Majors

TaylorMade Golf – The equipment that helped Rory McIlroy repeat in Augusta

April 13, 2026 – Rory McIlroy is no stranger to pressure. Especially in Augusta. As he stood on the 12th tee with a one shot lead, Rory took his time to analyze every aspect of the situation and stepped up and hit the shot of the golf tournament.

He had complete confidence in his TaylorMade golf bag, and specially in his TP5 golf ball that he strategically switched to for moments like he had on hole 12. Rory launched his 9-iron left of the flag and the ball landed on the green and shot to the right getting to 6-feet-11 inches of the hole before making the putt to take a two-shot lead.

From an equipment perspective, it was a fitting moment and result for Rory. It goes back to a switch he made in the beginning of 2025 that led to his iconic shot on hole 15 en route to his career grand slam one year ago. That same switch, now to the 2026 TP5, helped Rory become just the fourth player to win consecutive tournaments at The Masters, and the 15th player in history to win six or more majors.

Rory finished with a final score of 12-under (67-65-73-71) to win by one.

There’s a lot to the equipment story of Rory’s back-to-back wins in Augusta, so let’s get right to it. Let’s go!

Rory’s Augusta What’s In The Bag

  • Driver: TaylorMade Qi4D (9.0º, Fujikura Ventus Black 6K)
  • Fairway woods: TaylorMade Qi10 3 (15.0º, Fujikura Ventus Black 8X); TaylorMade Qi4D 5 (18.0º, Fujikura Ventus Black 9X)
  • Irons: TaylorMade P760. (4, Project X 7.0); TaylorMade RORS Proto (5-9, Project X 7.0)
  • Wedges: TaylorMade: TaylorMade Milled Grind 5 (46º SB, 50º SB, 54º SB, 60º LB, Project X 6.5, Project X 6.5 wedge 60º)
  • Putter: TaylorMade Spoder Tour X (Short Slant)
  • Golf Ball: TaylorMade TP5
  • Golf Bag: TaylorMade Season Opener Staff Bag
  • Accessories: TaylorMade Season Opener Headcovers

The switch that keeps on winning

Rory’s switch to TP5 before the start of his 2025 season has been well-documented – and for good reason. In fact, he credited the switch as to why he was able to hold the green on his now legendary draw into hole 15 at Augusta before claiming the career Grand Slam.

Similar performance was seen in this year’s tournament with the new 2026 TP5, especially on the aforementioned shot on hole 12.

“When I stood up on the tee, I felt like (the wind) was off the right, and I looked at the 11th flag, it was blowing right to left. But I was patient, and I waited to feel where the wind should have been coming from and I knew it was just a perfect three-quarter 9-iron,” said Rory McIlroy.

That three-quarter 9-iron was the exact golf shot Rory’s switch to the new TP5 unlocked.

“If you have a golf ball that produces consistency in spin, then you only have to worry about launch angle,”Senior Tour Manager Adrian Rietveld said. “A great player like Rory can control that.”

From Rory’s perspective, control when shaping shots and taking speed off the ball is the exact advantage of playing TP5.

“What the ball switch forced me to do was hit more of these half and three-quarter shots. I’ve been forced to play those because if I hit a full wedge shot it would just spin straight off the green. So, I started to get more comfortable hitting the half and three-quarter wedge shots and that started to creep sort of the whole way through the bag. I can go down to a six iron with that type of shot. It’s something I’ve developed from using this ball,” continued Rory McIlroy.

Catching up with Rory at the beginning of this season and his breakdown of the new TP5 was that it:

  • Spins more consistently
  • Launches slightly lower with short irons
  • Holds its line better on off-center strikes
  • Feels softer and more responsive around the greens

Inside Rory’s Qi4D driver fitting

When it comes to driver testing, Rory’s testing session in the fall of 2025 is stuff of legend. The results of that fitting were proven in real time during Rory’s final round in Augusta. On his four birdies where he hit driver, Rory averaged 343 yards off the tee including a 350-yard drive on hole 13.

For the week of the Masters, Rory drove it on average 334 yards and gained +0.92 strokes off-the-tee (7th best).

Those were results Rory and our TaylorMade tour representatives knew would materialize almost immediately during the fitting process.

“It was without a doubt the best driver testing session I’ve seen in 15 years of doing this. Within two shots he said he knew it was going straight in the bag. We hit 30 total shots and he only missed his target twice with a 117 RPM spin deviation while consistently carrying it 330,” said Adrian Rietveld.

The build of Rory’s driver is a Qi4D 9.0° head two clicks towards the lower setting on the loft sleeve playing to 8.0° giving him the visual he wants to see. He is a low-loft back CG player with driver as he doesn’t want to see too flat of a face.

On the new Qi4D eight-inch roll face, Rory opted to go with reflective fitting markers to allow him to frame the ball matching up with the top line.

In terms of weighting, he has two four-gram weights in the front and two 11-gram weights in the back. From the loft on the face, Rory holds the spin and then combines that with the forgiveness of the back center of gravity with the two heavy back weights.

