Table of Contents
- A historic afternoon at Aronimink
- The two-glove approach behind a major champion
- Why Aaron Rai trusts MacWet
- The technology behind the gloves
- Choosing the right MacWet glove
- Heritage, humility, and the long road to a major
- What lies ahead for Aaron Rai
- FAQs
A historic afternoon at Aronimink
When Aaron Rai stood over a 68-foot putt on the par-three 17th at Aronimink Golf Club on Sunday evening, the Pennsylvania sun was already washing the course in the low, golden light that often marks the closing acts of a major championship. He held a two-shot lead. No one in contention had birdied the hole all day. The 141st-best putter on Tour over the previous twelve months was not expected to change that.
He did.
The ball tracked, slowed, and dropped. Aronimink erupted. By the time Rai had walked to the 18th tee, the chant had begun. "That’s a PGA champion right there," shouted one voice from the gallery. Within the hour, the 31-year-old from Wolverhampton had signed for a closing five under 65, finished the week on nine under par, and become the first Englishman to win the PGA Championship since Jim Barnes in 1919.
He had also done so wearing two MacWet golf gloves, just as he has since he was eight years old.
The two-glove approach behind a major champion
Rai’s signature has long been the pair of black gloves he pulls on before every full shot. In a sport where convention dictates a single glove on the lead hand, removed for putting and often for short pitches, his preference for two has been a source of curiosity for spectators and commentators alike.
For Rai, it is not a quirk. It is a foundation. He has explained the origin many times, most recently in conversation with Golf Monthly.
"It started when I was 8 years old. I just happened to be given these two gloves, the guy who actually makes them sent a pair over, and I got into the habit of wearing them. Then, a few weeks down the line, my dad forgot to put the two gloves in the bag so I had to play with one. It was terrible. I couldn’t play, I couldn’t feel the grip, so I’ve always stuck with the two gloves ever since."
He does make exceptions. Like most professionals, Rai removes both gloves on the greens to feel the speed of the putter. For bunker shots, he typically wears just one. Everywhere else, from tee to fairway to rough to pine straw, the pair remains in place.
Why Aaron Rai trusts MacWet
Rai is a long-standing ambassador for MacWet, the British brand whose Aquatec® micro-fibre gloves were originally developed for equestrian sport before finding a natural home in golf. The technology was designed to do something most golf gloves cannot. Hold a firm grip in the presence of moisture rather than slip away from it.
Aronimink in mid-May offered the full menu of conditions a major can throw at a player. Humid mornings, warm afternoons, and the kind of perspiration that turns a traditional leather glove from an asset into a hazard. Rai’s MacWets did exactly what they were built to do.
This is not a new story for him. His maiden DP World Tour win at the 2018 Hong Kong Open came in tropical humidity. His Scottish Open victory in October 2020 came during the lash of Storm Alex at The Renaissance Club. His maiden PGA Tour win at the 2024 Wyndham Championship came in the heavy, sweat-soaked air of North Carolina in August. Now a major has been added to the list, and the gloves have been there for every one of them.

The technology behind the gloves
MacWet’s Aquatec® fabric is engineered from yarn roughly 3,000 times finer than a human hair. When the material meets moisture, whether from rain, perspiration or humidity, its grip improves rather than deteriorates. Touch and feel are retained, which matters enormously to a player like Rai who relies on a low ball flight, precise shaping, and an intimate sense of the clubhead through impact.
It is worth pausing on that final point. Rai is one of the seven shortest players on the PGA Tour off the tee. He has never relied on distance. Accuracy is his currency, and on Sunday at Aronimink he hit every fairway on the back nine. That kind of precision asks a great deal of the connection between hand and grip, which is precisely the connection a MacWet glove is built to preserve.
Choosing the right MacWet glove
Rai changes models depending on conditions, and the MacWet range is built around exactly that decision.
In warmer, drier weather, he reaches for the MacWet Original Micromesh, a lightweight glove with mesh panels for breathability and a soft Aquatec® palm for grip. It is the model he tends to favour for American summer events.
When the temperature drops or the rain arrives, as it so often does at Open Championships, Scottish Opens and European autumn fixtures, Rai switches to the MacWet Winter Climatec. The Climatec adds thermal insulation without compromising the grip technology that defines the brand.
