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L.A.B. Golf

L.A.B. Golf Link.2.1 Putter

2026Mallet$399

Mallet Putter

L.A.B. Golf built its name on one idea: a putter that doesn't twist in your hands. The Link.2.1 is the 2026 update to the brand's more accessible mallet, and it runs the same Lie Angle Balance technology that put L.A.B. on tour bags under players like Adam Scott and Lucas Glover. The short version is that the shaft connects to the head in a way that cancels out torque, so the face wants to stay square from takeaway to impact instead of opening and closing.

That matters more than it sounds. Most putters rotate a little through the stroke, and you learn to time that rotation without ever thinking about it. The Link.2.1 takes the rotation out of the equation. You make your stroke, the face stays pointed where you aimed it, and mishits off the toe or heel lose less speed and direction than they would on a conventional mallet.

This is the model for golfers who want the L.A.B. concept without stepping up to the DF3 or Mezz.1 price. It gives up some of the adjustability and finish work of the flagship putters, but the core technology is the same. If you've watched L.A.B. putters roll and wondered whether the hype held up, the Link.2.1 is a reasonable way to find out.

Design

The Link.2.1 is a full mallet with a face-balanced setup, which fits the L.A.B. approach since the whole point is to keep the head from wanting to rotate. The weight sits low and spread toward the perimeter, so the sweet spot covers more of the face than you'd get from a blade. A single sightline runs across the top of the crown for alignment, and it's clean enough to line up quickly without cluttering your view over the ball. Where it differs from the pricier L.A.B. models is in the details. You won't find the same range of hand-tuned weighting or premium finishes here. The Link.2.1 keeps the geometry that makes Lie Angle Balance work and trims the extras, which is how it lands at a friendlier price while still rolling the ball the way the brand is known for.

Who It's For

  • You've struggled with pulling or pushing putts and suspect your hands are manipulating the face through impact.
  • The L.A.B. concept appeals to you but the DF3 and Mezz.1 sit above your budget.
  • You prefer a mallet head with a simple single sightline over a busy alignment system.
  • You want a putter that forgives toe and heel contact on longer lag putts.
  • You're willing to spend a session getting used to a stroke that feels different from a standard putter.

Technology

Perimeter WeightingAlignment AidLie Angle BalancedZero Torque Design

About L.A.B. Golf

L.A.B. Golf pioneered Lie Angle Balanced (LAB) technology, which means the putter face stays square to the target throughout the stroke without any manipulation. This zero-torque design simplifies putting mechanics.

Specifications

BrandL.A.B. Golf
ModelLink.2.1
Year2026
TypeMallet
Toe hangFace balanced
Alignment aidYes
MSRP$399

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Lie Angle Balance actually do on the Link.2.1?
It removes the torque that makes a normal putter twist in your hands. The shaft attaches so the head stays balanced no matter how you hold it, which means the face resists opening and closing during the stroke. Practically, that helps you start putts on your intended line more consistently.
How is the Link.2.1 different from the DF3 or Mezz.1?
It uses the same Lie Angle Balance technology but at a lower price. You give up some adjustability and premium finish work compared to the flagship models. The core benefit, a face that stays square through the stroke, is identical.
Is the Link.2.1 face balanced or does it have toe hang?
It's face balanced. That fits the L.A.B. design, since the goal is to keep the head from rotating rather than adding the toe hang a conventional putter uses to match an arced stroke.
Will the Link.2.1 feel weird if I switch from a normal putter?
Probably at first. Because the face doesn't rotate the way you're used to, the stroke can feel unusually stable or even dead early on. Most golfers adjust within a few practice sessions, and the payoff is a face that stays where you aimed it.
Does the single sightline give you enough to aim with?
For most golfers, yes. The Link.2.1 keeps a clean top line with one alignment mark, so you set the line to your target and make your stroke. If you prefer a heavier alignment system with multiple reference points, this is a simpler look.

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