Ever wonder what the powerhouse lefty from Good Good, Bubbie Golf, has in his bag to hit those mammoth drives and delicate chips? You’re not alone. Bubbie’s setup is one of the most frequently asked-about topics, and for good reason - his journey from a right-handed player to a formidable lefty has been incredible to watch. This article breaks down every club Bubbie games, offering not just a list, but also a coach’s perspective on why these clubs suit his style and what you, the average golfer, can learn from his choices.
Bubbie Golf’s Complete 'What's In The Bag?'
Bubbie’s bag is a fantastic example of a modern club setup. It blends cutting-edge technology from major brands with smart choices from direct-to-consumer companies. It’s not just a collection of the newest and most expensive gear, it’s a thoughtfully assembled toolkit designed to maximize his strengths - power and creativity - while providing the forgiveness needed for his unorthodox swing. While sponsored gear can change, this is the core setup Bubbie has been relying on in recent Good Good videos. Let’s get into the specifics.
- Driver: PXG 0311 Black Ops (10.5° loft)
- 3-Wood: PXG 0311 Black Ops (15° loft)
- Irons: Takomo 301 CB (4-PW)
- Wedges: Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (50°, 54°, 58°)
- Putter: Varies, often a PXG Brandon Battle Ready Blade
- Golf Ball: Titleist Pro V1
Each of these choices says something important about his game, so let’s look at what each club does for him and what it could do for you.
The Driver: Power and Forgiveness with PXG
His Club: PXG 0311 Black Ops (10.5°)
At the top of the bag, Bubbie unleashes the beast with a PXG 0311 Black Ops driver. This club is engineered for a combination of high launch, low spin, and, most importantly for a player like Bubbie, a massive amount of forgiveness. The carbon fiber composite crown and sole plates save weight, allowing engineers to place mass in strategic areas to boost the Moment of Inertia (MOI). In simple terms, a high MOI means the clubface resists twisting on off-center hits. If you miss the sweet spot, the club helps keep the shot on a better line with more speed than a less-forgiving driver would.
The Coaching Takeaway
Bubbie’s driver choice is one every amateur golfer should pay attention to. Many players buy drivers that are marketed for pros - super low-spinning models that punish mishits severely. Bubbie, despite his immense power, chooses a model that helps him find more fairways. As a coach, I see so many players struggle because their driver doesn’t match their swing. They fight a slice with a driver built for a draw, or they use a low-forgiveness head when they hit it all over the face.
Your action item here is to be honest about your own game. Do you consistently find the dead center of the clubface? If not, look for a driver known for its forgiveness. A club like the PXG Black Ops, TaylorMade Qi10 MAX, or Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke MAX gives you a bigger margin for error. A straight shot in the fairway is always better than a slightly longer one in the woods. Choosing forgiveness over a few extra yards of potential distance is a smart play that leads to lower scores.
Fairway Wood: The Go-To Off the Tee
His Club: PXG 0311 Black Ops 3-Wood (15°)
Matching his driver, Bubbie's 3-wood is the PXG 0311 Black Ops. This club is his ultimate utility tool. You’ll see him use it frequently off the tee on shorter or tighter par 4s where accuracy is more important than raw distance. The Black Ops fairway wood has a lower profile and a forward center of gravity, which helps create a strong, piercing ball flight. It’s also incredibly versatile from the fairway, giving him a powerful option to attack long par 5s in two.
The Coaching Takeaway
Your 3-wood should be your "old reliable." Bubbie demonstrates this perfectly. When the driver is being wild or a tight fairway demands precision, he turns to his 3-wood. Think about your own bag: do you have a club you can count on when you absolutely must find the short grass? For many amateurs, a 3-wood or even a 5-wood is a much easier club to control than the driver.
Practice with your fairway wood off the tee at the driving range. Get a feel for its typical distance and shot shape. Learning to hit your 3-wood not just off the deck but also from a tee will give you a fantastic strategic alternative. On those intimidating tee shots, trading 20 yards of distance for a much higher chance of being in the fairway is almost always the right decision.
The Irons: Forged Feel with a Dose of Help
His Club: Takomo 301 CB (4-PW)
This is where Bubbie’s bag gets very interesting. He opts for the Takomo 301 CB irons, a direct-to-consumer brand known for producing high-quality forged irons at a great price. The "CB" stands for Cavity Back, a design that walks the line between a sleek player’s blade and a more forgiving game-improvement iron. Forged from S20C carbon steel, these irons provide the soft, satisfying feel that better players love. At the same time, the small cavity in the back adds a bit of forgiveness on mishits, helping maintain ball speed and consistency on strikes that aren't perfectly pure.
