spotted – Ultra Golfing https://ultragolfing.com Golf news & updates Thu, 14 May 2026 12:42:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://ultragolfing.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/cropped-UG_Favicon-32x32.png spotted – Ultra Golfing https://ultragolfing.com 32 32 New TaylorMade Spider putters spotted at Zurich Classic of New Orleans https://ultragolfing.com/new-taylormade-spider-putters-spotted-at-zurich-classic-of-new-orleans/ https://ultragolfing.com/new-taylormade-spider-putters-spotted-at-zurich-classic-of-new-orleans/#respond Thu, 14 May 2026 12:42:32 +0000 https://ultragolfing.com/new-taylormade-spider-putters-spotted-at-zurich-classic-of-new-orleans/


The yet-to-be-released Spider family features two new heads and a new finish.

AVONDALE, La — Rory McIlroy recently used a TaylorMade Spider Tour X putter to win his second Masters Tournament, and while the putter features the same shape and insert found in the putters you will find at your local pro shop, McIlroy’s is a little different. By request, TaylorMade took a Spider Tour X, sand blasted it, then heated it to create a unique brown, almost rusty look. As of now, McIlroy is the only one who plays a Spider with this unique finish.

However, that might be changing soon because TaylorMade has created a new family of Spider putters and brought them to the PGA Tour. After quietly debuting last week at the RBC Heritage, four different TaylorMade Spider putters were spotted Monday at TPC Louisiana that each featured a dark, PVD finish that is very similar to McIlroy’s.

TaylorMade is mum on official details about the putter, like what the new family is called, when they will be released and how much each putter will cost, but TaylorMade did confirm with Golfweek that the Spider Tour and Spider Tour X models will be be unchanged from the current models, aside from the new finish.

The Spider Tour F and the Spider Tour V are new head shapes, though Collin Morikawa used a prototype version of the Spider Tour F last season at the Rocket Mortgage Classic in Detroit. The Spider Tour V is similar in shape to a model that was released in 2023.

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Unreleased L.A.B. Golf blade putters spotted at Bay Hill https://ultragolfing.com/unreleased-l-a-b-golf-blade-putters-spotted-at-bay-hill/ https://ultragolfing.com/unreleased-l-a-b-golf-blade-putters-spotted-at-bay-hill/#respond Thu, 12 Mar 2026 14:19:41 +0000 https://ultragolfing.com/unreleased-l-a-b-golf-blade-putters-spotted-at-bay-hill/


Traditional blade shapes with 303 stainless steel and lie-angle balance hint at a new direction for L.A.B. Golf.

ORLANDO, Florida — There’s something ironic about spotting yet-to-be-released L.A.B. Golf blade-style putters in the practice area ahead of the 2026 Arnold Palmer Invitational. The Oregon-based company built its reputation on shapes that help golfers get more consistent results on the greens but look, to some, like potato mashers on a stick. L.A.B. has never shied away from unconventional designs.

The Link 2.1 and Link 2.2 that were leaning against a L.A.B. Golf bag next to the practice green at Bay Hill Club & Lodge on Tuesday looked refined, traditional and, dare we say, conventional while still retaining the company’s signature lie-angle balance technology.

The Link 2.1 resembles a traditional heel-toe weighted blade. It has a dark finish, clean shoulders and a compact profile. Like the OZ.1i HS, it is heel-shafted and features a riser that extends up from the head and connects to the shaft. L.A.B. debuted the riser system last summer in the OZ.1 HS series. It allows the company to offer heel-shaft putters with different lie angles while maintaining lie-angle balance. The riser progresses from being short on flatter lie-angle putters to to higher for more-upright putters.

Eight circular stainless steel weights are positioned in the Link 2.1’s sole, but what’s stamped on one of the back bumpers is particularly noteworthy. The 303 SS marking indicates the head is milled from 303 stainless steel, a material long favored by premium putter makers for its feel and machinability. Currently, L.A.B. putters are made from milled aluminum, and only two models, the OZ.1i and DF3i, feature stainless steel face inserts to provide the crisp feel and sound many players prefer.

The Link 2.2 appears to take that same fundamental shape and stretch it. The back flange is noticeably wider, which likely shifts more mass rearward and toward the perimeter to increase forgiveness. It still looks like a blade, but one that leans closer to the stability spectrum L.A.B. players have come to expect.

While the use of 303 stainless steel will be welcomed by many golfers, the bigger story may be what these shapes represent.

L.A.B. has built its identity around lie-angle balance, and that philosophy is not going anywhere. The design helps keep the putter face square to the arc of a player’s stroke on the backswing, through impact and into the follow-through. Models such as the DF 2.1 and DF 3 pushed the boundaries of geometry in pursuit of torque resistance. More recently, the OZ.1 introduced a more traditional look. Now, the Link 2.1 and Link 2.2 appear to answer a different question: What if you could get lie-angle balance in a package that looks familiar at address?

For many golfers, particularly those who grew up on blade putters, visual comfort matters. The Anser-style profile has endured for decades because it frames the ball cleanly and sits square without distraction. If L.A.B. can integrate its zero-torque principles into a traditional 303 stainless steel blade, it could open the door to players who admire the technology but have hesitated because of the shapes.

The 303 stainless steel construction is also significant. Unlike the DF3i or OZ.1i, which incorporate face inserts to fine-tune feel and sound, a fully milled 303 head would not require an insert. The material itself typically produces a softer, more responsive impact sensation than aluminum or multi-material constructions. For purists who prefer a single-piece milled head, that detail matters.

These putters have not been officially announced, and specifications, pricing and release timing remain unknown. But visually, they suggest refinement rather than reinvention.

If the DF 3 and OZ.1 proved that lie-angle balance could succeed in bold, high-MOI platforms, the Link 2.1 and Link 2.2 hint that those same principles may now be migrating into more traditional forms.

If that happens, L.A.B. may find itself doing something it has rarely done before: winning over golfers who want cutting-edge performance without giving up the look of a classic blade.

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