Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Does Distance Matter?

Webb Simpson U.S. Open
Getty Images
U.S. Open Champion Webb Simpson is far from the longest hitter in the game.
1
By 
Steve Eubanks
PGA.com

Series: Eubanks
If what the USGA tells us is true and the U.S. Open is the ultimate test to identify the best in the game, then hitting the ball long off the tee must not be that important. And bombing tee shots 300-plus yards could be more of a detriment than an asset when it comes to being the best you can be.

Just look at the numbers. None of the top finishers in this year’s Open were among the game’s longest hitters. In fact, the top 30 leaders in driving distance were nowhere to be found on Sunday.
Bubba Watson, the No.1 long-ball hitter, didn’t make the cut and said Olympic Club was "too hard" for him. Jamie Lovemark (No.2 in driving distance with an average tour tee shot of 309.1 yards) wasn’t even in the field at Olympic, while the tour’s third-longest bomber, Robert Garrigus, shot 72-77 and spent the weekend at home.
Of all the players who average more than 300 yards off the tee, only Jason Day made the cut. Long-ball aficionados like Gary Woodland, Jhonattan Vegas, Ryan Palmer and J.B. Holmes didn’t make the top 70 and ties after two days, or they missed qualifying for the field all together.
Dustin Johnson (top-10 in driving distance with an average tee shot of 303.7 yards) went home early, while Zach Johnson (154th in diving distance with an average tee shot of 280.4 yards) played the weekend and had a respectable 71 on Sunday.
Woodland, who averages 300.4 yards on his drives, was 11-over for the first two days in San Francisco, while David Toms, who hits it 275 and is ranked 173rd in driving distance, and Jason Dufner, who is 63rd in driving distance, just squeezing past the 290 mark, finished tied for fourth.
Of those who were in contention late into the back nine on Sunday, Webb Simpson ranks 112th in driving distance with an average tee shot of 285.8 yards, while Graeme McDowell sits at 145th in the bomber ranking. McDowell’s average poke is 281.9 – not short by amateur standards, but nowhere close to the towering tee shots that have come to exemplify the modern game.
Then there is Jim Furyk, the man who controlled his own destiny until the final three holes on Sunday. Furyk averages 277.7 yards per drive, a number that puts him 165th among his long-hitting peers.
"I go from spot to spot," Furyk said of his approach, not just to playing Olympic Club, but to the game in general. Granted it was a hooked tee shot that killed Furyk, but that had nothing to do with length. He was hitting a hybrid off the tee at the par-five 16th when he made his worst swing of the week.
Of course there will be those who argue that statistics are misleading – many players hit less than driver off the tee in an attempt to keep the ball in play while others take a more aggressive approach – and the U.S. Open is a unique animal, unlike any other golf tournament in the world and, thus, an outlier when it comes to statistical lessons that can be learned.
But that doesn’t explain the fact that Jason Dufner leads the FedEx Cup race with tee shots that no one on tour would call long. Zach Johnson, Matt Kutchar, Webb Simpson and Hunter Mahan are also near the top of the FedEx standings, and none of them are in the top 50 in driving distance. Of the top 10 contenders in the FedEx Cup, only Tiger Woods, Bubba Watson, and Rory McIlroy are on the first page of the driving-distance stat sheet.
If those facts don’t make the point clearly enough, look at the last two winners of the FedEx Cup. Bill Haas is the 83rd longest hitter on tour, while Furyk, who won in 2010, at his long-hitting best never cracked the top 100.
"The game has been sold as a distance game with the idea that the farther you hit it the better you’ll play," said PGA National Teacher of the Year, Mike Malaska. "That’s just not the case. You don’t have to hit it that far. Distance, in and of itself, does not make you a better player, even though hitting driver a long way is what the average amateur wants to learn to do." 
The most important statistics, and the ones most amateurs never examine, are how close you hit it to the hole, and how well you putt once you get there. Tour leaders in sticking approach shots close are Dufner, Steve Stricker, Furyk, and Kutchar. Three of those four – Kutchar, Dufner, and Furyk – are in the top four in scoring average.
Granted there is no sex and sizzle to hitting 8-irons inside 20 feet, or making all your three footers, and there are certainly no club companies telling you to hit it shorter and straighter. But numbers don’t lie: especially those numbers you have to put in the little boxes on your scorecard.
"I have played in U.S. Opens, and I’ve played in a lot of corporate outings," Malaska said. "And with the corporate guys, I often play an entire round where I never hit any club longer than a 7-iron. When I do that, I always shoot somewhere between 73 and 80." 
His point is the simplest one in the game:
"Never hitting it more than 150 yards and always being in the fairway is lot more important than trying to hit it 300 yards and being in the trees," Malaska said.
That is true whether you are playing your home course with buddies on Saturday, or teeing off in the final group on Sunday in the U.S. Open. The numbers prove it, even if we find it hard to accept.

