Golf Equipment

Ogio Funday Stand Bag Review

Ogio Funday Stand Bag review

It’s said that the Sunday bag got its name because, when caddies didn’t work on a Sunday, players would have to carry their bags and wanted them as lightweight as possible. It is a bag designed to carry the bare essentials only. Half a set of clubs at most, some tees, some balls and a water bottle. They’re pretty much the same as the best pencil bags, and offer an ideal carrying solution for golfers who only play half a set or want to sneak out for a relaxed evening nine holes of golf. Ogio’s new Sunday bag – playfully named Funday – has hit that brief but with clever new additions that add even more practicality.

For Funday, Ogio has added two modular pockets that allow you to customise your storage needs. A full-length Velcro strip along the side of the bag allows you to add and take away the modular water bottle and accessories pocket and reattach it to any part of that Velcro strip you’d like. Don’t need to carry a waterproof with you? Take off the accessories pocket. Don’t need a water bottle for this round? Take that off, too. You can then add and rearrange these modular pockets to suit whatever needs for storage you have ahead of your round. I love this idea, and it has been executed perfectly by the team at Ogio. It makes the Sunday bag that little more practical when you need it, or as bare bones as possible when you just need a handful of clubs and balls.

The modular water bottle holder can be moved anywhere up the side of the bag.

(Image credit: Future)

The pockets that are built into the bag include a front pocket for balls and tees, which has a stretchy band to store tees and pencils in the front, a netted water bottle pocket (though I used this for a rangefinder), and a Velcro patch to which you can attach your glove. This is all you’ll really need in the majority, but it’s great to have those modular pockets as and when you need them. I used the bag to walk around Sunningdale Heath, but have also used it regularly at the driving range when I want to use a handful of clubs – it’s a surprisingly versatile bag for regular golfers.

Some Sunday bags I’ve tried have often sacrificed comfort in the strap and hip pad in order to save weight, but Ogio has managed to keep the bag incredibly lightweight (just 3lbs) while still making sure that the strap and hip pads offer the sort of comfort you’d expect from the best stand bags. The moulded shoulder and hip pads are brilliant and offer that extra bit of…

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