Equipment Roundup: Ryder Cup
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PARIS, FRANCE - SEPTEMBER 30: Dustin Johnson of the United States on the 11th green during singles matches of the 2018 Ryder Cup at Le Golf National on September 30, 2018 in Paris, France. (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)
Dustin Johnson uses tight tee shot to birdie No. 9 at TOUR Championship
Dustin Johnson joked with reporters on the eve of the Ryder Cup that he'd "surprise" everyone with his putter selection, before confirming he'd continue with the cross-handed grip and TaylorMade Spider Tour putter that nearly helped him win the FedExCup title.
While Johnson stuck to his word over the first two days of play, he opted to go away from the grip and mallet on Sunday, returning to a conventional grip and Anser-style TaylorMade TP Black Copper Juno against Ian Poulter.
Johnson's flat stick had a single white sight line on the flange and his initials stamped on the right bumper. The head shape is identical to the TP Collection Juno he used to win last year's THE NORTHERN TRUST.
The putter remained hot during the middle portion of the match, as Johnson strung together three birdies to grab a 1-up lead on the 11th when his lengthy effort from 60 feet found the bottom of the cup.
Even with the momentum in his favor, Johnson would go on to lose three of the next four holes to Poulter, en route to a costly defeat.
"I felt like I played pretty well," Johnson said. "Made some nice putts. I knew it was going to be a tough match starting out. I just didn't hit enough fairways."
Rahm goes back to M2: Jon Rahm finished the 2017-18 PGA TOUR season ranked 3rd in Strokes Gained: Off-the-tee with a TaylorMade M4 driver. When you're ranked inside the top-5 in any statistical category, the assumption is the clubs in the bag are working without any issues.
Only that wasn't the case for Rahm, who shelved his M4 in favor of last year's M2 at the TOUR Championship and continued using the driver during the Ryder Cup.
It's unclear why Rahm suddenly shifted away from M4 late in the season, especially given that he never finished worse than T26 in the strokes gained category during the Dell Technologies Championship and BMW Championship; and his missed cut at THE NORTHERN TRUST was due to a balky putter and poor ball-striking week with his irons.
Whether it was really a couple less-than-stellar weeks (for his standards) with the driver that led to the swap, the M2 sparked a strong week off the tee at East Lake Golf Club, where he ranked fourth in Strokes Gained: Off-the-tee.
Rahm entered Sunday singles 0-2 for the week but managed to defeat Tiger Woods in a tightly contested match to squash a United States comeback that, for a brief moment, looked to be in full swing. It was Rahm's 365-yard drive on 17 that put him in perfect position to stuff a gap wedge to three feet for the win.
JT's wedges: Vokey wedge rep Aaron Dill created something special for Justin Thomas' maiden Ryder Cup appearance. Hoping to give Thomas some good vibes, Dill stamped stars and "Ryder Cup" on the back of his SM6 lob wedge, before adding red, white and blue paint fill to give it an American flag look.
"You outdid yourself on this one AD," Thomas said of Dill's creation on Twitter. Thomas went 4-1 with the custom stamped wedge at Le Golf National.
Free agents lead the way: Francesco Molinari (5-0) and Tommy Fleetwood (4-1) led the way for Europe in their impressive takedown of the United States. Given the success of equipment free agents last season on TOUR, it seems fitting that two key equipment free agents were at the forefront of the route.
Molinari and Fleetwood were under contract with Nike Golf for their equipment until the end of 2016 when the apparel giant left the hard-goods industry. Fleetwood has remained a free agent throughout the bag; Molinari signed a ball deal with Titleist in 2017 and putter deal with Bettinardi earlier this year, but the other 13 clubs (all TaylorMade) remain up for grabs.
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