Harris English hadn't won on the PGA Tour since 2021. After battling the conditions at a tough Torrey Pines, and outlasting Sam Stevens and Andrew Novak among others, English ended that drought with a one-stroke victory at the Farmers Insurance Open.

English is a PING staffer and plays PING completely throughout his bag, but is unique in that he has just one current line of clubs in his bag in addition to a putter that's 14-years old!

All WITB information is courtesy of GolfWRX.

Driver: PING G430 LST (10.5 degrees)

Shaft: Fujikura Ventus TR Blue 6 X

Starting at the top of English's bag where he games the now prior generation PING G430 LST. He plays it with a 10.5 degree head and Ventus TR Blue 6 X shaft in it. With some incredibly windy weather and a tough course to add to that, hitting it off the tee was a challenge for all players. English actually lost strokes to the field Off the Tee, finishing 49th among all players as he lost 0.745 strokes overall. English isn't a bomber by any means, and his 300.3 yard average off the tee, which was the 43rd longest average drive, follows suit. He struggled with his accuracy off the tee though too, finiding just 23 of 56 fairways, which considering he won the tournament, is actually pretty incredible.

3-wood: PING G400 (14.5 degrees)

Shaft: Fujikura Atmos Tour Spec Blue 7 X

Moving to his fairway wood, where English goes back to the PING G400 for his 14.5 degree 3-wood. He plays this 2017 release with a Fujikura Atmos Tour Spec Blue 7 X Shaft in it. PING G400 line is somewhat iconic, and to see it still being played by a PGA Tour Pro should be no surprise considering how successful this club was. 

Irons: PING G410 Crossover (3), PING Blueprint T (4-9)

Shafts: Fujikura Atmos HB Tour Spec Black 9 X (3), True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 (4-9)

For his irons, English combos a PING G430 Crossover Utility Iron with a set of PING Blueprint T Irons. Released in 2019, the PING G410 Crossover featured a high-density tungsten 30g weight in the toe, which was a 50 percent increase from its PING G400 predecessor. It's also a smaller clubhead than than G400 giving it a more iron-like design. He then blends that with the latest PING Blueprint T Irons, which are a fully forged, muscle back designed for maximum precision and workability. While English may have struggled off the tee, he made up for it with his approach game. He hit 45 of 72 greens in regulation, which was 28th best, but was putting the ball in spots he could score from, or escape with par. Overall he gained 3.956 strokes on the field on his approach to green, which was the 4th best performance of the week.

Wedges: PING Glide 4.0 (46-S12, 52-S12, 56 S-12), PING Glide Forged (60)

Shafts: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue X100 (46), True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 (52-60)

English stays true to playing previous generation clubs with his wedges, gaming three different PING Glide 4.0's and comboing those with a 60-degree PING Glide Forged. The Glide 4.0's came out in 2022, two years prior to their new s159 lineup, while the Glide Forged was released back in 2018! His wedges shined brightest around the green. English led the field in scrambling, converting 22 of his 27 up-and-down opportunities. Limiting himself to just 7 bogeys for the tournament was pivotal in his win, considering the conditions during the tournament and the 8-under winning score, meaning scoring opportunities were not there in bunches. Overall, he gained 0.941 strokes on the field around the green, which ranked 26th best.

The star of the show for English comes with the oldest club in his bag no less. English continues to roll the PING Scottsdale HoHum, which was released 14-years ago. It goes to show you that once you find a putter that works, there's no need to switch things up. While English wasn't making bombs of putts all week, with his 76 feet of putts made ranking 29th, nor being super efficient on the green, with his 1.78 putts per GIR ranking 28th, he minimized damage, which was the name of the game this week. That performance allowed him to gain 6.042 strokes on the field from the putting surface, which ranked 3rd overall, and was one of the key performances that led to English getting back into the win colum for the first time since 2021.