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Wilson

Wilson Infinite Windy City Putter

2024Blade$149

Blade Putter

The Infinite Windy City is Wilson's nod to its Chicago roots, and it fits a very particular kind of putter. This is a blade with full toe hang, which tells you most of what you need to know about who should be looking at it. If your putting stroke swings noticeably inside on the backstroke and releases through the ball, this head wants to move the way you already move.

Wilson built the Infinite line to give players milled-face feel and a counterbalanced setup without the four-figure price tag you see on the boutique brands. The Windy City is the traditional blade in that family. No frills, no wing extensions, no big alignment framework. Just a compact head that sits behind the ball and gets out of the way.

What you give up in forgiveness you get back in workability. A full toe hang blade rewards feel and touch, and it punishes a stroke that doesn't have a consistent arc. This is not a putter that tries to save a mismatched motion. It asks you to bring a repeatable arc and then it does its job quietly.

Design

The head is a slant-neck blade with full toe hang, meaning the toe points nearly straight down when you balance the shaft across your finger. That much rotation suits a strongly arced stroke, and it will feel fighty in the hands of a straight-back-straight-through putter. The Infinite family uses a heavier head paired with a longer grip for a counterbalanced feel, which steadies the hands and slows down a quick, wristy motion. There is no alignment aid on the top line, so you set up off the leading edge and the shape of the flange. Some players love that clean look because nothing competes with the ball for attention. Others miss a sightline. The milled face is meant to give a firmer, more responsive strike than a soft insert, and on faster greens that feedback helps you dial in distance.

Who It's For

  • You have a clear arc in your stroke, swinging inside on the way back and releasing through impact.
  • A clean, uncluttered top line appeals to you more than a bold alignment line.
  • You want milled-face feel and a counterbalanced setup without paying premium-brand money.
  • Feel and touch matter more to you than maximum forgiveness on off-center hits.
  • You prefer a compact traditional blade over a mid-mallet or wide-body head.

Technology

Heel-Toe WeightingCompact Profile

About Wilson

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

Specifications

BrandWilson
ModelInfinite Windy City
Year2024
TypeBlade
Toe hangFull toe hang
Alignment aidNo
MSRP$149

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Wilson Infinite Windy City good for a straight putting stroke?
Not really. The Windy City has full toe hang, which is built for a strongly arced stroke. If you putt straight back and straight through, a face-balanced mallet or a shorter slant-neck blade will match your motion much better. Toe hang and stroke type need to line up, and this one leans hard toward the arc.
Does the Infinite Windy City have an alignment line?
No. This model has no alignment aid on the top line. You aim off the leading edge and the shape of the head. If you rely on a sightline to set your face, that absence takes some getting used to, though plenty of players prefer the clean look.
What does counterbalanced mean on the Infinite line?
The Infinite putters pair a heavier head with a longer, heavier grip so more weight sits up toward your hands. That raises the balance point and helps quiet a wristy or handsy stroke. It makes the putter feel more stable through impact, especially on shorter, nervy putts.
How does the milled face feel and sound?
The milled face gives a firmer, more responsive strike than a soft polymer insert. You get clearer feedback off the center of the face, which helps with distance control on quicker greens. Players who like a crisp click at impact tend to get on with it faster than those who want a muted, dead feel.
Is the Windy City worth it compared to premium blade putters?
For the money, yes, if the specs fit you. You get a milled face and a counterbalanced blade at a fraction of what the boutique brands charge. It won't have the polish or resale value of a milled premium putter, but the performance basics are there. The bigger question is whether full toe hang and no sightline suit your stroke.

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