The Coaching Takeaway
Bubbie's choice of the Takomo CBs illustrates a massive lesson: you don’t need to play blades to be a good ball-striker. Many golfers think they need to "earn" a forgiving iron or that using a cavity back is a sign of a lesser player. That’s just not true. Bubbie wants phenomenal feel but also needs support when his unique swing isn’t perfectly synced up. The Takomo 301 CB is a modern player’s cavity back, providing the best of both worlds.
Consider where your own iron game is. Are you playing irons that are too demanding? If you hit clunky, thin shots frequently, moving to a more forgiving iron can make an immediate difference. A player’s cavity back like the Takomo 301, Mizuno Pro 243, or Srixon ZX5 Mk II offers an amazing combination of soft feel, workability, and the miss-hit help most of us need.
The Wedge Game: Vokey for Short Game Wizardry
His Club: Titleist Vokey Design SM9 (50°, 54°, 58°)
When it comes to the scoring clubs, Bubbie trusts the most popular wedges in golf: Titleist Vokeys. His setup of 50°, 54°, and 58° is a classic configuration that gives him an option for every situation inside 120 yards.
- 50° Wedge (Gap Wedge): This bridges the distance gap between his pitching wedge and his 54°. It's used for full shots where control is paramount.
- 54° Wedge (Sand Wedge): This is his workhorse around the greens for a variety of chips, pitches, and bunker shots.
- 58° Wedge (Lob Wedge): The go-to for high, soft shots that need to stop quickly, like delicate flops over a bunker or pitches to a tight pin.
Each Vokey is available in different "grinds" - subtle shaping of the sole that affects how the club interacts with the turf. Bubbie selects grinds that fit his steep angle of attack and the course conditions.
The Coaching Takeaway
Your wedge setup is the fastest way to lower your scores. Bubbie has precise yardage gaps between his wedges, and you should too. Go to a range with a launch monitor (or just pace off distances) and find out how far you hit each of your wedges with a full, comfortable swing. If you have a 15-20 yard gap somewhere in your bag, adding a specific gap wedge can fill that hole.
More importantly, learn what each wedge is for. Don’t just use your 56° for everything inside 100 yards. Use a 50° or pitching wedge for longer chips where the ball can run out (the bump-and-run). Use a 58° or 60° when you need to fly the ball over an obstacle and stop it fast. Having the right tools won't help unless you know how to use them.
The Putter: Feel is Everything
His Club: Varies (Often PXG Brandon or Similar Blade)
Bubbie is known to switch putters often, which is common even among tour pros. He usually leans towards blade-style putters, like the PXG Battle Ready Brandon. A blade putter suits a player with an "arcing" putting stroke, where the putter head opens on the backswing and closes through impact. The simple, clean look often appeals to players who value feel and a square sightline at address. He finds a model he trusts and rolls with it until the magic fades, then searches for the next hot blade.
The Coaching Takeaway
Putter selection is the most personal choice in golf. There is no one "best" putter. Bubbie’s preference for a blade highlights this. He is a feel player, and the blade putter gives him direct feedback. If you have a straighter, "rock the shoulders" stroke, a mallet putter with more weight in the back might offer more stability.
The best tip I can give anyone is to go to a golf store and spend 30 minutes on the putting green. Try different head shapes (blades, mid-mallets, mallets) and different neck styles (plumber’s neck, single bend, center-shafted). Forget the brand name and price tag. Pick the one that looks good to your eye and feels balanced in your hands. Bubbie trusts his feel, and you should too. When you find a putter you're confident with, you’ll start making more putts a lot sooner.
Final Thoughts
Bubbie's golf bag is a perfect reflection of his game: powerful, creative, and smartly designed. He combines high-forgiveness in his long clubs with precision and feel in his scoring clubs, a strategy that any golfer can learn from. His setup proves that choosing equipment based on your actual needs - not your ego or what the pros are playing - is the foundation for playing better, more consistent golf.
Building the right bag is one half of the equation, making the right choice on the course is the other. Knowing when to hit the forgiving driver versus the trusty 3-wood, or which wedge to pull for that tricky greenside lie, is where the real strokes are saved. That's why we created our tool, a way to help you with those tough decisions. With Caddie AI, you have an expert caddie in your pocket, ready to offer shot strategy or club recommendations in seconds. It allows you to analyze any situation, from course management on the tee to a tough shot from the rough, so you can step up and swing with the full commitment you see from players like Bubbie.