Jump to content
IGNORED

Relative Importance of Driving/Approach Shots, Short Game, Putting, etc. (LSW, Mark Broadie, Strokes Gained, etc.)


Recommended Posts

28 minutes ago, bones75 said:

But yes, keeping it in play is a must-have not a nice-to-have.

I agree.

50 minutes ago, bones75 said:

I just often feel that they are so much better ball strikers than me.

I guess it's how one defines a better ball striker, but IMO, if you're keeping it in play and beating them on the same courses, you're the better ball striker.

Jon

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Moderator
3 minutes ago, bones75 said:

 I routinely win our nassau's, so I'm not whining, but I'd be lying if I said I didn't get caught up in there mind games some days.

Mind games are for losers.  You're a winner!  :beer:

Dave

:callaway: Rogue SubZero Driver

:titleist: 915F 15 Fairway, 816 H1 19 Hybrid, AP2 4 iron to PW, Vokey 52, 56, and 60 wedges, ProV1 balls 
:ping: G5i putter, B60 version
 :ping:Hoofer Bag, complete with Newport Cup logo
:footjoy::true_linkswear:, and Ashworth shoes

the only thing wrong with this car is the nut behind the wheel.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

(edited)

I have been a saying long game was more important for 15 years. I always scoffed at the saying "Drive for show, putt for dough". I dare say I was ahead of my time back in 2005 when I started this THREAD. I took a beating at the time, even from some people who have now changed their tune. :whistle: 

Edited by NM Golf
  • Upvote 1

Danny    In my :ping: Hoofer Tour golf bag on my :clicgear: 8.0 Cart

Driver:   :pxg: 0311 Gen 5  X-Stiff.                        Irons:  :callaway: 4-PW APEX TCB Irons 
3 Wood: :callaway: Mavrik SZ Rogue X-Stiff                            Nippon Pro Modus 130 X-Stiff
3 Hybrid: :callaway: Mavrik Pro KBS Tour Proto X   Wedges: :vokey:  50°, 54°, 60° 
Putter: :odyssey:  2-Ball Ten Arm Lock        Ball: :titleist: ProV 1

 

 

 

 

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

2 hours ago, bones75 said:

Its a nice sentiment, but not one shared by my friends!  "If you're short enough, you don't get into trouble..." is a common jab, as well as the typical "nice chipping/putting today..."  (we are all friends, none taken offensively).  I routinely win our nassau's, so I'm not whining, but I'd be lying if I said I didn't get caught up in their mind games some days.

Most of my partners and me hit like you and your friends, but even with hitting wild shots off the tee where you're making a 200 yard shots 2 fairways over and have a horrible short game we'd make birdies or doubles. If there is OB then bogeys and triples.

However, long game does help a lot, and agree that slicing or hooking out of bounds is not good enough but pretty much any fade or draw over 280 is going to end with a low single type of score or better.

I played with a couple plus handicaps last weekend and it wasn't like they hit fairways all the time. They just hit long, one drove 280 and the Web player drove 320. Even the plus handicap hitting rough some of the time and was 2 or 3 under after 9.

All my birdies and GIR are just from being close enough to use a U wedge or LW on my second shots, and I only average 258 off the tee.

:ping:  :tmade:  :callaway:   :gamegolf:  :titleist:

TM White Smoke Big Fontana; Pro-V1
TM Rac 60 TT WS, MD2 56
Ping i20 irons U-4, CFS300
Callaway XR16 9 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S
Callaway XR16 3W 15 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S, X2Hot Pro 20 degrees S

"I'm hitting the woods just great, but I'm having a terrible time getting out of them." ~Harry Toscano

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Haven't read the entire thread but let me share a story of this past weekend...club championship.  The long game cost me way more than the short game.  I finished second by four shots and can EASILY attribute 10 strokes that are attributable to 5 long-game swings.  The short game?  I only had one three putt and a couple other bad chips that cost me two shots.  That's it.  I wouldn't even say I putted great.

It's the long game guys.  Ball striking...hitting fairways, greens and minimizing bad swings.  I'm mad just typing this out.

Fairways and Greens.

Dave
 

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Moderator
1 hour ago, Lihu said:

However, long game does help a lot, and agree that slicing or hooking out of bounds is not good enough but pretty much any fade or draw over 280 is going to end with a low single type of score or better.

I played with a couple plus handicaps last weekend and it wasn't like they hit fairways all the time. They just hit long, one drove 280 and the Web player drove 320. Even the plus handicap hitting rough some of the time and was 2 or 3 under after 9.

All my birdies and GIR are just from being close enough to use a U wedge or LW on my second shots, and I only average 258 off the tee.

I think you're confusing long game with distance. Long game in this context is anything beyond 100 yards. As mentioned earlier, a 250 driver is long enough to be scratch.

