The Current Bag panel on the right side of the app shows what you currently play. It's tracked automatically from your chat conversations - no manual data entry required.
How it gets populated
When you describe your clubs in the chat (even briefly - "I play Titleist T200 irons and a TaylorMade Stealth driver"), StickFitter extracts each club and adds it to your bag.
You'll see them grouped by type:
Driver
Fairway Woods
Hybrids
Irons
Wedges
Putter
Golf Ball (if you mention one)
Each entry shows the manufacturer and model. If you mention set makeup ("4-PW irons"), that appears too.
The composition chart
At the top of the Current Bag panel is a small chart showing how your 14 clubs break down by category. It's a quick visual gut-check for common gapping issues - too many long irons, not enough wedges, gaps between your longest iron and shortest fairway wood. A good bag composition isn't one-size-fits-all, but extremes usually signal an opportunity.
Keeping it accurate
The bag updates each time you describe a club change in the chat. If you buy a new putter, just mention it - "I just picked up an Odyssey White Hot #7" - and the bag updates.
If something gets tracked incorrectly (wrong model, missing club), clarify in the chat: "Actually my driver is the Stealth 2, not the original Stealth." We update the bag accordingly.
Golf ball tracking
If you tell StickFitter what ball you play ("I usually play a Pro V1"), it'll show up as a "Golf Ball" entry at the bottom of the bag. This information also informs ball recommendations when you ask for a ball fitting.
Why this matters for fitting
Every fitting StickFitter does takes your current bag into account. If you're shopping for new irons, it knows what your current irons are and can recommend a meaningful upgrade. If you're asking about a hybrid, it sees the gap between your longest iron and shortest fairway wood. Your bag is context — and context sharpens every recommendation.