Brad Fritsch Morgan Hoffmann Doug LaBelle shoot 64s to lead Web.com Utah Championship

SANDY, Utah -- Morgan Hoffmann came into the Utah Championship knowing if he wanted to contend this week, he would have to make a lot of birdies. On Thursday, he did just that.
Hoffmann, a non-Web.com Tour member, who earned a spot in this week's field by virtue of his tie-for-fourth performance at the United Leasing Championship in Evansville, Ind., two weeks ago, made eight birdies and a lone bogey for a 7-under 65. He is tied for the lead with Brad Fritsch and Doug LaBelle II after the first round of the 14th annual event. Jason Allred is a stroke back of the trio, with seven players tied for fifth, two shots behind.

"There are going to be a lot of low scores out here," Hoffmann said following his round. "It's shown in the last few years you need to go low."
Hoffmann knows his history. Since 2007, only one Utah Championship winner hasn't made it to at least 20-under -- Michael Putnam, who finished at 18-under in 2010. Hoffman, who made two PGA Tour cuts in 2011 and tied for 29th at this year's U.S. Open, looked like he was going to give a stroke back on the par-3 18th, when his tee shot missed the green, leaving him with a delicate chip from the right rough, with the cup 25 feet downhill cut not far from a nearby lake.
He pitched to three feet and made the par save. Even had he missed the putt, though, the Oklahoma State product, who is making his fifth Web.com Tour start this season, was enjoying his first official tour around Willow Creek Country Club.
"You don't get a better venue than this. Even if you hit a poor shot, you just look up at the mountains. It's unbelievable. I just feel lucky to be here," he said.
On a day when temperatures reached triple digits but the signature afternoon winds never materialized, 90 players of the 155 who finished their rounds were under par as the stroke average was 70.06 on the par-71 layout.
Fritsch, a Canadian native via Campbell College in North Carolina, turned a good round into a great one with his play on his final three holes, where he birdied all three.
"We were walking down the 16th fairway, and my caddie was babbling, saying, 'We're not going to birdie the par 5 because we never birdie the par 5,'" Fritsch said. "I just said I wanted three putts added on the last three holes."
Fritsch hit each green in regulation and got his wish, his 64 his lowest round since he fired a 9-under 62 in the final round of the Chitimacha Louisiana Open, where he went on to tie for fifth.
"The season has been weird for me. I usually make a lot of cuts," he said. "It either seems I top-10 or miss the cut this year." Besides his top-10 in Louisiana, Fritsch added a tie for fifth at the BMW Charity Pro-Am (both showings are his career-best finishes on the Tour) and a tie for seventh at the Panama Claro Championship. To his point, though, he's also missed six cuts among his 13 starts.
After not playing on the weekend in his last tournament, at the United Leasing Championship, LaBelle was more than pleased with his round Thursday, which included a 20-foot downhill birdie putt on the 18th hole that helped him finish his back nine bogey-free, with three other birdies and an eagle making up his 6-under 30.
"I was trying to two-putt; just dribble it down there," he said of his final-hole birdie putt. "Thankfully, it went in. When it's your day, it's your day."
Three weeks ago, at the Mexico Open, LaBelle held the final-round lead with 15 holes to play. He went from the top of the leaderboard to a tie for 17th when, as he explained, his putter let him down.
"I've played some really good golf, tee to green, this year. But I haven't gotten anything out of it. Missing four- and six-footers will to that to you."
First-Round Notes:
--The bogey-free rounds came from Shawn Stefani and Ron Whittaker. Stefani and Whittaker fired 67s, leaving them tied for 12th.
--Jeff Gove had a surprising round, as he made six bogeys and 12 pars for a 77. He has twice shot 62 at Willow Creek, including in the second round last year on his way to a second-place finish. His 77 broke a streak of eight consecutive under-par rounds for him at the Utah Championship.
--Shawn Edwards was disqualified for signing an incorrect scorecard.
--Even though there are five par 5s at Willow Creek, there were only five eagles. They came from James Nitties (No. 1), Rob Oppenheim (No. 3), Doug Labelle II (No. 12) and Matt Davidson and Rahil Gangjee (No. 17).
--The best birdie stretch of the day was three, by five separate players. But Morgan Hoffmann, one of three tied for the first-round lead, had a pair of three-birdie stretches during his round. He birdied the third, fourth and fifth holes and then added another streak at Nos. 10-12. Three players ended their rounds with back-to-back birdies. Brad Fritsch, James Sachek and David Vanegas all birdied Willow Creek's 16th, 17th and 18th holes. Aaron Watkins began his back nine by making birdies at the 10th, 11th and 12th holes.

