Sunday, March 2, 2014

New PGA Tour putting statistic aims to take bias out of previous stats

luke donald
Getty Images
Luke Donald would have led the PGA Tour in the new "Strokes Gained-Putting" stat in two of the past three years, had it been in effect.
0
By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
Dean Wilson always believed he was a good putter, whether he was in Japan or on the PGA Tour. The trick was finding proof of that in the statistics.
He finished no higher than 31st in putts per round over the last five years, but Wilson never put much stock in that because it doesn’t account for how often a player is putting for birdie or getting up-and-down from just off the green. He once was 13th in average putts per greens in regulation, although that didn’t account for proximity to the hole.
So the 41-year-old from Hawaii was not surprised when told about a new PGA Tour statistic that became official Monday, one that uses Shotlink data over an entire year to measure how well a player putts compared with the field.
The statistic officially is called “Strokes Gained-Putting,” and it’s the first time in 15 years that the PGA Tour has introduced a new core statistic. Wilson would have been among the top 11 putters in four of the last five years.
“I always felt like I’m a good putter,” Wilson said. “I’m confident in my technique and the theories I use. I just don’t know what the correct way would be to measure it. They’re all skewed one way or another. I could never think there was another way to do it.”
That’s where Mark Broadie comes in.
Broadie, who plays off a 4 handicap when he’s not working as a Columbia Business School professor, has been crunching Shotlink numbers for the better part of a decade as he tries to find the most meaningful measure of a tour player’s game.
“A good putting stat should provide a pure measure of putting skill,” said Broadie, who developed the stat and then honed it with a team from Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
His philosophy is simple -- the quality of every shot should be based on where it started and where it finished.
The math is a little more complicated.
It starts with determining how many average putts it takes a PGA Tour player from each distance. Broadie discovered that at just under 8 feet, players have a 50 percent chance of making the putt -- in other words, the average stroke for that length is 1.5. The average gets higher for the longer putts.
So if Nick Watney makes an 8-foot putt, he will have gained 0.5 strokes on the field. If he takes two putts from that distance, he will have lost 0.5 strokes to the field. The average for a 20-foot putt is about 1.9. If he makes the putt, he gains 0.9 on the field, whereas if he misses the putt, he loses only 0.1 strokes.
Add these up at the end of each round and you have “Putts Gained.”
Watney is used as an example because he is the current tour leader at 1.215. All that number means is that Watney gains an average of about 1.2 strokes on the field through his putting.
The numbers might not make a lot of sense, but the names do. Luke Donald would have led the tour in this statistic the last two years. Ben Crane would have led the tour twice. Tiger Woods for years was regarded one of golf’s best putters. With this statistic, he ranked among the top 3 in three of the last five years he was eligible.
Others who were around the top 10 just about every year were players whom their peers consider good putters -- Woods, Steve Stricker, Donald, Crane, Brian Gay, Aaron Baddeley -- and yes, even Dean Wilson.
The tour awards a medal to each player who leads a major statistical category, just as driving distance and greens in regulation. Starting this year, “putts gained” will determine who wins the putting category.
It’s not a perfect system, although it’s designed to take out the bias from the previous putting stats.

