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Hatton Golfer: Tyrrell Hatton's current Ping setup revealed in 2026 WITB

Hatton golfer Tyrrell Hatton's latest Ping setup is out, from his G440 LST driver to his Pro V1x ball, in a 2026 WITB feature.

Tyrrell Hatton WITB 2026: What Clubs Does The Englishman Use?
Tyrrell Hatton WITB 2026: What Clubs Does The Englishman Use?

’s latest bag setup is out, and the details show why one of Europe’s most proven hatton golfer contenders has stayed loyal to for years. In a 2026 what-in-the-bag feature, the Englishman’s current lineup was listed from driver through putter, giving a full look at the tools he is taking into competition now.

Hatton, who has been one of Europe’s top players over the past decade, has won on the , the PGA Tour and the , and has played in three Ryder Cups. He turned professional in 2011 and became a Ping staffer in 2016, a partnership that still defines his setup.

The headliner in the bag is his Ping G440 LST driver, built with a 9° head and a Mitsubishi Diamana TB 6TX shaft. That matters because Hatton averaged 301.6 yards this year on the LIV Golf League, a reminder that the equipment is built not just for control but for power off the tee.

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From there, the fairway woods stay in the same family. Hatton carries a Ping G440 Max fairway wood in a 15° head and a Ping G430 Max fairway wood in a 21° head, both fitted with Mitsubishi Diamana TB shafts in TX flex. The 3-wood shaft weighs 70 grams, while the 7-wood shaft weighs 80 grams.

His irons follow a split setup that has become familiar over the past decade. Hatton uses Ping i240 irons from 4-iron to 6-iron, then switches to Ping Blueprint S irons from 7-iron to pitching wedge, all fitted with Nippon Modus3 Tour 120 X shafts. Around the greens, he carries Ping S159 wedges in 50°, 54° and 60°, with the gap and sand wedges also using Nippon Modus3 Tour 120 X shafts and the lob wedge built with a True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 shaft.

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Hatton’s scoring end also includes the Ping PLD Oslo putter and the Pro V1x ball. The broader picture is simple: this is not a one-off experiment but a long-running Ping relationship, with the Englishman having used Ping irons for a decade and Ping mallet putters for many years.

For equipment watchers, the 2026 WITB list does more than name clubs. It shows a player who has kept a stable core while still chasing the fine margins that matter at the top level, and that combination is exactly what has kept Hatton in the conversation for years.

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