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Welcome to Fully Equipped’s weekly Tour equipment report. Every Friday of PGA Tour weeks (plus other times, if news warrants), GOLF equipment editor Jack Hirsh runs you through some of the biggest news surrounding golf clubs on Tour, including changes, tweaks and launches.

With just three weeks before his first major title defense, J.J. Spaun is benching the most notable club from his breakthrough victory.

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Spaun, who became the first player to win a major with a “zero-torque”-style putter at the U.S. Open last year, is switching from his L.A.B. Golf DF3 to a completely different look in an OZ.1i HS this week at the Charles Schwab Challenge.

Not only is his new OZ.1i HS a completely different shape and heel shafted as opposed to the center-shafted DF3, but it also has a different face with L.A.B.’s steel milled insert.

But through two rounds at Colonial, Spaun is eight under and gaining more than a shot on the field with the new flatstick. So clearly it’s working.

That’s a marked improvement for Spaun on the greens this season. Despite winning the U.S. Open with that memorable 64-foot bomb on the 72nd hole to walk it off, Spaun has struggled with his putting since. Even with his win at the Valero Texas Open less than two months ago, Spaun is losing more than a half shot on the greens, ranking 155th in SG: Putting.

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“I found myself kind of resenting my putter at times when I’m out on the course,” Spaun said Friday after his second-round 68 in Fort Worth. “That’s been the only issue all year. My ball striking’s been pretty solid. The weeks that I putt just slightly better than average, I contend. Valero, I won and I was not even like that high in putting.”

L.A.B. co-founder Sam Hahn told GOLF the swap had less to do with the feel and release of the putter, but rather Spaun’s alignment. Spaun’s DF3 sported a platinum finish that had started to wear down in the year-and-a-half he’d been using it, especially as he practices in the Arizona sun at home. It got to the point where Spaun couldn’t see the alignment aid.

L.A.B.’s Liam Bedford worked with Spaun last week in Arizona to find a new gamer, and the OZ.1i HS, L.A.B.’s first-ever heel-shafted design, was the decisive winner.

“Despite the fact that the face rotation and all that stuff was on par with his DF3, he just loved the way it looked and had confidence setting up with it and knew where he was looking,” Hahn said. “All of us golf psychos know what that journey’s like, and sometimes just a fresh look can change everything.”

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Hahn pointed out that the advantage L.A.B. has is that all of its putters have the same torque profile. So it was really just finding a visual Spaun liked because the performance would match.

L.A.B. Golf OZ.1i HS Putter (Stock)

L.A.B. Golf OZ.1i HS Putter (Stock)

It’s heel-shafted. It’s still L.A.B. Heel-shafted putters have been around forever. No reason they shouldn’t be balanced. OZ.1i HS is the first heel-shafted putter with Lie Angle Balance, giving golfers the traditional look so many love with the ease of use that defines L.A.B. This isn’t just an OZ.1 i with a different neck. Lie Angle Balance demands precision, so we re-engineered the OZ.1 i chassis for a no-compromise heel-shafted design. Our proprietary aluminum riser connects the shaft to the head in a way that maintains Lie Angle Balance and delivers the same forgiveness as the OZ.1i. Golfers who prefer a heel-shafted look no longer have to compromise on performance. And because it’s a L.A.B., you can count on every putter being individually built and balanced. With OZ.1i HS, it’s not where the shaft goes. It’s where the ball goes.

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ALSO AVAILABLE AT: PGA TOUR Superstore, L.A.B. Golf

The OZ.1i HS also has a firmer steel insert than the grooved aluminum face on his DF3, but Spaun tested that insert earlier this year in a DF3i, ironically, the week he won at Valero.

He did make one spec change, now going to a putter with 0 shaft lean, compared to the 2˚ on his previous gamer. “After the U.S. Open last year, there was kind of a gentle decline in some of his stats and then this year more of the same,” Hahn said. “So you build up some — I don’t want to say scar tissue — but just a bunch of thoughts and ideas about what’s going on, and then you put a new putter in play and it just kind of wipes the slate clean.”

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After two rounds, Spaun sounded pretty confident the OZ.1i HS would be in the bag for his title defense in three weeks at Shinnecock.

“It’s good to switch it up and see it kind of solidify that it was a good decision these first two rounds and hopefully keep it going this weekend, next week, and keep it into going into the U.S. Open,” he said.

Aberg finally ditches blade for trending Scotty prototype

One of the five players in the top 25 of the Official World Golf Ranking still using a blade putter has finally relented this week.

Ludvig Aberg switched out of his longtime Odyssey Ai-One No. 1 gamer for a new Scotty Cameron Phantom 3.2 prototype mallet.

Read the full article here

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