When your putting game needs a sledgehammer instead of a scalpel, most players reach for their trusty overstable approach disc. But what if that utility could live right in your putter slot?
The Tursas breaks the mold of what a putter should be. Sure, it's got that familiar putting disc feel in the hand — comfortable rim, manageable weight distribution — but throw it with any real power and this thing reveals its true nature. Pure beef. This isn't your circle-one confidence builder; it's the disc you grab when the pin sits behind a guardian tree or when that crucial approach shot absolutely cannot drift right.
Watch it fly and you'll see something almost contradictory: surprising glide that carries the disc forward before that inevitable fade kicks in like a parking brake. The flight path resembles a question mark more than the gentle arc most putters trace. That hard finish isn't subtle either — we're talking about a disc that wants to spike into the ground at a forty-five degree angle.
Smart bag builders recognize the Tursas fills a crucial gap. It's more controllable than a zone for tight lines, more reliable than a regular putter in wind, and way more consistent than trying to muscle a traditional approach disc on delicate shots. Think of those moments when you need guaranteed left finish but can't afford to overthrow the green.
Advanced players love it for forehand approaches and skip shots off concrete tee pads. Newer players? They might find it refreshingly honest — no mysterious turns or unexpected flights, just predictable, dependable fade every single time.
