The Tour’s best putter practices with 2 different putters. Here’s why

by Curtis Jones
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Jacob Bridgeman is only in his third full season on the PGA Tour, but he’s already proven that on the greens, he’s among the game’s best.

During his rookie season, the 26-year-old ranked seventh in SG: Putting. He followed that up with another strong showing with the putter during his sophomore campaign as he finished 2025 21st in the category. This season, which features a win at the Genesis Invitational, Bridgeman sits atop the Tour in SG: Putting, gaining nearly a full shot on the field per round with his putter.

“I’ve always been a very aggressive putter,” Bridgeman said earlier this year.

That aggressiveness served him well in junior golf — but it began to cost him strokes once he got to college golf. So, with the knowledge of strokes-gained statistics guiding him, Bridgeman focused more and more on dialing in his peed to reduce three-putts.

“Dialed it back a little bit, got a lot more focused on speed,” Bridgeman said. “And towards the end of my college career got pretty good at it — pretty good at putting.”

Reducing three-putts is a tried-and-true method for improving putting stats, but that isn’t the only secret to Bridgeman’s success on the greens. He also practices with two different putters — a blade and a mallet — to make sure his stroke is sound.

At the beginning of Bridgeman’s pro career, he putted exclusively with a blade. But after experimenting with the Spyder a bit, he opted to put the ever-popular Taylormade mallet in the bag.

“I looked at the stats, and I doubled my strokes gained from the blade to the Spyder, so it’s helped me quite a bit,” Bridgeman said. “This year I’ve putted well to start the year, and I think I’m going to stick with the Spider for a while.”

However, while the mallet might have earned gamer status, his old blade still proves plenty useful as Bridgeman practices with the blade each week to make sure his stroke is technically sound.

“[The Spyder] is super big, very forgiving,” he said. “A blade putter is less forgiving. If I hit it a couple millimeters off center, I’m going to feel that … It’s just a lot harder putter to putt with.”

When using the blade putter, Bridgeman has a much smaller margin for error on mishits than he does with the mallet. So, if he is stroking pure putts with the blade, he knows his stroke is technically sound and will translate out to the course.

“When I am putting good with the blade, I know my stroke is in a position where this is going to be miles better,” he said.

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