From driver to putter: We take a look inside Justin Rose’s bag and reveal the clubs that helped him secure a record victory at Torrey Pines.
Even at 45 years old, Englishman Justin Rose dominated his competitors at Torrey Pines during the 2026 Farmers Insurance Open on the PGA Tour. With a seven-stroke lead and a tournament record of 23 under par, the native South African claimed his first title of the season. A look inside his bag shows that his club selection is as versatile as his game, which he impressively demonstrated in Southern California.
Justin Rose’s Driver: Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Triple Diamond Max
Off the tee, Justin Rose starts with a Callaway driver featuring a 9° loft. The Paradym Ai Smoke Triple Diamond Max is known as a high-performance club for experienced players seeking maximum control, a compact head shape, and low spin, without sacrificing the forgiveness benefits of the \”Max\” construction. It combines tour-proven performance with enhanced stability through the Ai Smart Face technology, which uses real player data to optimize the clubface and create multiple \”sweet spots\” across the surface. This helps stabilize spin and launch angle on off-center hits. At the Farmers Insurance Open, Rose recorded a maximum drive distance of 352 yards (approximately 322 meters) with this driver.
Fairway Woods For Every Shot
Complementing his driver is a TaylorMade M6 3-wood with a 15° loft, featuring Twist Face technology similar to the M5 series, providing explosive shots from both the turf and the tee. An evolved Speed Pocket slot in the sole increases face flexibility, enhancing the trampoline effect and delivering higher, longer shots with less distance loss on mishits. Rose’s bag also includes a TaylorMade QiD4 7-wood, lofted at 21°, ideal for mid to long approach shots. Its high ball flight ensures soft landings on the greens and is especially useful from the rough. The QiD4 is a newly introduced model already popular among many touring professionals.
Irons That Combine Control and Feel
For irons, Rose selects either a 4 or 5 utility iron from the Japanese manufacturer Miura’s TC-502 series depending on course conditions. His regular irons (6 through pitching wedge) are also Miura MC-502 models. The key difference is that the TC series are tour-cavity irons, while the MC series are muscle-cavity irons. Muscle-back irons (blades) provide maximum control and a rich feel through compact heads but require precise striking. Cavity-back irons, often called \”tour cavity\” for better players, feature a cavity behind the face that shifts weight to the perimeter, offering greater forgiveness, a lower center of gravity, and higher ball flight.
For wedges, Rose relies on traditional Titleist clubs, choosing either Vokey Design SM10 wedges with 52° or 56° loft or a Vokey Design WedgeWorks wedge with 60° loft.
The final club in Rose’s bag comes from Carlsbad, California: the Scotty Cameron Phantom T-5 Tour Prototype putter. Not yet available on the market, Rose has been testing this mallet-design put