- Flighting his Pro V1x golf ball into the wind on Harbour Town’s par-4 18th, Matt Fitzpatrick took aim at the flagstick and watched his approach from 204 yards finish 13 feet, 4 inches from the cup on the first hole of a playoff. Fitzpatrick rolled it in for birdie to capture his fourth PGA TOUR victory and second RBC Heritage title in four years. His 2023 victory also came via a clutch playoff approach into 18, Fitzpatrick hitting his Pro V1x to within 12 inches for birdie on the third extra hole.
- Fitzpatrick emerged victorious from an all-Titleist golf ball playoff. The runner-up has used his Pro V1 golf ball, as well as a full set of Vokey Design wedges, for every one of his four majors and 20 PGA TOUR victories. Both players were among the overwhelming majority of competitors (54) who teed up a Titleist golf ball this week in Hilton Head.
- For the week, Fitzpatrick gained over 8 shots tee to green (+8.392/4th) with over five of them coming on approach shots (+2.659/12th) and around the green (+2.631/12th). He also finished the week T7 in Scrambling and got his Pro V1x up-and-down on six of seven attempts during the final round.
- “There’s obviously so many different variables with a golf ball. I’ve always been kind of a lower flight player but I am kind of high spin, so that’s where I feel like my game is at with the golf ball. To be able to rely on the golf ball and know that it’s going to do what I want it to do – have a consistent flight, consistent spin with every shot that I hit – that’s so important. Having that ability to know what your ball is going to do rather than second guessing makes a hell of a difference and obviously makes you more comfortable. And from there you’re going to hit better golf shots. I love the golf ball that I’m in, it just works perfectly for my game.”
- “The reason [Pro V1x] is so good for me is feel. I like the harder feel off the club face. I just feel like the spin’s consistent, the flight’s consistent, and that’s what you need in a golf ball. You don’t need it kind of in different windows. It’s nice to have that consistency to have the confidence in the golf ball to know how far it’s going to go every time, and to be within a really tight deviation is obviously so important. This is a game of inches after all, the margins are so fine you want it to be as tight as possible. So that’s why I play Pro V1x because it’s exactly that, you know what you’re going to get every shot and you don’t get any strange effects from shots.”
- “You just know, hitting other golf balls, that as soon as you’ve hit it, it doesn’t have the same effect. I’ve messed around with balls on the range when they’ve been mixed into the Pro V1x bag that I always go to grab, and they just get funky flights. I don’t know how you can play golf with that, to be honest, and not knowing what you’re going to get from shot to shot.”
- “I feel like, for me, the firmer the ball is, the more I can control the spin. That’s always nice for me (with Pro V1x), knowing that I can increase spin, and take spin off it. That’s been the big thing. I know for a fact I can flight the ball easy, much easier, up and down, with the ball that I use.
- “I’ve been Pro V1x ever since I was probably about 15. It was always the best ball. There was never anything else for me growing up, to be honest. That’s all I’ve ever known.”
The RBC Heritage champion brought his GT3 9.0 driver to the winner’s circle for the second time in his last three starts, gaining over three shots on the field off the tee (+3.102, 7th) while ranking T11 in Driving Accuracy (70%) and 13th in Driving Distance (314.5 yards).
All four of the 31-year-old Englishman’s PGA TOUR victories — including the 2022 U.S. Open — have been won with a Titleist driver.
The victory also makes it wins for Titleist driver players in five of the last seven weeks on the PGA TOUR:
Entering this week, the RBC Heritage champion ranked 16th on TOUR in SG: Off-the-Tee, picking up an average of +0.549 shots per round on the field. He ranks 3rd in Driving Accuracy (70%) and 5th in Distance from Edge of Fairway (20’0”).
The RBC Heritage winner finished on top again with a full set of Vokey Design wedges: SM10 48.10F, 52.12F (@ 52.5), 56.08M, 60.08M (@ 61.5) wedges.
He gained over 2.5 shots around the greens (+2.631, 12th) while scrambling at an 81% clip (22/27, T7).
The runner-up was also gaming Vokey Design gap, sand and lob wedges: SM8 50.12F, 56.14F, SM9 WedgeWorks 60T wedges. Both players have used at least three Vokey wedges in capturing each of their career PGA TOUR wins.
In total, 54% of the sand, gap and lob wedges in play this week were Vokey Design (129), more than all other competitors combined.
Titleist’s NEW GTS drivers continue to earn their way into the bags of players across the worldwide professional tours. In the four weeks since their debut at the Texas Children’s Houston Open, 47 different players have gamed a NEW GTS2, GTS3 or GTS4 driver in competition on the PGA TOUR.
The 2021 FedExCup champion and three-time U.S. Ryder Cupper gained +3.119 strokes on the field off the tee (6th) in his first week gaming his NEW GTS4 setup.
- Gaming a GT3 10.0 driver and GT3 15.0 and GT2 21.0 fairways, the winner of the JM Eagle LA Championship birdied the first extra hole to win for the fourth time so far this season (2 LPGA, 2 LET). She closed in 4-under 68 to make the playoff, playing her final eight holes in 5 under.
- The champion made the switch to her GT3 driver from a competitor’s model at the FM Championship last fall, finishing out the season with a pair of top-5's, including her best individual finish of 2025 at the Maybank Championship (T2).
