Blade Putter
The Evnroll ER2V MidBlade is the shape for a golfer who arcs the putter hard and wants a compact head that gives it all back in feedback. This is a blade, not a mallet, so the footprint behind the ball is small and the feel is direct. Miss the center and your hands know it. What sets any Evnroll apart is the face, and the ER2V carries the milled variable-groove pattern Guerin Rife built the brand on. The grooves cut deeper toward the middle and shallower out toward the heel and toe, so a putt struck off-center rolls close to the same distance as one flushed. Most putts die short or run long on speed, not line, and that face is Evnroll's answer to it.
The MidBlade name points to a bit more mass and body than a traditional thin blade, which nudges the forgiveness up without turning it into a mallet. It still reads as a player's putter. The top line is clean with no alignment aid, so if you're the kind of golfer who aims better with a bare crown and just sets the leading edge to your line, this suits how you already see the putt. Golfers who need a sightline to trust their aim will feel the absence.
The number to check before you buy is the toe hang, and here it's full. Balance the shaft across your finger and the toe drops straight down. That is built for a stroke with a pronounced arc, one where the face opens well on the way back and releases hard through the ball. A player with that natural motion gets a putter that closes in time with the hands. If your stroke runs straight back and straight through, this is the wrong hang and you'll spend the round fighting the face closed.
Design
The face does the heavy lifting. Evnroll's milled grooves vary in depth across the width of the face so ball speed holds steady from heel to toe, which tightens distance control on the strikes you don't catch flush. That pattern sits in a MidBlade body, a blade with a touch more mass than a thin heel-toe design, so you get some added stability without losing the compact look and the crisp feedback a blade is chosen for. The top line stays clean. There's no sightline, which keeps the crown quiet for players who aim off the leading edge and find a painted line more distracting than useful. The full toe hang is the defining fit. It pairs the small head with a face that rotates a large amount through the stroke, so a golfer with a strong arc gets a putter that opens and closes with the hands instead of resisting them. As a blade, the ER2V asks for a better strike than a mallet does and pays you back with feel and workability rather than raw forgiveness. If you want a big stable head that hides mishits and aims itself, look at Evnroll's mallets instead. This one is for the player who trusts their hands, arcs the stroke, and wants the milled face doing the work on speed.
Who It's For
- Players with a strong, pronounced arc stroke, since the full toe hang matches a face that opens and releases hard through impact.
- Golfers who leave first putts short or run them past, because the variable-groove face keeps off-center strikes rolling closer to the right speed.
- Anyone who aims better off a clean leading edge and finds a painted sightline distracting rather than helpful.
- Blade players who want a little more stability from the MidBlade mass without moving up to a mallet.
- Feel players who want direct feedback on every strike instead of a forgiving head that hides the miss.
Technology
About Evnroll
Evnroll's patented Sweetface Technology uses variable-width grooves to progressively increase friction toward the edges, gently guiding off-center hits back toward the target line.
Specifications
| Brand | Evnroll |
| Model | ER2V MidBlade |
| Year | 2025 |
| Type | Blade |
| Toe hang | Full toe hang |
| Alignment aid | No |
| MSRP | $399 |
Frequently Asked Questions
- What makes the Evnroll ER2V MidBlade face different from a normal putter?
- It uses Evnroll's milled variable-depth grooves. The face is cut deeper near the center and shallower toward the heel and toe, so a putt struck off-center comes off at close to the same speed as one struck flush. Because most missed putts are missed on speed rather than line, a face that evens out distance on mishits is where the ER2V actually saves you strokes.
- Is the ER2V's full toe hang right for my stroke?
- Only if you arc the putter. Full toe hang suits a stroke with a pronounced arc, where the face opens well going back and releases hard through the ball. To check, balance the shaft on your finger. If the toe drops straight down toward the ground, that's full toe hang, which is what the ER2V has. If you swing the putter straight back and straight through, a face-balanced or lighter-hang model fits you better and you'll fight this one closed all round.
- Does the ER2V MidBlade have an alignment line?
- No. The top line is clean with no sightline. That's a deliberate fit for golfers who aim off the leading edge and trust their eye rather than a painted reference. If you rely on a sightline to set your start line, the bare crown will feel like something is missing, and a putter with an alignment aid would suit you better.
- How is the MidBlade different from a standard Evnroll blade?
- The MidBlade carries a bit more mass and body than a traditional thin blade. That extra weight raises stability and forgiveness a step without turning the head into a mallet, so you keep the compact look and the direct feedback a blade is picked for while giving up a little of the harshness on off-center hits. It sits between a pure blade and a mid-mallet in how it plays.
- Will the ER2V help me stop three-putting?
- It goes after speed, which is the usual cause. The milled variable-groove face keeps your ball speed more consistent on strikes you don't catch flush, so the first putt is less likely to come up short or run past. Aim is on you here, since there's no sightline, but if you already aim well off the leading edge and your problem is distance control, the ER2V is built to help.
More from Evnroll
Ratings & Reviews
No ratings yet. Sign in to rate this club.
Add this putter to your bag