Putter Shopping Do’s and Don’ts
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Putter Shopping Do’s and Don’ts

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Putter Shopping Do’s and Don’ts

We golfers may be alike, but that doesn’t mean we’re the same.

For some of us, putter shopping is like going to the movies: it’s escapist entertainment. Drop us off at PGA TOUR Superstore or Golf Galaxy and the putter corral is like golfer daycare. We’ll happily pass the time trying every putter in the store until a responsible adult comes to pick us up.

We may not buy anything, but we will stay out of trouble.

For others, putter shopping is a blood sport.

We’re damn well going to stay until we find the best putter bargain possible, and we don’t care who gets hurt in the process.

Putter Shopping Do's and Don'ts

And then are those of us who keep trying to find that little piece of magic that turns us into the Boss of the Moss. We want to be one part Loren Roberts, one part Ben Crenshaw and equal parts Jack and Tiger when that charity scramble is on the line.

But putter shopping can also be a money pit surrounded by a minefield. For a club that gets used more than any other in the bag, so many of us forgo fitting and analytics and rely on far more subjective and far less reliable metrics.

As with any other club in your bag, the putter you use matters. And there’s more to it than “I gotta like the looks and feel.”

So today we’re going to look beyond the cliches and discuss the practical Do’s and Don’ts of putter shopping.

Putter shopping do's and don'ts

Do You Really Need A New Putter?

We golfers are pretty easily seduced. We’re Benjamin Braddock and any new putter is a potential Mrs. Robinson.

But before you go off half-baked, it’s a good idea to ask yourself if you really need a new putter, or just simply want a new putter. Either answer is fine with us, as long as you can sneak the funding past the Appropriations Committee.

But don’t decide you need a new putter after a bad round or two. The putters at the store can sense your desperation and will tell you anything and everything you want to hear. Look, even Tour pros have putting slumps that have nothing to do with the arrow and everything to do with the archer. Maybe your mechanics are a little messed up or maybe you’ve played a few rounds on unfamiliar greens. If you’ve had success with your gamer, it’s doubtful the damn thing has suddenly gone rogue on you.

Of course, there’s always Scottie Scheffler to consider. Nothing good happened when he switched from a Scotty Cameron Anser-style blade to a Logan Olson Anser-style blade. Scheffler then switched from the Logan Olson to a TaylorMade Spider Tour X at Bay Hill and has been residing in “the zone” ever since.  

There is something to be said for new, pure and untainted by three-jacks.

Do Do Your Research…

As with our recent guide on driver shopping, we think the best place to start is MyGolfSpy’s Most Wanted Putter Testing. No, it’s not the be-all and end-all, but it does give you a pretty complete rundown of what’s out there and how those putters performed in the hands of real golfers. 

It’s a place to start.

Putter shopping do's and don'ts

Don’t, however, go online and blindly buy whichever putter finished first overall. True, you might be the chosen one and it’ll work great for you. But it’s more likely you’ll wind up attached to another object by an inclined plane wrapped helically around an axis.

In other words: Screwed.

Do Try Everything…

This is where the responsible adult drops you off at your favorite retailer for golfer daycare. Have some fun and roll ‘em all. You’ll start to notice some putters fit you more comfortably than others. That’s almost always a function of length and lie angle. Some golfers can play very comfortably with a standard 34- or 35-inch putter, while others may settle in more comfortably around a 33- or even a 30-inch model. It’s not so much your height as it is your posture and how you manage to get your eyes directly over the ball. As for lie, you’ll know a putter is too upright if the toe is off the ground when you take your stance.

And the shorter the putter, the more weight you’ll need in the head to make the putter feel balanced and to ensure a smooth stroke.

Some of you may be peculiar enough to fit into an armlock, a counterbalanced or even a broomstick putter. None of them is a cure-all but you’ll never know if it’ll help you unless you give it a whirl.

This is where a good putter fitting can help. It could be through an app like iPING, it can be high-tech with a SAM PuttLab or a Quintic Ball Roll setup or it can be au naturel with a guy who knows what he’s looking at. Either way, you’ll learn whether you have a strong arc, a slight arc or a straight-through stroke.

Once you figure that out, you can start looking at different levels of toe hang and hosel transitions.

Don’t Be Shallow Hal

That means don’t get hung up on looks.

If I had a dollar for every time someone said, “Hey, I gotta like the looks or I can’t play with it,” I’d have many, many dollars. We get it: we like sexy putters. We like clean lines and we like fine milling. But being a $400 work of art doesn’t necessarily mean it’s the right putter for you. Take this one to the bank: there’s a reason why there are so many sweet-looking putters in the used section at your local golf shop.

