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This Tester Gained 22 Yards With A Hybrid And Still Shouldn’t Put It In The Bag

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Testing new golf equipment often starts with one question: How much farther does it go?

That’s fair. For some golfers, more carry is exactly what they need. But with hybrids, distance alone can be misleading. A hybrid has to fill a yardage gap but it must keep the ball playable.

Our 2026 hybrid test gave us a perfect example.

One golfer in the test had nearly a 30-yard carry gap between the shortest and longest hybrids he hit. His longest hybrid also carried 21.6 yards farther than the hybrid that produced his best overall result.

That sounds like an easy win for the longer club. The rest of the data said otherwise.

The longer hybrid was not the better hybrid

For this golfer, the TaylorMade Qi4D was the longest hybrid he hit. It carried 215.54 yards and finished at 231.45 yards total.

The TaylorMade Qi4D Max was his best-performing hybrid when you look at its combination of Strokes Gained, playable shots, green in regulation percentage and more. It carried 193.95 yards and finished at 205.51 yards total.

That means the better-performing club was 21.59 yards shorter in carry.

MetricLongest Hybrid: TaylorMade Qi4DBest-Performing Hybrid: TaylorMade Qi4D Max
Carry215.54193.95
Total231.45205.51
Strokes Gained0.20580.5379
Playable Shots60.0%100.0%
GIR13.3%35.7%
Proximity71.529.1
Shot Area4,2731,226

A 21.6-yard gain with a hybrid is not something you ignore. If the rest of the numbers are close, you’d probably be smart to take the extra distance.

But these numbers were not close.

The shorter hybrid produced 100 percent playable shots. The longer one produced 60 percent. The shorter hybrid almost tripled his GIR percentage, going from 13.3 percent to 35.7 percent. It also finished 42.4 yards closer to the hole on average. That’s almost another wedge shot!

The shot area is also telling. It’s almost a quarter of the size for the TaylorMade Qi4D Max.

This was not a one-player issue

If we move away from looking at individual clubs for a second and look at how golfers performed using their longest hybrid in testing, it rarely led them to the best hybrid. Four out of 20 testers had the best performance from their longest hybrid.

For the other 16 golfers, the hybrid that carried the farthest was not the one that produced their best overall result.

This doesn’t mean that distance is bad. Nor does it mean that we thought the longest would always be the best.

The point is that if you’re testing hybrids or going for a fitting and you’re hung up on distance, let it go. Hybrids are gap fillers between your irons and your fairway woods.

The goal is to fill a gap, not chase distance.

Whatever loft, club, shaft combination it takes to help you fill the gap is what you should have in play.

Here’s a complete look at our complete hybrid testing to give you a starting place when you test on your own: Best Hybrids of 2026.

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