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Freddaly Putters | Golf Monthly

Author

Matthew Sanders

Updated on April 06, 2026

Lol...Well I have a few more putter than just that, but to be honest The putters are all quite different than each other in different ways.

With Yes Putter the balance is great, nice feel & weight, plus the C Groove which does really help the end over end roll with less skidding on putts...

The cavity on the back is also perfect for picking up the ball on those given putts..lol Not to mention I love bladed putters. And although a heal toe weighted putter its also face balanced. Meaning if you were to ballance the putter by its shaft horizontally it would sit with the face level with the horizon, yet still suite either back & through or in to in players.

The Ping Karsten B60 that I have is a slightly shorter length than the Yes Putter, which I should have perhaps have gotten fitted. Again little to fault it on. Apart from maybe the lack of grinding in the face to inhibit skidding which it can be prone to in certain conditions & greens. Although stricktly speeking still a bladed putter, there is certainly a nod towards the D shaped mallet type, but still with that handy cavity.
The Putter serves it purpous, but There are other varients of the B60 that for the sake of a few extra quid I might have been worth sticking out for. Now I love Ping putters, but this one is definitely one for fair weather & perfect technique. imo

Now as for the Daly Golf #7
The link shows mine. Now its certainly the lighter weight of all of them & some respects actually clossest to being a classic design of putter as with the shaft balanced in your hand, the face will hang almost vertically. Which would lead you to believe that the putter would suite in to in players rather than back & through players. The Daly experience of fitting is well worth the effort. Though & ironically to me they as a company seem to favour the back & though aproach, which at times can feel a bit technical. But when leveling the head so that it sits on the ground correctly is the key to their putters.

The only thiong really is that the face could do with milling or groved technology to improve the roll, but the feel off the face is good & although there is a little more tendency to skid, with a proper & careful stroke, this barely comes into play.

Though If I were to get another Daly Putter I'd probably be tempted to get the #3

for the useful cavity & the added mass for year round use. That's not to say the #7 was a mistake or no good. Far from it, its an excelent putter & when I'm playing well it really rewards, especially with the added feel. But on those days when I get the jitters so to speak & maybe try & get too technical, then things can go awry... Now this is nothing to do with the putter, but the tool (player/person) using the tool..lol

I love my Yes Putter, but the Daly Golf putter gives me something else I can use with an equally effective, yet different technology. And if nothing else it gives the player practical lesson he or she can take to the other putters they may also own.