Conversely, that doesn’t mean the sexiest beast in the putter corral isn’t right for you. It’s just that a putter’s looks shouldn’t be your leading, first or only metric.

There may be a wonderful putter out there that’s a little frumpy but has a great personality. It just might be your soulmate. Do give it a chance. You may not love the looks right off but, once you start holing some bombs, it’ll start looking downright gorgeous.

Do Be Open To Small Brands

Odyssey, TaylorMade, PING and Scotty can cover you with any style of putter imaginable. You’ll no doubt find something among those four that will work for you.

T-Squared putters

But that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t consider smaller brands while putter shopping. Evnroll, Bettinardi, Edel, Mati, newcomer T-Squared and others offer excellent performers. And while OEMs like Wilson, Cleveland, COBRA and Mizuno may not immediately ring your putting bell, don’t dismiss them. They perform well and can be a great value. Even store brands like Tommy Armour can git ‘er done for you.

Then there’s the phenomenon that is L.A.B. Yeah, they may look funky, but if you start with the “I’ll never put that ugly-ass putter in my bag” thing, we’re just going to make you go back and re-read the Shallow Hal section above.

Don’t Make Any Snap Decisions

Raise your hand if you’ve ever made an impulse putter buy. That’s when you try a putter at the store, sink a bunch in a row, lose all your willpower and decision-making capabilities and buy the sunuvabitch.

If that’s worked out for you, then what are you reading this article for?

(Other than for the pristine prose and awesome alliteration, I mean.)

Have you ever had a great range session before a round and then couldn’t hit a lake if you jumped out of a boat once on the course? A snap-decision putter buy is a lot like that.

Be strong. Resist temptation and walk away. It’s something even we hardened, cynical golf writers wrestle with.

Do Consider A Putter Fitting

You’re most likely going to use your putter 30 to 40 times per round. If you’d like it to be closer to 30, a putter fitting is a good idea. As we said, it could be as simple as using iPING or as high-tech as using a Quintic or SamLab machine.

You’ll learn about tempo, stroke stability and ball roll. And that data will help determine head shape, weighting, length, lie and loft. Yes, loft matters, depending on whether you forward press and, if you do, how much.

Even the shaft and grip matter.

Don’t discount the impact head shape and alignment aids can have on how well you can square up a putter. They’re not all the same. Years ago, I was fitted into a mini-mallet with a curved backside. This was an Edel fitting, using a laser reflecting off a mirror on the face of the putter to determine your actual aim. During the fitting, I asked to try a Wilson 8802. The fitter said, based on the fitting, there’s no way I should be able to square up a blade like that but I was able to do it five or six times in a row. The fitter couldn’t understand it until David Edel himself explained it.

“Both putters are curved on the back end. You’re obviously a guy who likes a nice, rounded backside.”

Don’t write letters, people. It really did happen.

Do’s and Don’ts: Some Parting Thoughts

So what makes a putter the right putter for you? With every other club in the bag, the flight of the ball tells all. But with a putter, it’s a little more subtle. Sure, rolling the ball into the hole is the ultimate judge but, as with the other 13 clubs, the result is the sum total of the ingredients.

Having the appropriate toe balance allows you to square up the face more easily at impact. And a square face means the ball will roll on the line you choose.

The proper length and loft will allow you to set up comfortably, get your eyes over the ball and make a consistent stroke. The proper loft will make sure the ball skids less and starts rolling sooner, making its trip to the hole more consistent.

The right head shape and alignment lines make it easier to aim the putter easily and accurately, without having to make compensations that can complicate your stroke.

The right weighting helps with stability and, just as importantly, distance control.

Let’s Wrap This Baby Up

We’ve thrown a lot of putter shopping tips at you today so let’s get down to some actionable bullet points.

  • Do you need or new putter or do you just want one? (Either is OK. After all, it’s your money)
  • Do do your research but don’t buy something because we or anyone else says it’s a great putter. We’re not playing it. You are.
  • Do try everything: blade, mallet, armlock, counterbalanced, broomstick and even something crazy-looking like a L.A.B.
  • Don’t focus on just the big names. Smaller brands can deliver big performance.
  • Do consider value putter lines from OEMs such as Wilson, Cleveland or COBRA. Even Tommy Armour, DICK’s store brand, could be the one.
  • Don’t rush to judgment. Holing a few in the putter corral feels good but it might not translate to the real world.
  • Do make sure the length, loft, lie, shaft and grip are right for you.
  • And for all that, you might want to invest in a good putter fitting.

And in the end, may the putts you take be equal to the putts you make.

Wouldn’t it be nice?