Bill

“By three methods we may learn wisdom: First, by reflection, which is noblest; Second, by imitation, which is easiest; and third by experience, which is the bitterest.” - Confucius

My Swing Thread

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

(edited)
4 hours ago, DaveP043 said:

Mind games are for losers.  You're a winner!  :beer:

Why do you think those guys are playing mind games? Because you're beating them! When my playing opponent starts down that track, that's when I know I've got him! Stay the course!

Edited by Buckeyebowman
Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

(edited)
14 minutes ago, billchao said:

I think you're confusing long game with distance. Long game in this context is anything beyond 100 yards. As mentioned earlier, a 250 driver is long enough to be scratch.

Not exactly, he mentioned that he and his buddies hit those same yardages and was attributing good scores to short game play. I was only pointing out that at those distances it's long game that puts you on the green and having birdie chances.

Also, 250 yard average is like a minimum to get to scratch if you can do everything else better than average as well.

Most scratch or plus around here hit in the 280 range high and straight.

Edited by Lihu

:ping:  :tmade:  :callaway:   :gamegolf:  :titleist:

TM White Smoke Big Fontana; Pro-V1
TM Rac 60 TT WS, MD2 56
Ping i20 irons U-4, CFS300
Callaway XR16 9 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S
Callaway XR16 3W 15 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S, X2Hot Pro 20 degrees S

"I'm hitting the woods just great, but I'm having a terrible time getting out of them." ~Harry Toscano

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Originally I was just highlighting how while I believe distance (and in play) is better, my personal story just felt like I made up many of my strokes within 100 yards of the green and that was what kept me ahead of my friends all these years. I actually do scramble much better than my friends, and tbh I still think this better short game has been key to beating my friends consistently over the years, but I do realize that there's more to it than just that (e.g. getting to nGIR w/ less penalties).  

A takeaway from this thread is that I may have a better long game, even if it's shorter distance-wise than my friends, because I keep it in play and 250 w/ driver is enough for now. (14 FIR's isn't that unusual for me).  However, perhaps the easiest way to progress from here is for me to get longer?  (I was ~270 yds years back when i was a 6-7 HI).


I don't see these two skills, the long and short game, as being as separate as is being implied, especially if you are including mid and short irons as part of the long game.  All iron play is closely related.  If you can hit decent 5 irons with varying depths of divots you're gonna have plenty skill around the greens. 

I think of it as 3 categories of shot making: the driver, irons and the putter.  Fairway woods fall more under the category of irons for me, even when hit off the tee.  Of course, you can try and swing up on it and hit it like a driver, but that's when the trouble starts for me.  Short chipping is half putting.

I guess my time allocation is close to this:

Driver - 20%

Irons - 70%

Putter - 10%

That puts wedge practice and chipping in the iron category.  I probably practice short approach shots and wedges more than I need now but it's a way to practice without wearing out my back or wrists on driving range mats.   Most of my driver practice is far below 100% effort for the same reason.  I'd like to be able to beat balls longer but I've overdone it before and learned my lesson.


 

9 hours ago, bones75 said:

However, perhaps the easiest way to progress from here is for me to get longer?  (I was ~270 yds years back when i was a 6-7 HI).

I was kind of thinking that.

So it's totally probable that those extra 20 yards would translate to 3-4 strokes per round?

:ping:  :tmade:  :callaway:   :gamegolf:  :titleist:

TM White Smoke Big Fontana; Pro-V1
TM Rac 60 TT WS, MD2 56
Ping i20 irons U-4, CFS300
Callaway XR16 9 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S
Callaway XR16 3W 15 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S, X2Hot Pro 20 degrees S

"I'm hitting the woods just great, but I'm having a terrible time getting out of them." ~Harry Toscano

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Administrator
13 hours ago, NM Golf said:

I have been a saying long game was more important for 15 years. I always scoffed at the saying "Drive for show, putt for dough". I dare say I was ahead of my time back in 2005 when I started this THREAD. I took a beating at the time, even from some people who have now changed their tune. :whistle: 

If you're talking about me, you're mostly right. I can't remember what I was thinking back then, but I do remember you went on about how FAR you hit the ball in several topics, and I remember thinking that my objection centered around distance as a huge component.

Distance, as we now know, is a good-sized component of driving, but there's more to it than that of course, like avoiding penalties, etc.

But yeah, that topic is a good one that shows that I'm not one to stick with something just because it seems right. Good reminder though of a few things…

  • New facts can surface.
  • That we should all be willing to change our minds when presented with better information.

(That doesn't mean that I'm going to ease off what I feel now just because it might change. We didn't understand the earth's gravitational pull until we did, and we're much further along in understanding where scoring occurs now than we were 12+ years ago. :-D)

9 hours ago, bones75 said:

A takeaway from this thread is that I may have a better long game, even if it's shorter distance-wise than my friends, because I keep it in play and 250 w/ driver is enough for now. (14 FIR's isn't that unusual for me).  However, perhaps the easiest way to progress from here is for me to get longer?  (I was ~270 yds years back when i was a 6-7 HI).

