High MOI Putter
The Battle Ready Bat Attack is PXG's answer to the golfer who sprays the ball off the toe and heel and wants the putter to fight back. It's a high-MOI mallet, and the shape tells you everything. Two wings sit behind the face like outriggers, pushing weight to the far corners of the head. That layout resists twisting when you miss the center, so the ball leaves the face closer to your intended line and holds its speed better on those off-center hits.
This is a face-balanced putter, which means the face points at the sky when you balance the shaft on your finger. Translation: it wants to move straight back and straight through. If your stroke has very little arc, this head matches what your hands are already doing. Golfers who release the putter hard and rotate the face open and shut through impact will find it a harder fit, and that's fine. Not every putter is for every stroke.
PXG builds these with real weighting hardware rather than just a molded head, so the Bat Attack tends to feel more planted than its size suggests. It's a lot of putter, and it looks like a lot of putter at address. Whether that's confidence or clutter depends on the golfer standing over it.
Design
The defining feature is the twin-wing rear geometry. Instead of packing mass into a solid block, PXG splits it to the perimeter and the back corners, which is the whole point of chasing high MOI. More resistance to rotation on mishits means less distance lost and less push or pull when you catch it off the sweet spot. The alignment aid runs down the crown to give your eyes a clean reference for squaring the face, and on a head this wide you need that line or the size works against you. Face balancing comes from where the weight sits relative to the shaft axis, and PXG tunes it to sit neutral. That's a deliberate pairing with the high-MOI head, since a stable, non-rotating design and a straight stroke reinforce each other. The tradeoff is the footprint. This is a large mallet, so it fills the space behind the ball and can feel like overkill for a golfer who already rolls it well from short range.
Who It's For
- You miss toward the toe and heel and want a head that holds its line on those strikes.
- Your putting stroke moves nearly straight back and straight through with little face rotation.
- You like a big alignment line and a wide head to frame the ball and quiet a nervous setup.
- You want PXG's adjustable weighting and premium build without needing a blade-style look.
- Speed control on longer putts matters more to you than pinpoint feel from three feet.
Technology
About PXG
PXG brings a distinctive approach to putter design, focusing on quality materials, precision manufacturing, and performance-driven engineering.
Specifications
| Brand | PXG |
| Model | Battle Ready Bat Attack |
| Year | 2024 |
| Type | High MOI |
| Toe hang | Face balanced |
| Alignment aid | Yes |
| MSRP | $295 |
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is the PXG Battle Ready Bat Attack good for a straight putting stroke?
- Yes. It's face balanced, which suits a stroke that goes straight back and straight through with minimal face rotation. If you have a strong arc and release the putter hard, a toe-hang model will fit your motion better.
- What does high MOI mean on this putter and does it actually help?
- High MOI means the head resists twisting on off-center hits. The Bat Attack pushes weight into its two rear wings and far corners, so when you catch a putt off the toe or heel the face stays squarer and the ball keeps more of its speed. It helps most on the misses, not on pure center strikes.
- Is the Bat Attack too big for short putts?
- It's a large mallet, so some players find the footprint busy from close range. The upside is the alignment aid and wide body make it easy to aim. If you already roll short putts well and want feel over framing, a smaller head may suit you more.
- Can I adjust the weight on the Battle Ready Bat Attack?
- PXG builds its Battle Ready putters with real weight hardware rather than a fixed molded head, so head weight can be tuned to match your stroke tempo and green speeds. Ask a PXG fitter about the sole weight options for your setup.
- Who should skip this putter?
- Golfers with a pronounced arc who rotate the face open and closed through impact. A face-balanced, high-MOI head fights that release. You'll get straighter starts and better feel from a toe-hang design instead.
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