Most Wanted Mallet Putter 2015
Yesterday you saw the big list of putters we evaluated in our 2015 Most Wanted Mallet Putter Test.
Today we show you how they performed. As with all MyGolfSpy testing, logos and name means nothing. Performance is everything. And our new scoring system is the most accurate way to test performance regarding player putter efficiency.
You don’t likely have the time to test twenty-eight putters, but we do. Our 2015 Most Wanted tests will point you toward the best putters in the marketplace. We’re not talking about the most popular putters, we’re talking about the putters that actually perform.
How We Test
Strokes Gained (developed initially by Professor Mark Broadie of Columbia Business School) putting has been approved by the industry and golfers as the most accurate and important way to present player putter efficiency. This statistic simply measures the average number of putts a player takes over 18 holes.
The final Strokes Gained 18 number you see is the number of strokes you can expect to drop off your score for a 18 hole round of golf. As we mentioned yesterday, MyGolfSpy scoring is based upon the Strokes Gained putting statistic. Like years previous, our testers putted from 5, 10, and 20 foot distances, but rather than measuring radial accuracy, this year we are looking at strokes gained vs. the average.
For more details about the test itself, visit our How We Test page.
The Results
The Most Wanted Mallet Putter will be the one that allows you to put lower numbers on your scorecard. That’s what matters, and that is why this system of assessment was adopted.
*Hover over any column title in the dynamic chart below to enable sort features. If the chart doesn’t load, please click here for a static version.
The Top 10
All of the putters placing in the Most Wanted Top 10 produced positive strokes gained values, ranging from the PING Cadence Ketsch TR Heavy’s 1.8 to the Cleveland Classic 2i’s 0.43. What that means to you is that all of these putters should help you to make more putts.
PING Cadence TR Ketsch Heavy
MLA Golf Tour Classic
Bputters Panther
Kronos Mandala
Scotty Cameron Futura X5
Odyssey Works Versa 2-Ball Fang
PING Cadence TR Rustler Standard
Edel Golf E1
Bellum Winmore NOLA
Cleveland Classic 2i
The Rest of the Field
Though the first few putters in this section still provided our testers with a strokes gained advantage, here is where we see the putters that provided average performance, or actually performed below average compared to the cohort. Remember, a negative strokes gained value actually means that you are giving strokes back, causing your score to go up!
Support Unbiased Club Testing:
We’re not lying when we say that we refuse to take advertising from the biggest names in golf. We truly believe it’s the only way to remain above the influence, publish real results based on real data, and continue to provide honest opinion and commentary about what’s happening inside the golf equipment industry.
If you found this report useful, meaningful, or just interesting, please consider making a donation to help support MyGolfSpy’s independence.
We accept credit cards through PayPal. A PayPal account is not required in order to donate. [donation-can goal_id=’fund-the-revolution’ style_id=’mgs’ show_progress=false show_description=false show_donations=false show_title=false title=”]
Casey
9 years ago
In the preview picture showing all 28 putters what is the one second from the left in the top line?
It has no sight lines? I cannot seem to find it in the list at all….am I losing my mind?
Please help I really want to find it.
Dave Wolfe
9 years ago
That’s the Edel E1.