Perhaps, yes. Distance throughout the bag will help a bit.

1 hour ago, Runnin said:

I don't see these two skills, the long and short game, as being as separate as is being implied, especially if you are including mid and short irons as part of the long game.  All iron play is closely related.  If you can hit decent 5 irons with varying depths of divots you're gonna have plenty skill around the greens. 

I disagree. I've seen people who have great full swings, but who can't pitch or chip anywhere near their handicap level. Or I've seen some guys with relatively good short games who desperately need to work on their full swings. I don't think hitting pitches or bunker shots or chips and flushing a 5-iron go as hand-in-hand as you may want to believe, generally speaking.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

1 hour ago, Runnin said:

I don't see these two skills, the long and short game, as being as separate as is being implied, especially if you are including mid and short irons as part of the long game.  All iron play is closely related.  If you can hit decent 5 irons with varying depths of divots you're gonna have plenty skill around the greens. 

I think of it as 3 categories of shot making: the driver, irons and the putter.  Fairway woods fall more under the category of irons for me, even when hit off the tee.  Of course, you can try and swing up on it and hit it like a driver, but that's when the trouble starts for me.  Short chipping is half putting.

I guess my time allocation is close to this:

Driver - 20%

Irons - 70%

Putter - 10%

That puts wedge practice and chipping in the iron category.  I probably practice short approach shots and wedges more than I need now but it's a way to practice without wearing out my back or wrists on driving range mats.   Most of my driver practice is far below 100% effort for the same reason.  I'd like to be able to beat balls longer but I've overdone it before and learned my lesson.

This seems reasonable. I only hit my driver 5%, but looking at my performance on the course probably should spend 20%...

:ping:  :tmade:  :callaway:   :gamegolf:  :titleist:

TM White Smoke Big Fontana; Pro-V1
TM Rac 60 TT WS, MD2 56
Ping i20 irons U-4, CFS300
Callaway XR16 9 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S
Callaway XR16 3W 15 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S, X2Hot Pro 20 degrees S

"I'm hitting the woods just great, but I'm having a terrible time getting out of them." ~Harry Toscano

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

1 hour ago, iacas said:

If you're talking about me, you're mostly right. I can't remember what I was thinking back then, but I do remember you went on about how FAR you hit the ball in several topics, and I remember thinking that my objection centered around distance as a huge component.

Distance, as we now know, is a good-sized component of driving, but there's more to it than that of course, like avoiding penalties, etc.

But yeah, that topic is a good one that shows that I'm not one to stick with something just because it seems right. Good reminder though of a few things…

  • New facts can surface.
  • That we should all be willing to change our minds when presented with better information.

(That doesn't mean that I'm going to ease off what I feel now just because it might change. We didn't understand the earth's gravitational pull until we did, and we're much further along in understanding where scoring occurs now than we were 12+ years ago. :-D)

 

It was you among others. We all have to be able to open our minds to other options especially when the data shows us another direction. Lord knows I've made more than a few changes in the way I think.

I am ordering your book in the next week. I am looking forward to reading it, as of now I think it is probably the best way for me to drop a couple more strokes, The swing is what it is at 45 years old I have probably hit it as well as I can.

  • Upvote 1

Danny    In my :ping: Hoofer Tour golf bag on my :clicgear: 8.0 Cart

Driver:   :pxg: 0311 Gen 5  X-Stiff.                        Irons:  :callaway: 4-PW APEX TCB Irons 
3 Wood: :callaway: Mavrik SZ Rogue X-Stiff                            Nippon Pro Modus 130 X-Stiff
3 Hybrid: :callaway: Mavrik Pro KBS Tour Proto X   Wedges: :vokey:  50°, 54°, 60° 
Putter: :odyssey:  2-Ball Ten Arm Lock        Ball: :titleist: ProV 1

 

 

 

 

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Administrator
27 minutes ago, NM Golf said:

It was you among others. We all have to be able to open our minds to other options especially when the data shows us another direction.

What we lacked back then was the data. And I still think that topic felt like it was mostly about distance. But who the hell knows…?

It also serves as a reminder that just because a good player says something it may not be true at all.

You’ll enjoy the book. :-)

  • Upvote 1

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

(edited)

I got your book through my library (Inter-Library Loan)  I will start perusing it soon.

Edited by Zekez

On 9/19/2017 at 4:01 PM, NM Golf said:

I have been a saying long game was more important for 15 years. I always scoffed at the saying "Drive for show, putt for dough". I dare say I was ahead of my time back in 2005 when I started this THREAD. I took a beating at the time, even from some people who have now changed their tune. :whistle: 

Good thread. . .