When it all comes together, Rory’s build delivers a higher more stable spin window that improves performance on low face strikes and maintains consistency across mis hits.

In the final round, Rory hit 71% of his fairways with an average driving distance of 325 yards (21 yards longer than the field). After the win, Rory called his drive on 13 one of the two most important shots of the golf tournament.

The full spec is below:

  • LOFT SLEEVE: 2 Toward Lower
  • LIE: 59°
  • FRONT WEIGHTS: 4g, 4g
  • BACK WEIGHTS: 11g, 11g
  • SHAFT: Ventus Black 6X
  • LENGTH: 45 5/8”
  • TIPPING: 1”
  • SWINGWEIGHT: D5
  • GRIP: Golf Pride MCC Black/White
  • WRAPS: 2

The perfect 5-wood spec

Rory had played both Qi4D 3-wood and 5-wood in every start this season but elected to go back to familiar club in his Qi10 3-wood for Augusta. His 5-wood was a club he had been looking to improve performance on over the last two seasons and landed in a spec that he is extremely comfortable with.

  • HEAD: Qi4D 5-Wood
  • FINISHED LOFT: 17.5°
  • LIE: 58.5°
  • SHAFT: Ventus Black 9X
  • TIPPING: 2’’
  • LENGTH: 41 5/8” EOG
  • SWINGWEIGHT: D4

Rory’s iron set up

Rory has consistently played the same iron set up for most of the last five years gaming a combo set of P·760 4-iron and RORS Proto 5-9.

“The RORS Protos have a nice short blade length allowing him to turn them over when he needs to while holding spin,” said Adrian Rietveld. “His lie angles play a little bit upright, but flatten out as they get down to the end of his bag.”

Rory’s iron loft, lie and length progression is as follows:

  • LOFT: 23°, 26°, 30°, 34°, 48°, 42°
  • LIE: 59°, 59.5°, 60°, 60.5°, 61°, 61.5°
  • LENGTH (EOG): 38.75”, 38 5/16”, 37 7/8”, 37 1/4”, 36 3/4”, 36 1/4”

Rory games Project X 7.0 shafts on his irons.


Wedges built for Augusta

Rory put MG5 wedges in the bag and won straight away in dramatic fashion on his home soil at the DP World Tour’s Amgen Irish Open in 2025. Simply put, MG5 wedges checked three main boxes Rory considers in a wedge: the visual of how it sets up, turf interaction specifically with his lob wedge, and feel.

The forged construction of MG5 wedges provided Rory the soft feel he was looking for. Spin Tread Technology and the all-new saw-milled grooves also enhanced performance in wet conditions creating more friction and therefore more consistent spin, as well as lower launch.

With his focus directly on Augusta last year, Rory switched to a 60° low bounce lob wedge bent to 61°. The conversation of making this now crucial adjustment was centered around two areas of Rory’s game: turf interaction, specifically on tighter grass, and the 40-to-70-yard wedge shot. Rory simply wanted to explore how to make those shots easier.

Adding more loft to his lob wedge also slightly increases the bounce and leading edge sit point, which is where the leading edge sits at address in relation to the ground. This helps Rory’s short game by preventing the low- bounce wedge from catching in the grain to perform well on tighter grass like at Augusta.

“He creates so much speed down at the bottom that the little bit of loft just helps the ball come out a little bit softer and he can be more natural,” Adrian Rietveld told Golf.com this week.

Prior to the start of this week, our TaylorMade Tour team built Rory a fresh wedge so he could have fresh grooves ready to go for his repeat bid. Per Data Golf’s strokes gained calculation, Rory gained 1.39 strokes around the greens for the tournament.

Rory’s wedge loft, lie, length progression:

  • LOFT: 46°, 50°, 54°, 61°
  • LIE: 62°, 63°, 63°, 63°
  • LENGTH (EOG): 36 1/4”, 35 7/8”, 35 3/4”, 35 1/4”

Rory plays Project X 6.5 in his 46°-54° and Project X 6.5 Wedge in his 60°.


Sustained success with Spider

Rory has played his torched Spider Tour X short slant putter since the 2024 Tour Championship. Safe to say it has performed well as he has now won four PGA TOUR events (two majors), two DP World Tour events and two Race to Dubai titles.

“Rory’s Spider Tour X has 30° of toe hang and a flatter lie angle. This helps give Rory more face rotation and arc through the stroke. Rory likes the putter to open on the backswing so he can close it on the downswing which makes the short slant a good match up for his moderate stroke arc,” said James Holley, TaylorMade Tour representative.

Rory’s Spider Tour X spec:

  • HOSEL: Short Slant
  • SIGHT LINE: Full Line
  • INSERT: Pure Roll
  • SHAFT: Black Stepless
  • LENGTH: 34 1/2″ EOG
  • LOFT: 
  • LIE: 69°
  • GRIP: SuperStroke Pistol Tour
  • WRAPS: 1

Por REDACCIÓN