Winner's Bag

PGA Championship 2022: The clubs Justin Thomas used to win at Southern Hills

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David Cannon

It seemed implausible, if not impossible that Justin Thomas would win his second PGA Championship. Starting the day seven shots in arrears, Thomas spent the bulk of the day not even on the first page of the leaderboard. But the 2017 PGA champ kept chipping away, playing the final nine holes in 32 to give him a final-round 67, and eventually, a playoff with Will Zalatoris after Mito Pereira knocked his tee shot in the water on 18 and made double bogey.

On the first playoff hole Thomas used his Titleist Vokey WedgeWorks 60-degree wedge to stuff an approach close enough to roll in a birdie to saw off Zalatoris’ birdie on the par-5 13th. Then on the second hole, JT unleashed a bomb with his 15-degrees Titleist TS3 3-wood that carried 288 yards and landed just in front of the green on the short, par-4 17th before bounding onto the green, leading to another birdie that thrust him into the lead. A final hole par sealed the win.

Although not in the limelight until late on the final nine, Thomas got back in it with a one-two punch at the 11th and 12th holes, knocking the ball in from 64 feet at 11 and following it up with a 18-footer for birdie on the following him. A solid up-and-down birdie at the short par-4 17th put him in just enough position when Pereira faltered.

Thomas’ putting was key to his game all week. Thomas switched to a new Scotty Cameron by Titleist Phantom X 5 Knuckle Neck prototype mallet just this week. Thomas had the putter at his Florida home and practiced with it during his time off. Although it is similar in shape to the putter he put in the bag at last year’s Open Championship in appearance, there are differences.

Chief among them are the neck and sound. “With the sound, he felt the new one was a bit hollow,” said Titleist’s PGA Tour putter rep Drew Page. "In order to make the sound similar to what he was playing we added an aluminum plate across the back cavity. This adjustment made it similar to what he was used to hearing and accomplished what he was seeking.”

The neck configuration also is new. “The neck in the new putter helps with his face closure and provides stability,” said Page. “He went away from the smaller slant neck and feels like he is seeing his start lines better, which in turn, gives him more confidence.”

Apparently so as Thomas was second in strokes gained/putting at Southern Hills, gaining 6.323 strokes on the field.

Thomas’ iron play also was on target as he ranked second in the field greens in regulation at 69.44 percent with his 621.JT custom muscle-back blade irons with Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shafts and Golf Pride Tour Velvet cord grips. Thomas first put the irons in play at the CJ Cup in October but has been partial to muscle-backs for some time. Titleist PGA Tour rep J.J. VanWezenbeeck explained why to Golf Digest last year.

“These guys are playing green speeds, green firmness and pin positions that golfers who play on the weekend don’t face,” says VanWezenbeeck. “For a player like Justin Thomas to use the slopes and contours of the green when they have 7-iron or less into the hole, he’s really having to shape the golf ball into that spot and using a muscle-back blade iron really helps him do that while helping him control his vertical flight as well.”

Or enough control to win his second major championship.

What Justin Thomas had in the bag at the 2022 PGA Championship
Ball: Titleist Pro V1x
Driver: Titleist TSi3 (Mitsubishi Diamana ZF 60), 10 degrees
3-wood: Titleist TS3, 15 degrees
5-wood: Titleist 915Fd, 18 degrees
Irons (4): Titleist T100; (5-9): Titleist 621.JT prototype; (PW): Titleist Vokey SM9
Wedges: Titleist Vokey SM9 (52, 56 degrees); Titleist Vokey WedgeWorks (60 degrees)
Putter: Scotty Cameron by Titleist X 5 tour prototype

TSi1/TSi2/TSi3/TSi4
TSi1/TSi2/TSi3/TSi4

WHAT IT DOES: Two of the four models cater to the extremes: the lightweight, slightly draw-biased TSi1 and the meaty, low-flying, ultra-low-spinning TSi4. The two middle models are for most of the market: those whose priority is forgiveness (TSi2) and those looking for playability and shotmaking (TSi3). Fitting four player types is nice, but the really neat achievement was finding extra speed. That meant using a special high-strength titanium originally designed for the Mars Lander. The lighter and faster-flexing alloy (ATI 425) means more design freedom to create extra off-center-hit stability in the TSi2 and movable weight in the more pear-shaped TSi3.

$550