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Is golf with fewer clubs more fun?

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There have been plenty of interesting golf trends over recent years: White-headed drivers, black steel shafts, driving irons, combo sets, custom headcovers, and direct-to-consumer brands, just to name a few.

But my favorite trend right now is all about playing golf with sets of fewer than 14 clubs.

Social media is full of accounts* advocating smaller sets, half-size bags, one club golf and other ways to get out and on the course as easily and efficiently as possible, with many arguing it is the most fun way to play. Given the necessity for walking courses in many places these days, it is no wonder that these trends are gaining more traction all the time.

@lessthan14

Smaller sets are not just about reducing the impact on the backs of players carrying their clubs; it is incredible how many people claim their scores are improving under the newer and more efficient layout in their Sunday bags. To my own surprise, I am one of those players.

The other thing about smaller sets is that they are all individual. Personally, I was having fewer swings of my 3 and 4 irons than I was rounds of golf, so they came out of the bag, and I have somehow been shooting lower scores. I could probably take out another one or two if I really wanted to, but for now, I am most comfortable with 12 clubs, and I don’t feel like there is any need for a manufactured swing or shot that I might come across.

@mackenziegolfbags

For many, it is the manufactured shots and the creativity required in a half bag that triggers the appeal. The need to curve shots and play to different distances with clubs you wouldn’t usually hit brings back a relationship to the game of golf that many believe has gone missing in the era of higher, straighter and longer shots which are the standard in today’s game.

Where a player comes to a shot that is in between clubs in a half set, they need to really commit to a shot that you may not need in a full set of clubs. This has been an awakening for some who otherwise may not be able to give total commitment to a shot that is ‘pretty close’ to the right number for them. Some get a bigger kick out of bunting a half 7-iron up to a green that would have otherwise been a stock standard 8 iron.

In fact, Donald Ross said it best with the following:

“In playing golf for more than 50 years, I don’t believe there ever was a round in which I used more than six clubs. Today there’s a stick in the sack for every shot. Golfers used to be made on the golf course. Now they are made in the machine shops.”

@mashie_melbourne

The clubs in today’s sets are also supportive of a bag with fewer clubs. A 5 iron today is the loft of a 3 iron of the past, and we are all hitting driver long enough not to need all the clubs in the bag that used to get a workout. Bomb and gougers who have always said that they only need driver and a wedge into the longest par 4s, can now rejoice and talk about how they used fewer clubs in the bag way before it was cool.

If you are looking to join the smaller set society, and you are looking to enter with a bang, try it out with clubs which are 20 or more years old. Throw a persimmon or two in there, and you are an even bigger deal on the small bag circuit. If the bag you are using is from the workshops of Mackenzie or Seamus, then you are playing in the big leagues of the small sets!

For now, I am a smaller set player of 12 or fewer clubs, and I feel like I am not leaving any shots on the table. If I played in a tournament, I would probably put in the extras just in case, but I also probably wouldn’t use them.

Fewer clubs slide straight in and out of the car and make it easier to walk to the tee, play at a good pace around the course, and I have felt noticeably better the day after my rounds with the lighter load. There is no way that fewer clubs will be mandated in the rules of golf, but they are one more way for me to play faster and maximise my enjoyment of the game we all love.

There are many different setups out there, but my fantasy current and classic half sets are below:

Current

Driver: TaylorMade SIM (9-degrees)

3-Hybrid: TaylorMade SIM Max

Irons: Miura Color Theory or National Custom fitted set

Wedge: TaylorMadeHi-Toe (58-degrees)

Putter: Scotty Cameron 009

(In my fantasy set I also have a good putting stroke…)

Bag: Mackenzie Waxed Canvas Custom

Classic ~20 years old

Driver: TaylorMade R510TP

Fairway Wood: Titleist PT (17-degrees)

Irons: Wilson Staff Tour Blades (5-7, 9-PW)

Wedge: Cleveland Classic 691 (58-degrees)

Putter: Ping O Blade

Bag: Ping Hoofer classic

Here are also some Instagram accounts to get you started or add to your collection of accounts

 

Will Kay is a passionate Australian fan of everything related to golf and equipment, with a particularly unhealthy love of waterproof jackets and outerwear. Previously the lead buyer for a chain of 50 golf stores across Australia, Will is a qualified lawyer and is struggling to maintain a single figure handicap in a double toddler household. He is always planning the next trip to Barnbougle in Tasmania, and doesn’t play enough golf to see any benefit in laying up.

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Equipment

Neal Shipley, AKA, the “Big Fridge’s,” custom stamping

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Neal Shipley was the first to admit that he enjoyed his food while in college. But since his days at Ohio State, he’s slimmed down and earned a PGA Tour Card.

That hasn’t stopped him from having fun with his wedge stampings, though it’s led to some misunderstandings.

On the 54 (degree), we have ‘Big Fudge,'” Shipley told GolfWRX. “It was supposed to be ‘Big Fridge,’ so this happened a little while ago. ‘Big Fridge’ was a nickname between my college teammates and I, with ‘fridge’ meaning stomach, a big stomach.

“We told the Ping guys to put … ‘Big Fridge’ on it, and I think maybe some bad cell service or something, and they thought I said ‘fudge,’ so they put fudge on it.”

On Shipley’s 50-degree he also continues the food theme, this time with his go-to order at the “Golden Arches,” and his stamping “DONS 7.”

“The number 7 meal, the two cheeseburger meal, that was my McDonald’s order, back when I would have McDonald’s frequently,” Shipley shared.

Check out Shipley’s full what’s in the bag and the rest of his wedge stampings here on “Inside the Ropes” from Colonial.

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Equipment

From the GolfWRX Classifieds: L.A.B. Purple DF3 with Masters cover

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At GolfWRX, we are a community of like-minded individuals who all experience and express our enjoyment of the game in many ways.

It’s that sense of community that drives day-to-day interactions in the forums on topics that range from best driver to what marker you use to mark your ball. It even allows us to share another thing we all love – buying and selling equipment.

Currently, in our GolfWRX buy/sell/trade (BST) forum, @raw10628 has a L.A.B. DF3 putter and Masters putter cover up for grabs.

From the listing: “Some great items here today, time to thin out and make room for next set of gear.  All prices include shipping. 
LAB DF3 Purple 33.5” 68° lie with TPT – $725. LAB Masters release DF3 cover – $150.

To check out the full listing in our BST forum, head through the link. If you are curious about the rules to participate in the BST Forum, you can learn more here: GolfWRX BST Rules

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Whats in the Bag

Maria Torres WITB 2026 (June)

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Driver: Ping G440 LST (9 degrees)
Shaft: Accra TourZ Green 5-M4

3-wood: Ping G440 Max (15 degrees)
Shaft: Accra TourZ Green 6-M4

5-wood: Ping G440 Max (19 degrees @18)
Shaft: Accra TourZ Green 6-M4

Hybrid: Ping G440 (23 degrees)
Shaft: Oban Isawa Red Hybrid Shaft 04 Flex 70 Gms

Irons: Srixon ZXi7 (5-P)
Shafts: Aerotech SteelFiber Private Reserve i80

Wedges: Cleveland RTZ (50-MID, 54-FULL, 58-MID)
Shafts: Aerotech SteelFiber Private Reserve i105

Putter: L.A.B. Golf OZ.1i
Shaft: ACCRA Putter Shaft

Grips: Golf Pride Tour Velvet

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