nickjdavis
Head Pro
Inspired (
) by the discussion around "never up never in" in the Golf Myths thread, I thought I'd start tracking my putting over the course of the year and trying to chart my "dispersion patterns" from various distances. Played 18 today and made a note of my putting distances and the "leaves" and where they finished in relation to the hole.
This was done without delaying play simply by counting steps taken from my ball to the hole after I'd played, working on the fact that my normal walking pace length is approximately 2ft. Once at the hole I just estimated where the ball lay in relation to the hole in terms of a 360 degree circle around the hole....90/270 degrees represents immediately right/left of the hole, 0 degrees directly beyond the hole, 180 degrees directly short of the hole....I estimated angles in roughly 15 degree increments. So...were not talking Trackman style accuracy here but good enough to get a decent representation of dispersion. The graphs show where the ball finished in terms of feet from the hole....the X and Y axes intersect at the hole....so any mark at 0,0 is a putt holed.
I must say I putted pretty well....didn't hole anything of note, but distance control was largely excellent....took 35 putts in total, didn't miss from 6ft and in, didn't 3 putt any hole. I did not bother logging results for any putt under 3ft.....nor for the temporary green on the 18th where we are having a new pond being built short of the proper green!!
So...the three charts below show short putts (3-10ft), medium length putts (10-25ft), long putts (over 25ft)
There are 6 short putts - distances were 3,3,3,4,6 and 7ft. The 7 footer was missed a foot long, everything else was holed (hence there only being 2 data points on the chart!!!).
7 medium length putts...15,15,17,18,20,22 and 24ft (only 6 points on the middle chart as 2 putts finished the same distance/direction away). The 3ft short putt was from 22ft on a green where the slope runs away from you after the hole...its dead easy to chase a ball 8 or 9ft past if you are a bit lively with the flat stick.
7 long putts...26,27,27,27,36,36 and 39ft....the putt that was left 4ft short was on the trickiest green, putting across a right to left slope from 26ft



Will be interesting (?) to see how these patterns build up as more data is added over the coming weeks/months.
This was done without delaying play simply by counting steps taken from my ball to the hole after I'd played, working on the fact that my normal walking pace length is approximately 2ft. Once at the hole I just estimated where the ball lay in relation to the hole in terms of a 360 degree circle around the hole....90/270 degrees represents immediately right/left of the hole, 0 degrees directly beyond the hole, 180 degrees directly short of the hole....I estimated angles in roughly 15 degree increments. So...were not talking Trackman style accuracy here but good enough to get a decent representation of dispersion. The graphs show where the ball finished in terms of feet from the hole....the X and Y axes intersect at the hole....so any mark at 0,0 is a putt holed.
I must say I putted pretty well....didn't hole anything of note, but distance control was largely excellent....took 35 putts in total, didn't miss from 6ft and in, didn't 3 putt any hole. I did not bother logging results for any putt under 3ft.....nor for the temporary green on the 18th where we are having a new pond being built short of the proper green!!
So...the three charts below show short putts (3-10ft), medium length putts (10-25ft), long putts (over 25ft)
There are 6 short putts - distances were 3,3,3,4,6 and 7ft. The 7 footer was missed a foot long, everything else was holed (hence there only being 2 data points on the chart!!!).
7 medium length putts...15,15,17,18,20,22 and 24ft (only 6 points on the middle chart as 2 putts finished the same distance/direction away). The 3ft short putt was from 22ft on a green where the slope runs away from you after the hole...its dead easy to chase a ball 8 or 9ft past if you are a bit lively with the flat stick.
7 long putts...26,27,27,27,36,36 and 39ft....the putt that was left 4ft short was on the trickiest green, putting across a right to left slope from 26ft



Will be interesting (?) to see how these patterns build up as more data is added over the coming weeks/months.