Both come as a pair. Both arrive ready to give the club golfer something close to the same advantage a major champion now relies upon.
Heritage, humility, and the long road to a major
Rai’s idiosyncrasies do not end with his gloves. He plays a TaylorMade M6 driver from 2019. He tees the ball up with the orange plastic castle tee a weekend twenty-handicapper might recognise. The irons in his bag are covered with neoprene head covers, a habit usually associated with juniors rather than world-class professionals.
The reason for the head covers is among the most affecting stories in golf at the moment. Rai’s father, who emigrated to England from India, gave up his job when his son was young to support his career. His mother emigrated to England from Kenya. Equipment was bought at the limit of what the family could afford, and his father would clean every groove of every iron after each practice session with a pin and baby oil. The head covers were added to protect what had been hard won.
"It started from the age of 4 years old, when my dad used to pay for my equipment. He paid for my membership, paid for my entry fees. It wasn’t money that we really had, to be honest, but he’d always buy me the best clubs. To protect the golf clubs, he thought it would be good to put iron covers on them and I’ve pretty much had iron covers on all my sets ever since, just to kind of appreciate the value of what I have."
It is a habit that explains a great deal about the character of the man who outlasted Rory McIlroy, Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm, Ludvig Åberg and Xander Schauffele on Sunday. As McIlroy himself put it after the round, "You won’t find one person on the property who’s not happy for him."

What lies ahead for Aaron Rai
Rai’s victory carries a five-year exemption on the PGA Tour, five years of invitations to the Masters, the US Open and the Open Championship, and a lifetime welcome back to the PGA Championship. His world ranking rises from 44th to 15th. He becomes only the second major champion of Indian heritage in the men’s game, alongside two-time PGA winner Vijay Singh.
The Wanamaker Trophy now belongs to him until next May. The two black gloves go with him everywhere.
For golfers watching from home, the message is unmistakable. The grip is the single point of contact between player and club. It is worth investing in.
FAQsWhy does Aaron Rai wear two golf gloves? Aaron Rai began wearing two golf gloves at the age of eight after being sent a pair by their maker. He continued the habit because wearing gloves on both hands gave him a stronger, more consistent connection to the club. When his father once forgot to pack the pair, Rai found playing with a single glove unworkable, and the two-glove approach has been a fixture of his game ever since. He now wears MacWet gloves on every full swing, removing them on the green and using a single glove for bunker shots. What gloves did Aaron Rai wear when he won the PGA Championship? Aaron Rai wore MacWet gloves throughout his victory at the 2026 PGA Championship at Aronimink Golf Club. MacWet is the British glove brand he has been associated with as an ambassador for many years. The brand’s patented Aquatec® micro-fibre technology is designed to maintain grip in heat, humidity and rain, all of which featured during the championship week in Pennsylvania. What is the technology behind MacWet golf gloves? MacWet golf gloves use a patented Aquatec® micro-fibre fabric, engineered from yarn that is roughly 3,000 times finer than a human hair. The fabric was originally developed for equestrian sport and reacts to moisture by improving its grip rather than losing it. This makes the gloves equally suited to humid summer rounds, perspiration in warm weather, and rain in colder climates. Crucially, they retain touch and feel, which is important for golfers who rely on precision rather than power. Why does Aaron Rai use iron covers on his clubs? Aaron Rai has used neoprene iron covers since he was four years old. His father, who paid for his equipment, memberships and tournament entries during a financially modest upbringing in Wolverhampton, would clean every groove of his irons after practice with a pin and baby oil. The head covers were added to protect the clubs the family had sacrificed to afford. Rai keeps them on to this day as a reminder of where he came from and as a mark of respect for what he has. How significant is Aaron Rai’s PGA Championship win for English golf? Aaron Rai is the first Englishman to win the PGA Championship since Jim Barnes in 1919, a gap of more than a century. Barnes won the first two stagings of the championship, in 1916 and 1919, both in match-play format. Rai’s victory at Aronimink also continued a remarkable run for European golf in 2026, following Rory McIlroy’s win at the Masters in April. It is the first time European golfers have won the first two majors of a season in the modern era. |