Who they’re for: Golfers who demand the ultimate in feel and precision and want a putter that looks like it came right off the PGA Tour. The Skinny: The four PLD putters are straight-from-the-tour ...
With the sustained success of their core putter line, which features classic designs like the Anser and Kushin 4, Ping is adding six new Tour-proven models in 2024, including the Anser D and Fetch.
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: The new Ping Scottsdale lineup of putters, which includes nine models, brings an element of game ...
Who it’s for: Golfers who want a soft feel at impact that still delivers responsiveness in a traditional Ping shape. What you should know: The latest generation of Ping Scottsdale putters features an ...
For Ping, the Scottsdale name is a meaningful one, so you can assume big things from putters that bear that name. With the 2025 Scottsdale line, Ping is releasing nine putter models with technology ...
Ping has been making Anser putters since 1966, when company founder Karsten Solheim sketched his first version of that venerable, blade-style club on the sleeve of a 78-rpm record. Since that time, ...
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: Ping is making its PLD putters, previously reserved for tour players, available to consumers via three avenues: the highly personalized PLD Custom, PLD Limited, celebrating the ...
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: The new “family” of Ping putters might be connected aesthetically, but they present 10 individual approaches to putting technology. That includes a mix of milled faces and ...
Fifty years after company founder Karsten Solheim designed the original Anser, putter, Ping has introduced two new Anser models – the TR 1966 Anser and Anser 2. Ping says its engineers relied on 3D ...
PING is celebrating the 50-year anniversary of its Anser putter by making a limited-edition version made from the original molds with components made in the U.S. that vendors supplied in 1966.