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John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

John is an aging, yet avid golfer, writer, 6-point-something handicapper living back home in New England after a 22-year exile in Minnesota. He loves telling stories, writing about golf and golf travel, and enjoys classic golf equipment. “The only thing a golfer needs is more daylight.” - BenHogan

John Barba

John Barba

John Barba





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      Peejer

      2 weeks ago

      I’ve been shopping for a face-balanced putter, after realizing my toe-hang EVNROLL ER7 wasn’t quite right for my stroke. I’ve probably spent at least 3 hours at the golf stores trying the various models, trying to find ‘the one’. I often tell my friends, I have a whole garage full of clubs that work great at the store. So, taking my time (which annoys the salespeople) and trying to find a good solution for me.
      One thing that is pretty annoying is all the color on the newer putters, either black or white, on the putters now. The scrapes and dings show up so much now, it really makes them look beat-up. Give me the old fashion metal look!

      Reply

      GOLFTATO

      2 weeks ago

      Read your article with a grin plastered on my face. For all your “mad putter” points you made, have we ever met? Over the last 40 years I’ve experimented with all the putting variables and have a different putter for each one of them. My basement inventory includes my favorite flat stick even though I’ll freely switch sticks as the mood changes. I remember all my fantastic putts (everyone remembers theirs), the course and the specific putter at the time. As a matter of fact, its not unlike my dating experiences! However, with all their measurable parameters and equipment, I do wonder if different fitters would produce the same results or putters?

      Reply

      Garrett D

      2 weeks ago

      Do: buy a LAB
      Don’t: waste your time with anything else

      Reply

      TenBuck

      2 weeks ago

      I like the feel of a lighter putter but I don’t like the heavy feel of a weighted putter. I have been a long neck proponent for the longest time almost since I started playing golf. Unfortunately, there are very few long neck putters around unless you special order or happen to find one on the Bay. My putter weight in at 340 grams and it feels just right. Good article, and I went to a fitter and really of all of the putters that I’ve tried out, none felt as comfortable. So I guess I’ll stick with my 27 yo putter and call it a day.

      Reply

      Tom S

      2 weeks ago

      I use a putter I bought from GolfWorks for $89. It works fine. Don’t know why I need to spend $350.

      Reply

      BH

      2 weeks ago

      “Rounded backside”…. giggity. Maybe that’s why I like my old B60’s?

      Reply

      Brad Watson

      2 weeks ago

      Great article (very well written with great mix of information, ideas and entertainment). Timely too, as I was about to pull the trigger on MYGOLFSPY’s top rated mallet putter – without ever actually gripping one. Impulse buys are why I own 50+ putters. I do believe there is value in putter fitting – if nothing else just to validate stroke type (high arc, slight arc, etc.) and which putters might be better fits with the appropriate level of toe flow. This would also speak to mallet versus blade – which has seemingly paid dividends for Scottie Scheffler.

      Reply

      RC

      2 weeks ago

      Guilty as charged, and once you’ve purchased an expensive piece of equipment that doesn’t feel right anymore, you’re kind of stuck, but you can “fix” the problem (if you erred on the side of too long), by cutting to the proper length and bending to the proper lie for you. Even the size grip matters because it influences the feel, and can also be fixed. I have experimented (self fitted) with a lot of variations.

      If you bought a blade and found out mallets feel better to you, or if you bought a center shafted but find that a different hosel feels/performs better for you, you’re screwed – and real putting doesn’t translate to indoor putting…at all, so the best advice I can offer is to take advantage of “90 Day Playability” offers and try a bunch of different “styles”, then once you find the style you like, dial in the length, lie, and grip.

      Reply

      Donald Averill

      2 weeks ago

      Your friends had a bad fitting experience because the fitter was trying to just trying to sell them a putter and did not have the knowledge to understand and address their shortcomings of putting mechanics first. I and 5 members of my club have experienced a tremendous improvement in our putting results because Kevin Arabejo from Club Champion in Newport Beach and formerly from Edel addressed our putting shortcomings during the fitting process. And it had nothing do with our stroke mechanics initially, it addressed our setups first to allow each of us to simplify our putting stroke as an athletic and natural stroke. He was able to put us each in a setup, stroke, and aiming to remove any variables except green reading and lag putting distance which are dependent on addressing by practice and a lessons from a professional instructor. Every one of us has seen dramatic improvements in our results.

      Reply

      Marc

      2 weeks ago

      Putter fitting…is there a bigger waste of time and money

      2 of my friends spared no expense and did extensive putter fittings with a nationally renowned fitting outfit. They both putt exactly the same with the new putter as their old ones and one of them has even gone back to their old non-fitted gamer

      Reply

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