Putting is normally a key component to success on the PGA Tour. Given that, it seems logical to take a look at every putter used to win a tour event over the course of the season. As the 2024 season kicks off this month with 38 regular-season and FedEx Cup Playoff events, let’s take a Read more…
Obviously, it’s a lot different for average golfers, whose livelihood doesn’t depend on what putter is in their bags. But there are things they can do to make the process of changing more effective, starting with getting custom fit.
Ping is readying the final release in its Ping Slam collection, the PLD Limited Anser, commemorating Seve Ballesteros’ 1988 triumph at Royal Lytham & St Annes.
Ping expands its PLD Milled line-up of putters to include two new Anser-style blades and a traditional heel-and-toe ballasted mallet. The putters are all milled from forged 303 stainless steel.
Angela Aulenti, head professional and club fitter at Sterling Farms Golf Course in Stamford, Connecticut, says if you’re playing with a hand-me-down putter, you’re making a big mistake.
The new Titleist Scotty Cameron Super Select putters maintain a fresh approach to classic shapes with renewed efforts to add forgiveness by distributing more weight to the heel and toe.
TaylorMade expands its Spider line-up to include a new high-stability mallet, the GTx, and the GT Max, an oversize mallet with adjustable weights on its parallel arms that change the centre of gravity’s distance from the face to make it feel, swing and perform like multiple putters in one.
TaylorMade’s TP line of putters gets an update with five head shafts (and seven hosel options) featuring the company’s hallmark Hydro Blast finish.
Our editors met with new companies and heard about innovations from brands across the industry all week at the 2020 PGA Merchandise Show in Orlando, Florida. Here are some of the coolest products we saw, which you’ll likely continue to
hear more and more about as the year progresses.