If you’ve spent any time around serious golfers over the past few years, you’ve heard the LAB Golf argument. Their Lie Angle Balance technology, the idea that a putter engineered to resist torque through the stroke will send the ball more reliably down your intended line, has converted players who swore they’d never leave their old blade behind. The problem, at least for a certain breed of purist, was always the look. Big mallets. Center-shafted profiles. Grips that felt like someone attached a spatula to the handle. For traditionalists raised on a plumber’s neck and a clean sight line, LAB’s lineup felt like medicine that worked but tasted wrong.
The new LINK.2.1 and LINK.2.2 change that conversation entirely.
Two Blades, One Mission
LAB Golf’s LINK.2 line pairs a traditional Anser-style blade shape with a conventional heel-shafted design, making these the most approachable putters the company has ever produced. Both models are built from 303 stainless steel with a deep fly-milled face and finished in a black PVD coating. Pull either one out of the bag and your playing partners will see a blade putter. What they won’t see is everything LAB changed underneath the surface to make it perform differently than any blade they’ve ever used.
The two models share the same core technology and the same price structure, but they are meaningfully different in shape and character. The LINK.2.1 is a narrow blade, closer to a traditional Anser, and the natural starting point for any golfer who has spent their life with a classic heel-shafted blade in their hands. The LINK.2.2 is over half an inch shorter from heel to toe and almost half an inch longer from front to back, giving it a wide-body profile with a square back. Same family, different personalities.
The Technology Underneath
Regardless of which shape fits your eye, both putters deliver the same zero-torque performance. You can drop either model in a swivel handle to test it against any conventional putter, and the LINK.2 will stay perfectly square while traditional putters twist and rotate. The engineering that produces that result is subtle from the outside. A sharp eye will notice that the hosel is positioned further back than normal. That is the only visible hint that these are not everyday blade putters.
The start-line payoff is tangible. The whole premise of Lie Angle Balance is that a putter face that resists torque through the stroke is going to find its intended line more consistently than one fighting rotation. With both LINK.2 models, that principle translates into a setup position that inspires genuine confidence, and a stroke that does not require the compensations most golfers have quietly built into their putting over the years.
Feel: Material Matters
Feel is always personal, and no review can settle that question for you. What can be said objectively is that LAB has given both LINK.2 models the best possible foundation for great feel. The 303 stainless steel construction paired with the deep fly-mill face is a combination that serious putter makers return to again and again for good reason. 303 stainless is prized for its machinability and its ability to transmit impact feedback cleanly through the hands. The fly-mill face pattern softens the initial contact just enough to take the edge off without blurring the information you need about where on the face you struck it. Together they produce a putter that communicates clearly and rewards a good stroke with a sensation that is difficult to find in a cast or insert alternative. Whether this translates to your ideal feel is something only a few minutes on a practice green can confirm, but the raw material quality is not in question.
Distance Control
One noticeable change with the LINK.2 line is the weight. Both models feel substantially heavier than previous LAB putters, and rather than working against the zero-torque technology, that heft works with it. The result is a putter that gives you something to feel throughout the entire stroke, which makes distance control considerably easier to trust.
Build It Your Way
One of the more compelling aspects of the LINK.2 line is how thoroughly LAB lets you make it your own. Going custom opens up your choice of alignment aid, lie angle, shaft length, and head weight. Grip options include Lamkin Deep Etched, rubber and cord pistol grips, LAB’s own Pistol 0, the Garsen Quad Tour, and three Super Stroke options in the Tour 2.0, Flatso 2.0, and Pistol 1.0. On the shaft side, the stock steel option is the starting point, with upgrades available through ACCRA at a $100 upcharge, GEARS at $175, Diamana at $250, and TPT at $399. For a putter you intend to game for years, that level of personalization is worth factoring into the buying decision, and the $599 custom entry point is reasonable given the range of options on the table.
Which One Is Right for You?
The answer comes down to shape preference. If you want a narrow, classic Anser profile, the LINK.2.1 is your putter. If you prefer a wider, more substantial blade with a square back and a bit more forgiveness built in, the LINK.2.2 makes a compelling case.
The LAB Golf LINK.2.1 and LINK.2.2 are available at labgolf.com. Price: $499 stock, $599 custom. Custom orders carry a 3 to 4 week lead time.
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