Eric
Again, it's not simply about the eagles or the birdies, it's about the distribution. If in 1991 18 eagles were recorded then you have to balance that against the "cost," such as the number of double-bogeys, or bogeys if as you say it played like a par 4. If nobody scored bogeys, then I agree: the risk-reward was out of whack then and needed to be fixed.
Jeff, as far as 13 goes, it's not doing terribly on the risk-reward front -- certainly not as screwed up as 15.
Lemme take another crack at this.
I. Cumulative play of the par 5s in Round 2
6 eagles = 1.6% of all scores on par 5s
115 birdies = 30.7%
204 pars = 54.5%
35 bogeys = 9.4%
13 double-bogeys = 3.5%
1 triple-bogey = 0.3%
So:
standard deviation of 0.22 strokes (same as R1)
scores within +/- 1 shot of par = 94.7% of all scores
birdies and pars = 85.3% of all scores
The distribution moved a little in the right direction, but statistically speaking there's no change.
II. Cumulative play for R1+R2
8 eagles = 1.1% of all scores on par 5s
241 birdies = 32.1%
412 pars = 54.9%
65 bogeys = 8.7%
22 double-bogeys = 2.9%
2 triple-bogeys = 0.3%
So:
standard deviation of 0.22 strokes
scores within +/- 1 shot of par = 95.7% of all scores
birdies and pars = 87.1% of all scores
And: the pros are scoring roughly 3 double-bogeys for every eagle. More on that below...
III. Cumulative play on par 5s for 2003, 2005, 2007, 2008 (% of total scores on par 5s) (It would be better to compare to pre-"Hoozio" changes but sorry this is all I've got.)
Eagles = 1.0%, 1.2%, 1.4%, 1.1%
Birdies = 28.8%, 32.9%, 29.8%, 32.1%
Pars = 55.9%, 54.4%, 54.3%, 54.9%
Bogeys = 11.6%, 9.4%, 11.9%, 8.7%
Double-bogeys = 2.0%, 1.5%, 1.7%, 2.9%
Triple-bogeys = 0.7%, 0.5%, 0.8%, 0.3%
Frankly, none of these distributions suggest The Masters in the Naughties has been much about risk-reward.
IV. A simple way to compare the distributions is to calculate the number of eagles per double-bogey. Call it the "Risk-Reward Index."
2003 = 0.48
2005 = 0.82
2007 = 0.86
2008 = 0.36
A perfect balance would be 1:1, or 1.0.
So why the complaining with 2007? Its index rates better than 2003 and 2005 -- although, it needs to be said again, a better comparison would be data from pre-Hoozio.
Not only that, 2007 totaled 18 eagles -- 45 percent more than in 2003 or 2005.
It's not about the total number of eagles! It's about their distribution across the days of the tournament, their ratio to risk (double-bogeys) -- and their distribution across the holes.
V. Distribution across holes
The problem in a nutshell was 15 -- not the only problem, but by far in 2007 the worst-scoring par 5 on the Risk-Reward Index. And this "trend" appears to have continued into the 2008 tournament.
Risk-Reward Index, 15th hole
2003 = 0.83
2005 = 1.00
2007 = 0.33 (versus: 2=2.50, 8=1.00, 13=0.82)
2008 = 0.14 (versus: 2=0.00, 8=0.25, 13=0.75)
It will be interesting to see if this trend continues on the weekend. So far the field has scored no eagles on 2 and just 1 on 15. This out of 188 chances on each hole.
Getting back to 2007, one thing that went wrong (from a "golf theater" perspective) was the field scored only 61 percent of its eagles on the back, versus 73% in 2003 and 86% in 2005.
In fact, half of 2007's eagles came on just one hole: the 13th. But even that hole fell short of ideal: it scored 0.82 on the Risk-Reward Index.
It paid to lay up on 13 and definitely 15.
Mark