and I can't remember the last time I saw a guy on TV putt it straight over the center of the hole. It doesn't happen. If anything, it's less than 5%...
Your mind seems to be made up not based on the ShotLink data or anything like that, but based on what you
think is true or what you "
can imagine." I think you'd be shocked at how often the ball rolls over enough of the hole for the flagstick to help.
You'd likely not have guessed that this is at all accurate either based on what you "think" or "can imagine," but it is:
I'm interested in discussing how this works in the real world because I've seen plenty of slow rolling putts hit the pin and deflect out
Gotta love the anecdata.
and very few putts (that would have had the pin out, but now have the choice) fly over the center of the hole.
A putt rolling at a speed that would go 4' by the hole is not "flying over the center of the hole." It's often hitting the back lip and nearly going in. And in my testing, 100% of the putts at 4' by speed went in… whether the flagstick was in or out. But at 1/2" off center, those numbers start to drop. At 4' by and 3/4" off center, 36% more putts went in than missed (44% vs. 8%).
I understand that analyzing those very few putts (the ones that would have flown over the center of the hole...) leads to the conclusion that its an advantage, and a free one at that...but the numbers are so small, and my experiences so one-sided the other way that I have to ask questions...
Even on a putt rolling 3' by (stimp 10) my study found a 22% advantage in holing putts… 1" off-center. (A ball misses the flagstick at ~1.09".) The percentages for other speeds and locations are often quite a bit higher.
Your experiences about the flagstick hurting more than helping isn't backed up by the studies that have been done.