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Wasn't there a scientist that proved hitting up on a ball on a tee naturally fades, while hitting down on a ball on the ground naturally draws?Erik, who would that be?
Why he hated Augusta was another story.
Geoff Ogilvy mentioned on the Fried egg podcast that doglegs with a turning point based amateur distance (250-260) cause the pros more grief, i.e., Wailaie. Some guys can carry the corner over the trees, but most either have to take less club or really shape it. It also seems like a lot of doglegs played on tour have a ~160 degree angle, which doesn't put enough pressure on pros to shape a shot. At Augusta there seems to be much harder angles, in the 130-150 degree range on 9, 10, and 13 specifically, that force a player to shape it or as you've seen, be out of position. On 10 that's emphasized with the green sloping hard right to left.
Quote from: Blake Conant on April 21, 2019, 10:03:29 AMGeoff Ogilvy mentioned on the Fried egg podcast that doglegs with a turning point based amateur distance (250-260) cause the pros more grief, i.e., Wailaie. Some guys can carry the corner over the trees, but most either have to take less club or really shape it. It also seems like a lot of doglegs played on tour have a ~160 degree angle, which doesn't put enough pressure on pros to shape a shot. At Augusta there seems to be much harder angles, in the 130-150 degree range on 9, 10, and 13 specifically, that force a player to shape it or as you've seen, be out of position. On 10 that's emphasized with the green sloping hard right to left. That's why added length could make 13 an easier hole...
If the trac man is to be believed, I’d say we ought to be building more holes that force players to turn it over, since it seems they all fade the ball anymore.