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Ping

Ping Mundy Putter

2024Mallet$295

Mallet Putter

The Ping Mundy is a 2024 mallet that doesn't play by the usual mallet rules. Most mallets come face-balanced, built for players who take the putter straight back and straight through. The Mundy has mid toe hang instead, which tells you exactly who Ping had in mind: golfers with a moderate arc who want the stability of a big head without giving up the release their stroke naturally wants.

That combination is the whole point. You get the forgiveness of a high-MOI mallet shape, so mishits off the heel or toe hold their line better than they would with a blade. But because the face rotates a bit through impact, the putter fits an arcing stroke instead of fighting it. If you've ever picked up a face-balanced mallet and felt like you had to steer it, the Mundy is the answer to that problem.

There's an alignment aid up top to help you set the face square before you ever draw it back. For a lot of players, aim is where putts get lost, not stroke path. The Mundy gives you a clear reference to start the ball where you're looking, then a head heavy enough to keep it there.

Design

The mallet head does the heavy lifting on forgiveness. Weight pushed out to the perimeter and back raises the MOI, so the face stays stable when you catch a putt off-center. On a 40-footer where your speed matters more than a perfect strike, that stability keeps distance control honest. Mid toe hang is the detail that separates the Mundy from the typical mallet crowd. Toe hang measures how the face wants to rotate when the shaft is balanced level, and mid hang sits between a face-balanced mallet and a full toe-hang blade. It matches a slight-to-moderate arc, the way most amateurs actually putt. The alignment aid on the crown gives you a straight visual to square the face, and it reads clean at address without a lot of clutter pulling your eye around.

Who It's For

  • You have a slight to moderate arc in your stroke and want a mallet that works with that motion instead of forcing you straight back and through.
  • Aim is your weak spot on the greens and a clear alignment reference would help you start putts on line.
  • You miss the forgiveness of a bigger head but never got comfortable with a fully face-balanced mallet.
  • You want steadier distance control on lag putts, where off-center strikes usually cost you the most.
  • You're moving out of a blade and want more stability without switching to a putter that feels completely foreign.

Technology

Perimeter WeightingAlignment AidAdjustable LengthPEBAX Insert

About Ping

Ping invented the heel-toe weighted blade (the original Anser) and continues to innovate in weight distribution and forgiveness. Their PLD line offers tour-level milled putters with Ping's signature engineering.

Specifications

BrandPing
ModelMundy
Year2024
TypeMallet
Toe hangMid toe hang
Alignment aidYes
MSRP$295

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Ping Mundy face-balanced or toe hang?
It has mid toe hang, not face balancing. That's unusual for a mallet this size. It means the face rotates slightly through impact, so the Mundy suits a stroke with a bit of arc rather than a dead-straight path.
What kind of putting stroke fits the Mundy?
A slight to moderate arc. Mid toe hang sits between a face-balanced mallet and a full toe-hang blade, which lines up with how most golfers naturally release the putter. If your stroke is dead straight back and through, a face-balanced mallet would fit you better.
Does the Mundy have an alignment aid?
Yes. There's an alignment feature on the crown to help you square the face and pick a start line before you putt. If aiming is where you tend to lose putts, that reference is one of the main reasons to look at this head.
Is the Mundy forgiving on mishits?
It's a mallet, so weight is spread to the perimeter and back for a high MOI. Heel and toe strikes hold their line and speed better than they would with a blade. That forgiveness shows up most on lag putts, where off-center contact usually hurts distance control.
How is the Mundy different from a standard face-balanced mallet?
The head shape and forgiveness are similar, but the mid toe hang is the difference. A standard face-balanced mallet resists face rotation and rewards a straight stroke. The Mundy allows some rotation, so it fits arc putters who want mallet stability without fighting their release.

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