Bryan Bros WITB 2026
Few names in golf content move faster than George and Wesley Bryan. The Bryan Bros have been building on-course entertainment since 2014, and in 2026 both brothers are playing some of the most talked-about gear on the internet. Here's exactly what's in their bags right now.
George Bryan
George Bryan is one half of the Bryan Bros, and his bag in 2026 leans hard into distance and control off the tee.
Driver: Titleist GT3, 8°
George recently walked away from the Callaway Rogue ST driver he trusted for three seasons. He now swings the Titleist GT3 at a low 8° loft, paired with a Mitsubishi Diamana BB 63X shaft. That combination is built for one thing: keeping ball speed high while cutting down on unwanted spin. For a player who already hits it a mile, this setup is about tightening the dispersion, not adding more distance.
3-Wood: Callaway Paradym, 15° set to 14°
George strengthens his 3-wood from 15° down to 14°, running it through a Fujikura Ventus Black 7X shaft. That's a low-spin, low-flight combination designed to hold up in the wind and give him a reliable second shot on par 5s.
Hybrid: Cobra DS Adapt, 19°
George used to carry a 2-iron in this slot. He's since swapped it for the Cobra DS Adapt Hybrid at 19°, matched with a UST Mamiya LINQ M40X shaft. The move was about forgiveness. Long irons demand precision; a well-struck hybrid gets you close even on a slight miss.
Irons: Takomo 301 CB, 4-iron through Pitching Wedge
George is a Takomo ambassador, and his iron choice shows why. The 301 CB is a compact cavity-back iron built for players who want a tour-like look with a bit more help than a true blade. He runs the full set on Nippon Modus 125 X shafts, a shaft favored by faster swingers who still want tour-level feedback.
Wedges: Takomo BB803, 50° / 54° / 58°
This is where George's fingerprints are literally on the product. The BB803 wedge was co-designed by the Bryan Bros, and the name pays tribute to both their nickname and the 803 area code where they grew up in South Carolina. George carries 50°, 54°, and 58° lofts with custom grinding to match his angle of attack, all built on Nippon Modus 125 S shafts, a touch softer than his irons for extra feel around the greens.
Putter: L.A.B. Golf DF3
George recently made the switch to the L.A.B. Golf DF3, a putter built around Lie Angle Balancing technology. The idea is simple: the putter is designed to resist twisting through the stroke, so the face stays square at impact more often, even on strikes that miss the center.
Golf Ball: 2025 Titleist Pro V1
With no ball sponsorship tying his hands, George plays the 2025 Titleist Pro V1, one of the most trusted balls in golf for a reason. It's a safe, proven choice for a player who wants consistency off every club in the bag.
Wesley Bryan
Wesley's bag tells a different story than his brother's. Where George is chasing control, Wesley has been chasing speed, and his setup in 2026 reflects a player willing to experiment to find more distance.
Driver: Callaway Paradym Ai-Smoke Triple Diamond Max, 9°
Wesley has openly admitted he battled the driver for years. His fix wasn't the usual heavier, more stable shaft. He went the other way entirely, pairing his 9° Callaway Paradym Ai-Smoke Triple Diamond Max with the ultra-lightweight Diamana GT 50 TX shaft. The goal was simple: swing faster, launch higher, and let the lighter shaft do the work. Wesley says the change added 20 to 30 yards.
3-Wood: Callaway Elyte, 15°
Wesley's 3-wood situation is a running joke in the group. His Callaway Elyte at 15°, built on a UST Mamiya LINQ M40X 7F5 shaft, was actually gifted away to a spectator after one too many costly misses during the International Series in the Philippines. Expect this slot in the bag to be updated as soon as Wesley settles on a replacement.
Hybrid: Titleist TSR3, 19°
Wesley plays the Titleist TSR3 Hybrid at 19°, a compact-profile option built for better players who want a smaller footprint behind the ball than a typical game-improvement hybrid. It's matched with a Fujikura Ventus Blue HB 9X shaft for a mid-launch, low-spin flight, useful for holding long approach shots into the wind.
Irons: A Multi-Brand Blend
Wedges: Vokey SM10 and Takomo BB803
Wesley is known across the Bryan Bros channel for his short-game creativity, and his wedge setup reflects that variety. Instead of a standard pitching wedge, he plays a Titleist Vokey SM10 at 46°, then drops into the Takomo BB803 at 50°, 54°, and 58°. All of them are built on Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts, which blend well with the X100 shafts already in his irons for a consistent feel through the bag.
Putter: L.A.B. Golf DF3
Wesley made a bigger leap than his brother here. For years on the PGA Tour, he gamed an Odyssey #1 milled blade, about as traditional as putters get. Moving to the large, soft-feeling L.A.B. Golf DF3 was a significant style change, but the Lie Angle Balancing technology has clearly won him over.
Golf Ball: Bridgestone Prototype
Wesley's golf ball has been in flux. He's rotated between the Callaway Chrome Tour and the Titleist Pro V1 over the past couple of seasons, but after filming with Jason Day, he's now testing a Bridgestone Prototype. It's not confirmed whether this matches the Bridgestone Tour B X that Day previously played or the newer prototype Day used during the PGA Tour Playoffs.
On-Course Notes: What the Bryan Bros Say About Their Own Bags
A few details from the Bryan Bros' own commentary are worth calling out for anyone building a similar setup:
George's move to a lower-spin driver head dropped his spin numbers from the high 2,800 to 3,100 rpm range down to roughly 2,300 to 2,600 rpm, producing more roll and a more controlled fade. That's a meaningful cut, and it's the kind of change a proper driver fitting can reveal for any golfer, not just a long hitter like George. Both brothers still carry a hybrid rather than a driving iron or 7-wood, despite that being a growing trend among younger tour players. Their reasoning is simple: reliability. A hybrid is more forgiving on a mis-hit than a driving iron, and more versatile from rough or tight lies than most 7-woods.The BB803 wedge remains a personal project for both of them. Beyond the affordability angle that comes with Takomo's direct-to-consumer model, both brothers point to the full-face grooves and custom grinding options as reasons the wedge holds up next to major tour brands at a fraction of the price.



