Let me put it this way...
Let's say there is a tournament of flipping coins (about same percentages of hitting a fairway that is 25 yards wide like at US Open). Obviously, who wins this tournament is purely on luck.
What if there is a guy with a weighted coin that comes up heads 60% of times instead of 50%?
If there was a tournament, this guy would win for sure, correct?
Well, yes and no. Over thousands of coin flip, the guy with the weighted coin will win. However, if we are talking about only 72 flips in a tournament and there are 100 other players flipping, by pure luck, there is a better chance that one of the 100 players with a non-weighted coins will win than the person with the weighted coin. That winner will win on pure luck, not because he flipped better than the person with the weighted coin.
The narrower you make the fairway and eliminate the chances of recovery, you are increasing the influence of luck in determining the winner, not skill (and results above show it).
I disagree, and I even disagree that the list of U.S. Open champions is weak. Over the last forty or fifty years, the U.S. Open was typically played on a course with very narrow (20-35 yards) fairways and green 4-6" rough. The player thought best equipped to handle these conditions was an accurate ballstriker. Look at the list of champions. Lee Trevino, Larry Nelson, Hale Irwin, Lee Janzen...these guys were really accurate ballstrikers, capable of hitting fairways and then small greens with longer irons.
The first golf tournament I remember watching carefully on television was the final round of the 1981 U.S. Open. I was just starting to get interested in golf at the time. If I am not mistaken, David Graham hit every fairway and 17 of 18 greens to win the tournament at Merion GC. That's golf artistry of a type that is rarely rewarded anymore. That's not luck, that's skill.
I don't get your thinking on this at all.
For one thing, one player does not that type of advantage (60% vs 50% success) over all other players. The fact that the field still beats that player more often than not (assuming you've verified that fact) is the nature of golf, where there are 150 possible winners, and a great player wins about 10% of the time.
Hi Phil,
Similarly, I disagree that big bounces will even out over 72, or especially 36 holes. If a player gets 5 or 6 wild bounces over a couple days, and instead of a 3-3 split he gets 5-1 bad bounces, it may cost them a spot on the weekend. If I'm not mistaken, the chances of having a 5-1 distribution of bad to good bounces is about 1 in 11 (9.4%). I expect at least one or two top players missing the cut by a stroke or two, while able to identify a specific bad break that cost them. So we'll see if that happens. It's not a bad thing, unless you're a golfer who dislikes "unfairness".