titleist T200 (4), Titleist T100 (5), Titleist 631.CY Prototype (6-9)
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold X7 (4-9)

Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM10 (48-10F, 52-12F, 56-14F @57), WedgeWorks (60-K* @62)
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold X7

Putter: Scotty Cameron Phantom 9.5 Tour Prototype

Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet Cord

Ball: Titleist Pro V1x Prototype

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Whats in the Bag

Peter Malnati WITB 2025 (August)

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Driver: Titleist GT3 (10 degrees, C2 SureFit setting)
Shaft: Project X Denali Blue 60 TX

3-wood: Titleist GT3 (15 degrees, A1 SureFit setting)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus TR Blue 7 X

7-wood: Titleist GT2 (21 degrees, D1 SureFit setting)
Shaft: Fujikura Ventus TR Blue 8 X

Irons: Titleist T150 (4, 5), Titleist T100 (6-9)
Shafts: True Temper AMT Tour White X100

Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM10 (48-10F @47, 52-12F, 56-08M @57, 60-04T @62)
Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400

Putter: Scotty Cameron Studio Style Fastback 1.5 Tour Prototype

Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet

Ball: Titleist Pro V1x Yellow

Check out more in-hand photos Malnati’s clubs here.

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GolfWRX Members Choice presented by 2nd Swing: Best driver of 2025

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We’re proud to once again partner with 2nd Swing Golf to bring you GolfWRX Members Choice 2025! 2nd Swing has more than 150,000 new and pre-swung golf clubs available in six store locations and online. Check them out here

What is the best driver in 2025? At GolfWRX, we take great pride in our online community and the cumulative knowledge and experience of our members. When it comes to the best driver of 2025, we want to know what our forum faithful think.

Since our founding in 2005, the bedrock of GolfWRX.com has been the community of passionate and knowledgeable golfers in our forums, and we put endless trust in the opinions of our GolfWRX members — the most knowledgeable community of golfers on the internet. No other group of golfers in the world tests golf clubs as frequently or as extensively, nor is armed with such in-depth information about the latest technology.

Below are the results of GolfWRX member voting for the 2025 best driver, along with the vote percentage for each club.

Best driver of 2025: The top 5

5. Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond: 6.02%

Callaway’s pitch: “For golfers looking for a fast, forgiving, yet workable driver, the Elyte Triple Diamond features a tour-inspired shape and is the preferred model by most Callaway tour players.”

You can read what other golfers are saying about the driver in the GolfWRX forums, and see our launch piece here. Shop the Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond here.

4. Ping G440 Max: 6.86%

Ping’s pitch: “The most forgiving G440 model, MAX has a hotter face to generate speed and distance, and a lighter overall system weight with a longer shaft (46″) for faster clubhead speed, higher launch and longer carries. The Free Hosel and Carbonfly Wrap crown save weight to create our lowest CG ever and increase forgiveness while contributing to a more muted, pleasing sound.”

You can read what other golfers are saying about the driver in the GolfWRX forums, and see our launch piece here. Shop the Ping G440 Max here.

3. Ping G440 LST: 9.53%

Ping’s pitch: “LST is an especially good fit for faster swings, offering less spin and more control with a penetrating trajectory. A hotter face, lighter overall system weight and longer shaft (46″) deliver more speed and distance while maintaining tight dispersion.”

@phizzy30: “Not a fan of Ping drivers in general, but 440 LST takes the cake. It’s super forgiving across the face for a low spin head, looks and sounds good and the ability to make it play neutral or slightly fade biased through the hosel settings is very appealing.”

You can read what other golfers are saying about the driver in the GolfWRX forums, and see our launch piece here. Shop the Ping G440 LST here.

2. Titleist GT3: 16.55%

Titleist’s pitch: “The GT3 Driver offers Titleist’s boldest combination of power and personalization through adjustable performance. Dial in the CG Track to your frequent contact location to make your biggest drives even bigger while taking total control over flight and shaping.”

@mrmikeac: “I’ve been Anti-Titleist for years and years and years (outside of Vokey, of course). With that being said, HOLY BEGEEZUS the GT3 driver is an absolute NUCLEAR MONSTER! This thing blew my G430 10K Max out of the water in every single category. Forgiveness is the biggest thing that stands out of me, the 3 model has always been one of the less forgiving models in the past but this GT3 can take bad shot after bad shot and still end up in the fairway, I think a ton of that has to do with the adjustability, it’s actually effective. Feel and sound is perfect, that solid crack is so addicting to hear and when you hit it out the screws this thing can absolutely bomb it. Titleist, I’m sorry for doubting you. You have converted me.”

You can read what other golfers are saying about the driver in the GolfWRX forums, and see our launch piece here. Shop the Titleist GT3 here.

1. Titleist GT2: 22.91%

Titleist’s pitch: “Delivering impressive distance from any impact point, the Titleist GT2 Driver extracts maximum performance through a forgiving design. Get the stability and added confidence of a high-MOI driver without sacrificing speed.”

@DTorres: “The Titleist GT2 has proven to be the best driver of the year. Packaged in a classic profile, GT2 perfectly balances performance and forgiveness while consistently being a high performer across all categories.”

You can read what other golfers are saying about the driver in the GolfWRX forums, and see our launch piece here. Shop the Titleist GT2 here.

Other drivers receiving >2% of the vote

Driver Vote percentage (%)
Cobra DS Adapt Max K 4.85%
Ping G430 Max 10K 3.85%
Callaway Elyte Triple Diamond 3.68%
TaylorMade Qi35 3.51%
Callaway Elyte 3.18%
Cobra DS Adapt X 2.34%
Cobra DS Adapt LS 2.17%
TaylorMade Qi35 LS 2.17%

 

 

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