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#1 |
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Does anyone have any stats on what it takes to ahoot 85 or 80? I want to set goals for my rounds in terms of fairways and greens but not sure what they should be.
Ie tday i Played 9 holes tday and Just looked at my stats and it's clear putting was my foe. I was 8 over wirh 44. I Hit 5 of 7 fairways 72% and hit 5 of 9 greens. 56%. I should have been around 40 for the 9 holes but I 3 putted 4 times!! 22 putts for 9 holes is terrible. |
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#2 |
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Is it possible to have a set stat for that sort of thing? Every player has there strengths and weaknesses so its hard to pin point. It sounds like putting might be holding you back if you played 18 you would be on pace for 44 putts and I definitely have those days. Even when I am at my best, which has not been often this year, I can look at my round and say well if I didn't three putt five holes I could have shot this. Personally, even if I am slapping the ball down the fairway I can get it to the green in two to three strokes provided I stay in play but once I am on the green it is easy to three putt and rack up strokes.
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#4 |
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#5 |
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People can shoot scores so many different ways, stats really don't mean a lot, in my opinion. One of the biggest misleading stats is putts per round. You said 22 putts per nine is bad, but if you are hitting every green, then you will probably have more putts than if you are missing every green and chipping on for your third shot instead of putting for your third shot. I'm not saying 22 putts is good at all, but someone can have 22 putts but most of the time be barely on the green when they take their first putt. You could be on the fringe, inches farther away from the person who is barely on, and have 13 putts but the exact same score because they chipped on (or putted from off the green, which is not counted as a putt) when the other guy putted.
You can miss every fairway, but if you are just barely missing and missing in the right places, is that really that bad? You could hit every green, but if you are consistently putting it in a bad spot on the green, you might take more putts than if you hit the green in the right spots. There are some holes on my course that I would rather miss the green short than hit the green long but have a fast downhill putt for my next shot. I'm usually a stats guy, but with golf, I don't usually keep very many stats on my game. I might keep track of fairways hit and putts because it's easy to do, but may or may not tell you a lot. |
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#6 |
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#7 |
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I remember golf digest ha an article that gave avg stats. Of course it going to be individual but the stats five a good estimation based on averages and this can provide good realistic goals to aim for.
I remember it seemed to hold pretty true for me I needed to hairlike 5 or 5 greens to break 85 or 80 can't remember |
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#8 |
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#10 |
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Not to pile on what's already been said, but to me the only stat that is relevant - at least to the EASE of what I shoot is Greens in Regulation. If I am hitting gir's then I know it will be easier to score than if I don't. |
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#11 |
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Not to pile on what's already been said, but to me the only stat that is relevant - at least to the EASE of what I shoot is Greens in Regulation. If I am hitting gir's then I know it will be easier to score than if I don't. |
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#12 |
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Yes putts don't tell the whole story. If you are missing greens and chipping the ball the 5 feet, you will have less putts in general. This happened to me last week. I had 5 or 6 gir in one round and 28 putts. I was missing the greens, but my chipping saved me. Shot an 81. Two days later, I hit my irons good and hit 14 greens and shot 76. I know I had more than 30 putts, but not exactly sure.
Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk 2 |
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#13 |
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Here is the site I was talking about yesterday. Very strong relationship associated with g.i.r. and scoring.....
http://www.oxnardtenniscenter.com/Ol...olferStats.htm |
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#14 |
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Here is the site I was talking about yesterday. Very strong relationship associated with g.i.r. and scoring..... I may hit the fairway a lot, but I'm not hitting it very long (about 200 - 220 yds) and I'm getting let down by my chipping and putting at the moment. Therefore *for me* as a golfer, FIR and GIR stats are fairly useless as even my GIR is fairly decent, it's the rest of the shots that let me down. Therefore, as other have suggested, there's not going to be one specific stat, other than total score, that all golfers can work on to improve their score. However, looking at stats on an individual basis may help to locate the weaknesses in a golfer's game that could help them to improve. |
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#15 |
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I think stats are valuable if only to give an indication of how you played but you can't draw conclusions to your score based on it because there just isn't enough information. A missed fairway because you were a foot off is a miss, as is one you hit into water, into the woods, etc. Stats are good to help you find areas to focus on.
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#16 |
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Does anyone have any stats on what it takes to ahoot 85 or 80? I want to set goals for my rounds in terms of fairways and greens but not sure what they should be. Some will give you these extreme examples about hitting every green and having 'X' amount of putts or missing every green and having 'Y' amount of putts and the stat doesn't matter. IMO those extremes don't happen and we live in the real world where people hit greens 30-40% of the time and then get lucky every once in a while with a chip or two. Based on what you've said, if you average 2 putts or less, you will shoot lower scores. Turn a couple 3-putts into a 2-putt and turn a couple of 2-putts into a 1-putt and you just shaved 4 strokes. |
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#17 |
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#18 |
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Some will give you these extreme examples about hitting every green and having 'X' amount of putts or missing every green and having 'Y' amount of putts and the stat doesn't matter. IMO those extremes don't happen and we live in the real world where people hit greens 30-40% of the time and then get lucky every once in a while with a chip or two. Based on what you've said, if you average 2 putts or less, you will shoot lower scores. Turn a couple 3-putts into a 2-putt and turn a couple of 2-putts into a 1-putt and you just shaved 4 strokes. Sent from my SPH-D710 using Tapatalk 2 |
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#19 |
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Here is the site I was talking about yesterday. Very strong relationship associated with g.i.r. and scoring..... I will do as it says and compare my last 5 rounds to the chart and see what it says. |
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#20 |
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If you looked at my stats, you would be shocked and confused. My bad days look identical to my good days on fairways hit, GIR, etc. But when you look at my putt total, you'll see exactly why I shot an 88 one round and a 78 the next.
I can honestly say GIR don't affect my game. They are identical on good days and bad. |
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