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Collin Morikawa's 2026 Bag: Breaking Down the Two-Time Major Champ's Setup

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·3 min read
Collin Morikawa's 2026 Bag: Breaking Down the Two-Time Major Champ's Setup

The Precision Player's Arsenal

When you're widely regarded as having one of the purest iron swings on Tour, your equipment choices carry serious weight. Collin Morikawa's May 2026 setup tells a fascinating story about balancing cutting-edge technology with proven performers — and there's plenty here for average players to learn from.

Let's break down what the two-time major champion is gaming this season and why these choices matter.

Woods: Embracing the Qi4D Platform

Morikawa has committed to TaylorMade's Qi4D platform at the top of his bag, starting with the Qi4D LS driver at 8 degrees. The LS (Low Spin) variant makes perfect sense for a player with his swing speed and attack angle. He's pairing it with a Mitsubishi Diamana D+ Limited 60 TX shaft — a premium offering that provides the stability needed for consistent shot shaping at Tour-level speeds.

Interestingly, his 3-wood tells a different story. Rather than matching his driver with Qi4D technology, Morikawa is still gaming a TaylorMade SIM Tour at 14 degrees. This is several generations old at this point, and it speaks volumes about how comfortable he is with that club's performance. When a player of Morikawa's caliber keeps a fairway wood in the bag through multiple equipment cycles, you know it's producing results he can't replicate elsewhere.

His 5-wood returns to the current generation with the Qi4D Tour at 18 degrees, again paired with the Diamana D+ Limited — this time in an 80-gram TX configuration. The heavier shaft in the fairway woods compared to driver isn't uncommon among precision-oriented players who want maximum control on approach shots from the fairway.

The Iron Setup: P7CB and a PDHY Addition

Here's where Morikawa's bag gets particularly interesting. He's gaming TaylorMade P7CB irons, which are compact blade-style clubs designed for workability and feel. For a player whose iron game is genuinely elite, these provide the feedback and shot-shaping capability he demands.

At the top of his iron set, Morikawa has added a TaylorMade PDHY (4) — a driving iron or utility iron that bridges the gap between his 5-wood and iron set. This club gives him a lower-launching, more penetrating ball flight when conditions demand it, while offering more control than a traditional hybrid would provide.

The P7CB is a demanding club to hit well, requiring consistent strike quality to produce the expected distances. But for Morikawa, whose ball-striking statistics are consistently among the Tour's best, these irons simply get out of the way and let his swing do the work.

What Average Players Can Take Away

Now, should you run out and buy P7CB irons? Probably not — unless your handicap is in single digits and you prioritize workability over forgiveness. But there are still lessons in Morikawa's setup that apply to every level of golfer:

  • Don't chase new for new's sake. That SIM Tour 3-wood is several years old. If a club performs, keep it in play regardless of what's on the new release shelf.
  • Shaft consistency matters. Notice how Morikawa uses the same shaft family throughout his woods. This creates a consistent feel from club to club, making distance gapping more predictable.
  • Bridge the gap intelligently. The PDHY at 4-iron replaces what would traditionally be a hard-to-hit long iron. Even Tour players recognize when technology can help.

The Takeaway

Morikawa's 2026 bag reflects a player who knows exactly what he needs. He's adopted TaylorMade's latest driver and 5-wood technology where it makes sense, kept a trusted 3-wood that continues to perform, and built an iron set around feel and workability. For equipment watchers, it's a reminder that even the best players in the world don't overhaul their bags with every new release — they make surgical changes where improvement is actually available.

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