Tom - I'm reminded of the 1998 Masters, when Jack Nicklaus finished 6th, at 58 years old, on a soon-to-be-replaced left hip, with a short game that was nothing to write home and in the rain the first two days (such that he was quite short off the tee). From what I watched and can remember, he managed that finish by playing his approach shots brilliantly - hitting them from the correct spots in the fairway to the correct/safe spots on the greens and, when he missed the greens, missing them in the correct/safe spots. It was a fine lesson in "Course Management on a Second Shot Golf Course" -- a dying art, I think, especially amongst so-called "good" (i.e. not as good as they think) golfers, who in the last decade have benefitted a lot from the new equipment/technology, and so have gotten used to hitting more greens with shorter irons, and have equated those GIRs with playing good golf. What they haven't noticed is how rarely they're hitting it to the right part of the green, or missing it in the right place. And one of the reasons (besides ego) that they don't notice is that there are so few courses around that force them to notice, and/or that penalize them when they don't. I think the old greats (Hogan, Nicklaus, Trevino, Miller) would've been quick to point that out to them.
Peter
PS - I might be confusing this with another stat, but I thought I heard mention on a recent telecast that someone Luke Donald does very well in this regard, while Phil Mickleson (he of the 7 degree driver and 320 bombs and 4 wedges) doesn't. It's telling I think.
Peter:
You should really read the entire article, it's in the September 12 GOLF WORLD, written by David Barrett.
However, since it's not often found on newsstands, I'll report they printed charts of the best and worst putters over the past four years (2008-11) according to the statistics. Luke Donald was #1 -- he gains 0.869 shots per round putting, over an average Tour player. Tiger Woods was tenth overall at 0.518 -- two shots better over 72 holes. [They remarked that Tiger's numbers were slipping, but the average hadn't fallen much because he hasn't posted that many rounds in the last year or two.] Greg Chalmers, Brian Gay, Aaron Baddeley, Bryce Molder, Carl Pettersson, Brad Faxon, Dean Wilson, and Brent Snedeker were the rest of the top 10.
Mickelson was right about average among Tour players, at 0.018. Steve Stricker, Jim Furyk, Geoff Ogilvy and Hunter Mahan were well above average; Dustin Johnson, Bubba Watson, Sergio Garcia, and Ernie Els somewhat below average. The only guy in the bottom ten who's ever won a major is John Daly, and I'd guess he was a much better putter back then.
Overall, I guess I was fairly amazed how close together the players are grouped. Only a dozen guys gain an average of two shots on the field over 72 holes with their putting prowess, and even the difference between the best putter on Tour (Donald) and the worst (Joe Durant) is 1.5 shots per round [or six per 72 holes]. Of course, that probably shows that Durant is a hell of a ball striker just to stay out there, and that other guys who are bad putters but not quite as good a ball striker just can't keep their cards.
The article did also note that this large data set does not take into account whether you're 15 feet above the hole on the 7th at Augusta, or 15 feet below the hole on some flat green at the TPC of Podunk, which would certainly make a difference ... it probably drags down the proficiency numbers of the elite players who play more of their schedules on tough greens. And certainly, Old Macdonald tries to make it matter where you miss ... those sharp edges of the greens make you play more toward the center, which makes you more likely to three-putt.