- The week following the FM Championship, at the Walmart NW Arkansas Championship, she switched to her GT3 15.0 fairway from a competitor’s model. She moved into the GT2 21.0 fairway from her TSR2 the next week at the Hanwha LifePlus International Crown.
- The champion, a longtime Scotty Cameron mallet user, also gamed a Phantom 3 (center shaft) tour prototype putter. She moved to her current gamer last October at the BMW Ladies Championship before helping Team Australia to victory at the International Crown the very next week, her second start with the mallet.
WITB: Titleist Pro V1x golf ball; GT2 10.0 driver; GT3 19.0 hybrid; T250 4-iron; T100 5-9 irons; Vokey Design SM10 46.10F, 50.08F, 54.10S, NEW SM11 WedgeWorks 58L wedges; Scotty Cameron Phantom 9R tour prototype putter
- Titleist Brand Ambassador Dylan Menante went low on Sunday, cruising to a six-shot victory and his first Korn Ferry Tour title.
- Menante, gaming a setup that includes his Pro V1x golf ball, GT2 driver, T-Series irons, Vokey wedges and Scotty Cameron Phantom putter, carded a bogey-free, 9-under 63 on Sunday, the low round of the day by four shots.
- The 24-year-old was dialed throughout the bag, hitting 73% fairways (7th) and 71% GIR (12th). He got up-and-down for par at a 71% clip (4th) and led the field with an average of 1.57 putts per GIR.
- Stewart Cink (Pro V1) broke through for his first career senior major title with a decisive six-shot win. Cink made an eagle and seven birdies Sunday to post a 9-under 63, the low round of the day by three.
- The 52-year-old American shot rounds of 69-67-70-63 while going bogey-free the last 28 holes of the championship. It is his third win of the season.
- Cink led a group of nine Titleist golf ball players finishing inside the top 11 at the top of the leaderboard. Titleist was the overwhelming #1 ball this week at The Concession Golf Club with 109 (70%) players teeing up a Pro V1 or Pro V1x model.
- The Senior PGA Championship winner brought two Vokey Design wedges (NEW SM11 56, SM10 60) to the winner’s circle in Bradenton.
WITB: Titleist Pro V1x golf ball; NEW GTS3 9.0 driver; GT3 19.0 hybrid; T250 3-iron, T150 4-iron, 620 MB 5-9 irons; NEW Vokey Design SM11 46.10F, 52.08F, 58.08M wedges; Scotty Cameron Studio Style Newport 2+ tour prototype putter
- In his first start with the NEW GTS3 driver, Titleist Brand Ambassador Sangyeop Lee earned his second career KPGA title by two shots.
- Lee was among the group of 39 players who played a NEW GTS2, GTS3 or GTS4 driver in their first week of availability on the KPGA. Six of the top-10 finishers had Titleist drivers in the bag, including three NEW GTS3 models, as more than half the field gamed a Titleist driver (73/51%). Twenty-seven NEW GTS fairway metals also went right into play in the KPGA’s season opener.
- This week also marked the debut for NEW SM11 wedges on the KPGA, with a total of 249 SM11’s going right in the bag — more than all competitors’ wedges combined. Nine of the top-10 were in Vokey wedges, with Lee and eight of the nine in full sets of NEW SM11s. Sixty-four percent of all gap, sand and lob wedges in the field were Vokey Design.
- Nine of the top-10 finishers played a Titleist golf ball, with a total of 99 players (69%) teeing up a Pro V1 or Pro V1x.
WITB: Titleist Pro V1x Left Dash golf ball; GT2 9.0 driver; GT280 13.0 mini driver; T150 3-iron, T100 4-9 irons; NEW Vokey SM11 46.10F, 50.12F, 54.10S, WedgeWorks 60A+ wedges
- In the first event of the 2026-27 Sunshine Tour season, Titleist Brand Ambassador Samuel Simpson (Pro V1x Left Dash) closed with a steady 1-under 70 to win by three and secure his second career victory.
- The 23-year-old South African shot a career-best, bogey-free 9-under 62 in Round 3, birdieing seven of his last 10 holes to open up a sizeable lead heading into the final round.
- Titleist was the overwhelming #1 golf ball of choice at the Mediclinic Invitational, with 101 (83%) players teeing up a Pro V1 and Pro V1x golf ball, more than five times the nearest competitor with 20.
- Bowen Chai (Pro V1) posted a 3-under 69 Sunday to secure a one-shot win and his first career China Tour title.
- Nine of the top-10 finishers on the final leaderboard trusted a Titleist golf ball, as did 86% of the field overall this week in Zhejiang.
- Gaming her Pro V1x golf ball and three Vokey Design wedges, the winner of the KKTcup VANTELIN Ladies Open won her second JLPGA title in three starts.
- Agatha Laisne (Pro V1) prevailed from a marathon, five-hole playoff to win her second LET title of 2026.
- Laisne made three birdies and an eagle to close in 69 (4 under) on Sunday, posting 19 under for the week and forcing extra holes in South Africa.
- The 26-year-old Frenchwoman clinched the victory on the fifth extra hole with her third birdie of the playoff.