Golf Tutorials

What Golf Clubs Does Min Woo Lee Use?

By Spencer Lanoue
July 24, 2025

Curious about the gear that powers Min Woo Lee’s electrifying game? A look inside his tour bag reveals a set of meticulously chosen tools built for speed, precision, and the creative shot-making that has made him a fan favorite around the world. We'll breakdown his complete What's In The Bag club by club, and more importantly, explain the why behind each choice and what you can learn from it for your own game.

Min Woo Lee's WITB: A Look Inside the Chef's Kitchen

As a Callaway staff player, Min Woo Lee’s setup is a fantastic example of a modern power player's bag. His choices are all about controlling trajectory, working the ball on command, and maximizing the speed he generates with his incredibly athletic swing. It's a bag with personality, just like the player himself. There's very little room for error built into these clubs, they are true players' sticks designed to reward a great swing. If you're wondering how he anihilates the ball off the tee and sticks his iron shots so close, the equipment is certainly a major part of the equation.

Driver: Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Triple Diamond S (8.5°)

At the top of the bag is Min Woo's primary weapon: the Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Triple Diamond S Driver. This club is not for the faint of heart. Here’s the breakdown:

  • Model: Paradym Ai Smoke Triple Diamond S
  • Loft: 8.5° (often adjusted)
  • Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Blue 6 X

The Coach's Take:

The first thing to notice is the model-"Triple Diamond S." This is Callaway’s most compact, lowest-spinning driver head. It’s designed for high-swing-speed golfers who have no trouble finding the center of the face. For Min Woo, who swings the club well over 120 mph, a low-spin head is essential to prevent the ball from "ballooning" up in the air and losing distance. The smaller head size (450cc vs. the standard 460cc) gives him maximum workability, meaning he can shape his drives - hitting a fade or a draw - more easily to fit the hole.

The Fujikura Ventus Blue shaft is another tour staple. The "X" denotes extra stiff flex, a must-have to handle his aggressive transition from backswing to downswing. The Ventus profile is known for its stability, minimizing twisting at impact and helping him deliver the club face squarely to the ball time and time again.

What This Means for Your Game:

Watching Min Woo send one 330 yards might make you want to rush out and buy his setup. But be honest with your game. Most amateur golfers will benefit far more from a standard Ai Smoke Max or Max D model, which offer significantly more forgiveness on off-center hits. The lesson here isn't to copy his club, but to copy his intention: match your driver to your swing speed and typical miss. If you slice the ball, a high-forgiveness, draw-biased driver is a much better choice than a low-spin model that can make a slice even worse.

Fairway Wood: Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke Triple Diamond (16.5°+)

Next up is his fairway wood, a versatile club he uses both off the tee on tight par-4s and to attack par-5s in two.

  • Model: Paradym Ai Smoke Triple Diamond
  • Loft: ~16.5° (essentially a strong 4-wood)
  • Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Blue 9 X

The Coach's Take:

Interestingly, Min Woo often opts for a higher-lofted fairway wood, around 16.5 degrees, which is technically a 4-wood loft in a 3-wood head. This gives him the best of both worlds: it's still powerful enough off the tee but adds enough height to land the ball softly on greens from 270+ yards out. The Triple Diamond head continues the theme of workability and low spin. The truly eye-opening spec here is the shaft weight: a Fujikura Ventus Blue 9 X. A 90-gram shaft in a fairway wood is exceptionally heavy. This is all about stability for Min Woo. It prevents the club head from feeling "floppy" at the speeds he generates, giving him a powerful, controlled flight that doesn't climb too high.

What This Means for Your Game:

The key takeaway is "gapping." A higher-lofted fairway wood might be a fantastic option for you. Many amateurs struggle to hit a standard 15° 3-wood off the ground because it doesn't have enough loft to get airborne easily. A 16.5° or even an 18° fairway wood (a true 5-wood) can be a far more consistent and useful club for a huge number of players. It can serve the same purpose on long approach shots and be much easier to use than a traditional 3-wood.

Utility, Driving Iron & Irons

Utility: Callaway X Forged UT (18°) OR Callaway Paradym Ai Smoke UW (19°)

This is a slot in the bag that Min Woo often tailors to the course. On a windy links course, he might put in the driving iron for a piercing flight. On a softer American-style course, he might opt for a utility wood for higher launch and a softer landing.

Irons: Callaway Apex MB '21 (4-PW)

This is where "The Chef" really cooks. Min Woo’s irons are the definition of a purist’s club.

