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Wilson

Wilson Infinite Grant Park Putter

2024High MOI$149

High MOI Putter

Wilson names the Infinite putters after Chicago landmarks, and the Grant Park is one of the biggest heads in the family. It is a full mallet, wide from face to back, sitting low and quiet behind the ball. Wilson built this line to give a lot of putter for not a lot of money, and the Grant Park is the version aimed at the golfer who wants the head to hold steady and point straight without asking the hands to do much.

The number that decides how it plays is the balance. The Grant Park is face-balanced, so rest the shaft across a finger and the face turns up toward the ceiling and stays there. That setting suits a straight-back, straight-through stroke, the motion where the putter barely opens and closes at all. If your putter moves like a pendulum down the target line, the Grant Park keeps the face square through the hit instead of wanting to rotate. It is the wrong fit for a strong arc, and Wilson makes other shapes for that golfer.

Up top you get a bold alignment setup, with sightlines running back from the face to frame the ball and get your eye square to the start line. Wilson finishes the Infinite heads with a double-milled face, cut twice for a flatter, more consistent strike surface, and offers a counterbalanced build with weight up under the grip to slow the hands and steady the stroke. For the price, it is a lot of forgiveness and alignment in one head.

Design

The wide mallet body is where the Grant Park earns its high MOI billing. Wilson pushes mass out to the perimeter and back away from the face, which builds resistance to twisting. Miss the center toward the toe or heel and the head fights the rotation, so the putt holds its line closer to a pure strike than a small blade ever would. The bold topline sightlines run your eye straight from the ball to the hole, and the flat back edge gives you a clean reference to square the face at address. Face-balancing ties the design together for its target golfer. Wilson sets the shaft so the face points up when balanced, keeping it from rotating open and closed through the stroke, which is what a straight-back, straight-through putter wants. The double-milled face is cut in two passes for a truer surface and a firmer, consistent roll off the putter, and the optional counterbalance weighting adds mass under the grip to quiet a jumpy stroke. This is a forgiveness-first head built for aim and stability, not for feel merchants who like to release the putter.

Who It's For

  • Your stroke runs straight back and straight through with little face rotation, which is exactly the motion the face-balanced setup rewards.
  • Aiming is your weak spot, and the bold topline sightlines give your eye a strong frame to square to the target.
  • Off-center strikes are your common miss, and the wide high-MOI body will keep more of those putts on line.
  • You want a lot of putter without paying premium-brand money, since Wilson prices the Infinite line well below the big names.
  • A hands-y stroke gives you trouble, and the counterbalanced option adds grip-end weight to slow things down and steady the path.

Technology

High MOI DesignMulti-Material ConstructionAlignment System

About Wilson

Wilson brings a distinctive approach to putter design, focusing on quality materials, precision manufacturing, and performance-driven engineering.

Specifications

BrandWilson
ModelInfinite Grant Park
Year2024
TypeHigh MOI
Toe hangFace balanced
Alignment aidYes
MSRP$149

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Wilson Infinite Grant Park face-balanced?
Yes. Rest the shaft on a finger and the face turns up toward the ceiling and holds there, which is the mark of a face-balanced putter. That makes it a fit for a straight-back, straight-through stroke where the face stays square and does not rotate much. If your putter swings on a noticeable arc, opening going back and closing through, a toe-hang model would match your motion better.
What does high MOI mean on the Grant Park, and does it help?
MOI is the head's resistance to twisting on off-center hits. Wilson pushes weight to the perimeter and back of this wide mallet, so a putt struck toward the toe or heel twists the face less and rolls closer to your intended line. For a golfer who misses the sweet spot often, that stability is the main reason to pick a head this size over a compact blade.
Is the Grant Park counterbalanced?
Wilson offers the Infinite line with a counterbalanced build that adds weight up under the grip. That extra mass at the top slows the hands and steadies the stroke, which helps golfers who get quick or wristy over short putts. If your hands stay quiet already, the standard weighting is fine, so it comes down to how much your stroke needs settling down.
What is the double-milled face on the Wilson Infinite putters?
Wilson machines the face in two passes rather than one, which leaves a flatter, more uniform hitting surface. The payoff is a firmer, more consistent roll and contact that feels the same putt to putt. It is a step up in face quality you do not usually see at this price point.
Is the Wilson Infinite Grant Park worth the money?
For a golfer who wants a big, forgiving, face-balanced mallet without spending premium-brand cash, yes. You get high MOI stability, bold alignment, and a milled face for well under what the marquee putters cost. You give up some of the finish polish and feel refinement of a high-end milled putter, but the core performance, holding line on mishits and helping you aim, is all there.

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