Wells Fargo Notebook: rory McIlroy's struggles continue at Quail Hollow

rory mcilroy
Getty Images
0
By 
Mike Cranston
Associated Press

Series:
Rory McIlroy's return to the PGA Tour after his final-round Masters meltdown didn't last long, guaranteeing the Wells Fargo Championship will have a new winner.
The defending champion shot an even-par 72 on Friday at Quail Hollow and missed the even-par cut by three strokes.
"Disappointed that after all that happened last year, not to be here for the weekend. But that's golf," said McIlroy, who shot a course-record 62 in the final round a year ago to win by four shots. "I'll go home and do some hard practice over the next few days and try to get ready for the next event."
McIlroy, who turned 22 Wednesday, shot an 80 on the last day at Augusta to lose a four-shot lead. He struggled with his ball striking on Thursday, and a day later his putter let him down.
"I gave myself a lot of opportunities," McIlroy said, "I just wasn't able to take them."
There were moments late in the round when it appeared McIlroy might pull off a similar feat as a year ago, when he was two shots over the cut line with three holes to go. An eagle on No. 7 allowed him to make the cut on the number. Then came weekend rounds of 66 and 62.
"I know better than most people that you just have to be around on the weekend and be able to make something happen," he said. "I was just trying to get in there, trying to get to the weekend."
McIlroy got within one of the cut line with a birdie on 15 and then lipped out a 40-foot birdie putt on 16. After three-putting the 17th for bogey, he knew he had to make eagle on the final hole.
"I basically needed to hole by second shot on the last to have any chance," McIlroy said. "I went for the pin and just came up a bit short and in the creek. Obviously, not what I wanted."
MICKELSON'S PRAISE: While Phil Mickelson created a stir a year ago when he criticized the greens at Quail Hollow, he's a big fan of the course layout.
He's also in his familiar spot near the top of the leaderboard.
Mickelson shot a 6-under 66 on Friday to move within three shots of leader Pat Perez.
"I love the way the course is set up," Mickelson said. "I love the way there's a first cut. There's a lot of opportunity for recovery. When you do miss the fairway, even though you're in trees and you have a tough shot, you still have an opportunity with a decent lie."
In seven previous appearances, Mickelson has five top-10 finishes. He finished second behind Rory McIlroy last year and is again in contention for his first win in Charlotte.
"It's going to be a fun weekend," Mickelson said.
HAAS AT HOME: Bill Haas knows he's biased about the Wells Fargo Championship, but it hasn't stopped him from repeating the line all week.
"It's just probably our best event outside the majors," Haas said.
Growing up two hours away in Greenville, S.C., Haas played Quail Hollow multiple times with his father, Champions Tour star and club member Jay Haas.
Haas continued to make trips to Charlotte while a student at nearby Wake Forest.
The institutional knowledge seems to be paying off after rounds of 64 and 70 left him two shots off the lead.
"I've got a lot of good friends here, a lot of Deacon fans here," Haas said. "I'm hearing 'Go Deacs' out there a lot, which is nice."
The only thing to make it better for Haas would be to get his third career win Sunday.
"Outside of the majors, this would be my No. 1 tournament to win," he said. "Just because of the people involved with the tournament. When I walk in the clubhouse, everybody I see I know."
DIVOTS: Vijay Singh, the 2005 winner, fired a 68 Friday to move within four shots of the lead. "It's been a while since I struck the ball this good," said Singh, winless since 2008. "I'm really excited." ... Davis Love III's 69 left him seven shots back and ended a streak of three straight missed cuts on the tour. "I'm just happy being on the other side of it, looking at the leaderboard rather than driving home," he said. ... Bryan Bigley, a groundskeeper at a nearby club who qualified for the event Monday, shot 78-76 to miss the cut in his PGA Tour debut. ... Storms moved through the area late in the morning, causing a delay of nearly 90 minutes, but Bigley and his last group still completed the round before darkness set in shortly before 8:30 p.m.

Jose Maria Olazabal lauds Ballesteros' spirit as he plays on in Barcelona

jose maria olazabal, miguel angel jimenez
Getty Images
Jose Maria Olazabal was consoled by fellow Spanish star Miguel Angel Jimenez after the moment of silence held during Saturday's third round of the Spanish Open.
0
By 
Joseph White
Associated Press

Series:
Jose Maria Olazabal played through tears Saturday, overcome by grief following the death of his close friend and former Ryder Cup partner Seve Ballesteros.
Olazabal, who teamed with Ballesteros as the most successful pairing in Ryder Cup history, broke down as players honored Ballesteros with a minute’s silence at the Spanish Open, hours after the 54-year-old golf great died of brain cancer.
Olazabal and fellow Spanish player Miguel Angel Jimenez both wept during the somber silence, the pair comforting each other with a long embrace. They then went out and played the third round as best they could.
“I just played the most difficult round of my life. It was very tough to make it to the first tee and hit the first drive,” said Olazabal, who shot a 3-over 75.
“I didn’t doubt about playing today. The last thing he would have wanted would have been for me not to play. I don’t think there will ever be another player like him. There can be others that are very good, but none will have his charisma.”
The 45-year-old Olazabal, a two-time Masters champion, choked up while answering reporters’ questions about Ballesteros.
“Obviously, he has been present all the time,” he said. “Our relationship was so close. I always felt privileged for all the moments that we shared together, and there have been many. Even though I knew what the situation was, when the moment arrives you are never sufficiently prepared.”
Playing partner Colin Montgomerie said Olazabal was “in floods of tears most of the day. He has lost an older brother almost.”
“It was very difficult to get too much out of Jose Maria -- he was very tearful and filling up. You could see in his eyes the great loss he feels and they’ve been a great support for each other. He did well to play at all today,” said Montgomerie, who partnered with Ballesteros in a number of Ryder Cups. “It was his brother, really. It was a very, very sad day for him.”
Olazabal lauded the strength and “fighting spirit” of the five-time major champion, who he knew was ailing after their last meeting April 16.
“He wasn’t well but he was lucid. We spoke about a lot of things and memories of the Ryder Cup,” he said.
Olazabal sported a small black wreath on his baseball cap that many other players and club staff wore on their lapels to honor a player who won a record 50 times on the European Tour.
Flag pins were kept at half staff on a day with an overcast sky and chill in the air. One fan embraced Olazabal as he made his way to the clubhouse.
Olazabal, who will captain the European Ryder Cup team across the Atlantic in Medinah next year to become the second Spanish captain after Ballesteros, recalled his first meeting with an idol turned friend nearly 30 years ago.
“I was an amateur and he called me to play a charity match. He surprised me very much and I was very excited about it,” Olazabal said. “I have lived so many moments with him so it’s hard to pick just one but, without a doubt, the moments of the Ryder Cup, especially ’97.”
That was the year Ballesteros captained Europe to victory on Spanish soil at Valderrama, a special moment for Jimenez.
“I was his assistant; it was a very special week. Seve’s passion for the Ryder Cup was one of a kind,” said Jimenez, who raced from the 18th hole to reach the minute’s silence in time. “The thing that really stands about him is his determination, his tenacity and his passion for everything that he did.”