
Even though J.J. Spaun missed the cut at the Masters, he already has a win under his belt in 2026 at the Valero Texas Open.
When I took a closer look at his setup, one thing stood out right away. This is one of the most mixed bags you’ll see on Tour. There’s no single brand dominating the setup even though he’s a Srixon staff player.
J.J. Spaun WITB (At a Glance)
1. The core clubs haven’t changed much
Spaun’s bag hasn’t seen a lot of turnover.
The Srixon combo set (ZXi5 long iron into ZXi7 short irons) has been a consistent part of his setup, along with Cleveland wedges and the Titleist driver.
The one major change? The move from a Scotty Cameron blade to the L.A.B. Golf DF3. That’s a big shift and one that we keep seeing more of on the PGA Tour.
2. The 3-Wood and 7-Wood each have a clear job
The 3-wood gives him a reliable option when the driver isn’t the play, whether that’s tighter holes or courses when control matters more than distance. The 7-wood fills a completely different role as a high-launch option into longer approach shots.
We’re seeing more players add 7-woods for that reason. They’re easier to launch than long irons and offer better stopping power into greens. It’s a move that amateur golfers should be paying attention to.
3. The wedge setup isn’t just one model
You don’t always see this level of mixing in a Tour wedge setup.
Spaun blends RTX ZipCore, RTZ, and RTX 6 ZipCore, which suggests he’s dialing in different sole and turf interaction characteristics depending on the loft. The 50-degree is built for full shots, the 54 adds bounce and forgiveness, and the 60 goes low-bounce for versatility around the greens.
It’s a small detail, but it shows how specific players get with scoring clubs, especially in that middle wedge slot where versatility matters most.
Final thoughts
The biggest takeaway from Spaun’s golf bag setup is that it’s not about matching brands; it’s about making sure every club does exactly what you need it to do.






