Monday, May 4, 2009

Short Game: How Close is Close?

My last article highlighted the importance of eliminating short game errors from our golf rounds. Building on that, here’s more diagnostics on short game performance. Traditional golf stat programs have you evaluate your short game by counting “Saves,” or the percentage of opportunities that you get up and down. Certainly getting up and down is always the goal, but as a statistic it can be misleading. This is because it mixes two important parts of the golf game – short game shots and putting. If you are just tracking Saves, you could be masking issues (or excellence!) in either your chip/pitch or putting skill.

At ShotByShot, we believe the proper way to evaluate short game ability is to measure the average putting distance after the short game shot, and calculate the % of opportunities that are successfully hit to within 5 feet.

Chip/Pitch Shots - How Important?
The answer for any golfer depends on the number of opportunities faced in each round. Long game performance directly affects the number of chip/pitch opportunities because more greens-hit-in-regulation means fewer short game shots – but that’s a topic for another day.

Here are some basic statistics from the ShotByShot database to help put your short game skill in perspective:


These stats will tell you whether or not your Short Game represents an improvement opportunity, or if your precious practice and lesson time (and $$$) should be spent elsewhere.


For a Complete Analysis of Your Game, go to: http://www.shotbyshot.com/

1 comment:

  1. Peter - I wish more amateurs would review this blog post. You are bang on with more details to determine up and down percentage. For example, a junior golfer said he had a good short game but had putting problems because he was only getting up and down 20% of the time. After using Shot by Shot, he learned that he was only getting the ball inside 5 feet less than 5% of the time. After some practice and rounds, he improved both percentages.

    Sincerely,
    Brian Gallant, CPGA, B.Sc.Kin, CAO Coach
    BG Golf Academy at FireRock
    www.bggolf.ca

    ReplyDelete