Michael Putnam, feeling right at home, leads after third day at Utah Championship

SANDY, Utah -- It would appear that Michael Putnam likes Willow Creek Country Club. The 2010 Utah Championship winner looked totally relaxed during his third round of the 2012 edition on Saturday, and it showed as he reeled off five straight birdies on the back nine then knocked in a six-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole to finish with an 8-under 63.
That was good enough for a four-shot lead over Robert Streb heading into Sunday's final round.
Putnam, who came from one stroke off the lead to win in two years ago, will be at the head of the pack this time as he attempts to become the first two-time winner of this Web.com Tour event, which began in 1990.

"I seem to play pretty well most every round. So I'm looking forward to playing well," said Putnam, 23, a Tacoma, Wash., native who lives in nearby Lakewood. "I just like playing around here. It reminds me of my home course back at home, Tacoma Golf and Country Club."
Putnam's bogey-free round included birdies on the second and third holes, and his five-birdie stretch came on holes 11 through 15. "I didn't birdie the two easy holes, 10 and 17. But I birdied 11, which is probably one of the hardest holes of the day," he added.
Putnam began the season on the PGA Tour, playing with a Major Medical Extension for a broken wrist he suffered midway through the 2011 season. When he couldn't meet the money-earning requirements that would allow him to keep playing on the PGA Tour, he moved to the Web.com Tour. Good memories have come flooding back this week, as he continues his assault on Willow Creek.
In 19 official rounds at the course in suburban Salt Lake City, dating to his first appearance here, in 2006, Putnam has 13 rounds in the 60s and 18 at par or better. His stroke average is 67.63, with Saturday's 63 included. To give Putnam's day even more of a hometown feel, he played with Andres Gonzales, another Washington product who was born 16 days before Putnam in Olympia.
"Michael and I haven't actually played in a tournament together since our senior year of the state championship (high school). But I bet last week alone, we played four or five (practice) rounds together," said Gonzales, who shot a 2-under 69 in the third round but lost six strokes to Putnam. He sits tied for third place with Doug LaBelle II, five shots back.
Putnam and Gonzales will play together for a second consecutive day (along with Streb), which should make for an interesting Sunday as tournament officials will group the field in threesomes and play from two tees between 11:14 a.m. and 1:15 p.m. EDT. They moved the starting times up as bad weather is expected to hit the Salt Lake Valley in the late afternoon.
Despite being alone in second, Streb understands he has a lot of work ahead of him. He opened the Utah Championship with rounds of 67-68 but moved up nicely from his 14th-place position when the day began. From a bigger-picture standpoint, Streb is 25th on the money list, with $93,644 in earnings. The top 25 on the year's final money list receive 2013 PGA Tour cards. Streb has earned nearly two-thirds of his money this year at two tournaments -- the BMW Charity Pro-Am (tied for third) and the South Georgia Classic (tied for fourth).
"There's still a long way to go this year. We're only halfway through the season, but I'm trying to get a win," said Streb, 25, a Kansas State graduate. "Once you get one of those, you're usually on the fast track, and that's the idea."
Second-round leader Morgan Hoffmann made the turn at 2-under but played his back nine in 3-over, including a double bogey on the 18th hole. He enters the final round tied for sixth after his 1-over 72 Saturday. He's seven behind.
Third-Round Notes:
--Officials suspended play at 2:03 p.m. MDT due to a dangerous weather situation. Play resumed at 3:06 for a total delay of 1:03.
--Michael Putnam and Robert Streb, Nos. 1 and 2 on the leaderboard, had the only bogey-free rounds Saturday.
--Nine third-round leaders have gone on to win the Utah Championship, including J.J. Killeen a year ago. The last player to hold the third-round lead and not win was Bradley Iles, who led Michael Putnam by one going into the final round and went on to tie for second, three strokes behind Putnam.
--Nicholas Thompson made a big move Saturday. He began the day tied for 50th place, but after his 6-under 65 he improved to a tie for 14th. His round consisted of one eagle, one bogey and five birdies. Sam Saunders also had a 65, with seven birdies and a bogey. He's tied for sixth. His career-best Web.com Tour finish came earlier this year at the BMW Charity Pro-Am, when he tied for fifth. His best PGA Tour finish was a tie for 15th at the 2011 AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.
--While the par-4 fourth hole was the most difficult hole in both the first and second rounds (4.213 stroke average Thursday, 4.286), in the third round it was ranked fourth, with a stroke average of 4.139. The par-3 18th hole, with the field averaging 3.222 there, was Willow Creek's toughest hole Saturday. It had seven double bogeys there and one "other."