Unless you’ve been living under a perfectly balanced rock, you know that we are smack in the middle of The Zero Torque Wars. It all began when L.A.B. Golf dominated the zero-torque putter market space in 2024, creating the hottest putter design on tour and in local shops.
Naturally, other companies are now also releasing zero torque putters. It’s not like they were going to sit idly by while L.A.B. Golf collected all of the pending putter profits.
One of the strongest competitors in the growing zero torque putter competition is PXG.
I suppose PXG’s track record for producing quality putters should have prepared me for the Allan’s excellence. PXG putters perform well in Most Wanted putter trials, and they have rolled out high quality putters for the last decade.
Still, I was surprised at how good the PXG Allan was.
The PXG Allan is an exceptional zero-torque putter, and I think that this new Bat Attack ZT may be even better.
PXG’s zero torque hosel
How dos this work? First, ignore where the hosel attaches and follow the shaft toward the head. If you then were to extend the tip of the shaft, it would land very close to the putter’s center of gravity.
Why do you want a square-to-target face at impact? Call me crazy, but having a putt roll on the intended line seems like a good way to make a putt go in the hole. Assuming your reads are not garbage, of course.
Other PXG putter technologies
For the PXG Bat Attack ZT, these technologies include their roll-promoting Pyramid Face Pattern, adjustable sole weights, and hollow-steel, filled with polymer construction.
Essentially, this means that the new PXG Bat Attack ZT gives someone who loves their PXG Battle Ready 2 Bat Attack all of their favorite putter aspects in a new zero-torque design.
With the ever-expanding number of torque-free putters being released these days, it may be a company’s proprietary putter technologies, not the lack of torque, that drive consumer decisions.
Did you say that the Bat Attack ZT was better than the Allan?
Last summer, I shot my lowest round ever with the PXG Allan in the bag. The PXG Allan made everything, and it was the first time that I thought that L.A.B. Golf was going to face some market competition.
Initial testing indicates that the PXG Bat Attack ZT is every bit as accurate as the Allan, and it has a way better feel. Maybe the hollow volume is larger in the Bat Attack ZT, with the additional S COR polymer dampening unpleasant vibrations and providing better feedback.
What’s going on with that grip?
Forward shaft lean is, of course, another hallmark of L.A.B. Golf putters, so in that element, the PXG Bat Attack ZT is like a L.A.B. Golf Putter.
Even so, I have a feeling that it’s the grip that will raise a L.A.B. Rat’s hackles.
Unlike the pistol grip on my PXG Allen, the new PXG Slant 1.5 R grip on the PXG Bat Attack ZT is long and rectangular in shape. The shape is the least interesting thing about the grip though.
Take a look at how the shaft enters the grip.
Isn’t that similar to how L.A.B. Golf’s Press Grip functions? Based upon my understanding of the design, they do seem similar.
Maybe it is just an example of convergent evolution, but can see why someone would argue that there was a bit of reverse engineering with this new grip.
The Bat Attack ZT once again confirms that PXG is a legit putter company.
Regardless, the simple truth is that the PXG Bat Attack ZT is a solid zero-torque putter. Fans of PXG will likely try this putter immediately. I’m betting the experience will be free of disappointment, and the wallet will leave the shop lighter.
Pricing is current-market competitive at $449.99. Remember that PXG offers discounts for military personnel, first responders, and teachers.
Regardless, we should all be in agreement that PXG is a player in the modern putter marketplace.
Find out more about the PXG Bat Attack ZT and the other PXG putters at PXG.com
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