Actually, I read Erik's first few responses, and they seem consistent with whatever he says now. Some people were beating you up but at least half agreed with what you stated in your OP.

Yet, there are plenty of 225 yard average golfers who play better than 270 yard golfers because of a pretty amazing short game and a command of their long irons and woods. I'm sure you run into the senior player who hits a Driver then 3W on a 400 yard hole and ends up rolling onto the green consistently.

I also agree that given the same ability to play short game, that distance helps.

In general, it's tough to generalize on any statement like "Drive for show and putt for dough." but it's also tough to generalize and say "a 270 yard average player will always beat the 225 yard player" as well.

:ping:  :tmade:  :callaway:   :gamegolf:  :titleist:

TM White Smoke Big Fontana; Pro-V1
TM Rac 60 TT WS, MD2 56
Ping i20 irons U-4, CFS300
Callaway XR16 9 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S
Callaway XR16 3W 15 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S, X2Hot Pro 20 degrees S

"I'm hitting the woods just great, but I'm having a terrible time getting out of them." ~Harry Toscano

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

On 9/19/2017 at 7:59 PM, bones75 said:

A takeaway from this thread is that I may have a better long game, even if it's shorter distance-wise than my friends, because I keep it in play and 250 w/ driver is enough for now. (14 FIR's isn't that unusual for me).  However, perhaps the easiest way to progress from here is for me to get longer?  (I was ~270 yds years back when i was a 6-7 HI).

Well, where are you losing strokes compared to where you want to be?  

Also, I know I sound like a broken mp3 telling everyone this in response to your question, but consider a Game Golf.  They're slightly more than $100 off Amazon now and helped me narrow onto where I was losing strokes.  I also had a round where one of my skills was at 0 strokes lost compared to Scratch (for that round at least) and that feeling was well worth every penny I paid for the device. 

-- Michael | My swing! 

"You think you're Jim Furyk. That's why your phone is never charged." - message from my mother

Driver:  Titleist 915D2.  4-wood:  Titleist 917F2.  Titleist TS2 19 degree hybrid.  Another hybrid in here too.  Irons 5-U, Ping G400.  Wedges negotiable (currently 54 degree Cleveland, 58 degree Titleist) Edel putter. 

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Want to join this community?

    We'd love to have you!

    Sign Up
  • TST Partners

    PlayBetter
    TourStriker PlaneMate
    Golfer's Journal
    ShotScope
    The Stack System
    FitForGolf
    FlightScope Mevo
    Direct: Mevo, Mevo+, and Pro Package.

    Coupon Codes (save 10-20%): "IACAS" for Mevo/Stack/FitForGolf, "IACASPLUS" for Mevo+/Pro Package, and "THESANDTRAP" for ShotScope. 15% off TourStriker (no code).
  • Posts

    • It’s not live on free to air tv in the UK, and hasn’t been since 1995. ( I pay a subscription to Sky for generally good golf coverage). There are limited highlights on the BBC for some golf events, but that’s it. Are other/all PGA events on NBC?  Allowing ticket scalping is a systemic failure across sports and showbiz, which could be legislated against, but in the UK is not in any meaningful way. I don’t know much about the secondary market in the US or anti scalping measures.  Charging more to keep prices down is an interesting concept, in practice no doubt you are right even if It sounds a bit Catch 22  Do you think sports tickets and broadcast rights  should be sold on a purely capitalist basis, or is there an argument to say that some sports might benefit more from wider exposure and affordable access. ( golf in the US is apparently not one of these if tickets sold out at those prices so quickly)  Fans might benefit from cheaper tickets and in the UK at least, TV coverage that reaches a wider audience.     
    • LPGA Updates Gender Policy for Competition Eligibility | News | LPGA | Ladies Professional Golf Association Accordingly, under the new policy, athletes who are assigned female at birth are eligible to compete on the LPGA Tour, Epson Tour, Ladies European Tour, and in all other elite LPGA competitions. Players assigned male at birth and who have gone through male puberty are not eligible to compete in the aforementioned events.
    • Day 65 - 2024-12-04 Helped @NatalieB with her stuff on the force plates, then hit some balls working on the left wrist stuff. Picking up the club.
    • Day 216 (4 Dec 24) - Dink and roll Weds - working on the green side short game covering 5-10 yd chips to low running pitches to about 50 yds (I have accommodating neighbors).  Focused on keeping stance more narrow, eye target about 2” in front of the ball AND not looking up until I see the ball leave.  This drill has really enhanced my confidence in making more consistent ball strikes.  
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to TST! Signing up is free, and you'll see fewer ads and can talk with fellow golf enthusiasts! By using TST, you agree to our Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy, and our Guidelines.

The popup will be closed in 10 seconds...