  • Irons: Callaway Apex MB '21 (4-PW)
  • Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100

The Coach's Take:

"MB" stands for Muscle Back, also known as a blade. These irons are forged from a single piece of soft carbon steel and offer the absolute pinnacle of feel and feedback. When youhit a shot pure with a blade, the feeling is sublime. When you miss the center by even a dimple, the club will let you know with a harsh-feeling shot that comes up well short of the target. These irons offer practically zero forgiveness. They are chosen for one reason: the ability to shape the ball at will. A skilled player like Min Woo can use a blade to hit a high-arcing draw to a back-left pin or a low-cutting fade that just works its way to the flag. This control is why an elite ball-striker chooses them. The shafts, True Temper Dynamic Gold X100s, are a classic choice for strong players, offering a heavy, stable feel with a low, penetrating launch.

What This Means for Your Game:

Honesty is essential when it comes to iron selection. Unless your number one priority is shaping shots and you strike the ball in the middle of the face almost every time, blades are probably not for you. Thankfully, modern golf offers incredible alternatives:

  • Cavity Back Irons: Offer the most forgiveness and are great for players looking for more distance and a higher launch on their mishits.
  • Players Cavity Back Irons / Players Distance Irons: A great blend of both worlds. They have a sleek look, good feel, and inject a healthy dose of forgiveness and distance technology. For the vast majority of good amateurs (0-15 handicap), this is the sweet spot.

Wedges: Callaway Jaws Raw (50°, 56°, 60°)

This is Min Woo's short game scoring setup, the tools he uses to create magic around the greens.

  • Lofts: 50°-10S, 56°-10S, 60°-08C
  • Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400

The Coach's Take:

The gapping here is perfect. The 50° is his Gap Wedge, used for full shots inside his Pitching Wedge distance. The 56° is his Sand Wedge, versatile out of bunkers and for standard pitch shots. The 60° Lob Wedge is his go-to for high, soft flop shots and delicate chips that need to stop on a dime. The "Raw" finish means the face will rust over time, which many tour pros believe improves spin, especially in wet conditions.

The numbers after the loft are also important: they refer to bounce and grind. For example, "10S" means 10 degrees of bounce with the S-Grind. This is a very standard, all-around grind suitable for a variety of conditions. His 60°, however, is a C-Grind, which has material removed from the heel and an 8˚ bounce. This allows him to open the face way up for a big flop shot without the leading edge coming too far off the ground, a must-have for a creative short-game player.

What This Means for Your Game:

Getting your wedges gapped properly is one of the quickest ways to knock strokes off your handicap. Know the loft of your pitching wedge, and then add wedges in 4-6° increments from there. Also, get fitted for the right bounce and grind! If you play on soft, lush courses, more bounce is your friend. If you play on firm, tight lies, less bounce and a more versatile grind (like the C-Grind) can be a huge help.

Putter: Odyssey Ai-ONE Milled #2

The club that seals the deal. Min Woo has been using a new gamer in 2024.

The Coach's Take:

He's chosen the Odyssey Ai-ONE Milled #2 model, which is a classic heel-toe weighted blade. Blade-style putters suit players who have a slight "arc" in their putting stroke, where the putter face opens on the way back and closes on the way through. This milled version provides fantastic feel and auditory feedback, allowing him to control his speed with precision. The Ai-ONE face insert in this putter is an incredible piece of tech. It’s designed to provide more consistent ball speeds across the entire face, so even if he mis-hits a putt slightly toward the toe or heel, it still rolls out a similar distance to a center strike. That’s a huge bonus, even for the best players in the world.

What This Means for Your Game:

Putter choice is deeply personal, but it should be based on your stroke type. If you have an arcing stroke, a blade is a great fit. If you try to keep the putter face square to the target path (a "straight-back, straight-through" motion), a face-balanced mallet putter will likely give you more consistency. Film your stroke to see your natural tendency and choose your weapon accordingly.

Final Thoughts

Min Woo Lee's golf bag is a beautifully crafted set of tools for a highly skilled artisan. It prioritizes feel, workability, and power, rewarding his world-class ability with precision and control. While you shouldn’t run out and copy his setup piece for piece, the philosophy behind it - choosing every club to match a specific strength and on-course need - is a lesson every golfer can learn from.

Building a bag like a pro means understanding your own game deeply - your tendencies, your miss-hits, and your typical course challenges. I know it can feel daunting to figure all that out on your own. My app, Caddie AI, acts as your own on-demand golf expert. If you’re ever stuck between two clubs or facing that weird lie in the rough and have no idea what to do, you can just ask for a recommendation or even snap a photo of your ball to get simple, expert advice. It removes the guesswork from those critical decisions, helping you play with the confidence and clarity of a Tour pro.

Spencer has been playing golf since he was a kid and has spent a lifetime chasing improvement. With over a decade of experience building successful tech products, he combined his love for golf and startups to create Caddie AI - the world's best AI golf app. Giving everyone an expert level coach in your pocket, available 24/7. His mission is simple: make world-class golf advice accessible to everyone, anytime.

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