Tiger’s Chip-In Won’t Be Matched as Masters Feels New Grooves
2010-04-07 04:00:10.0 GMT
By Michael Buteau
April 7 (Bloomberg) -- Tiger Woods made one of the Masters
Tournament’s greatest shots five years ago with a club that’s
now illegal. It’s unlikely the stroke will be duplicated this
week as the golf season’s first major event rocks to a new
groove.
The sloping greens at Augusta National Golf Club, where the
Masters starts tomorrow, require precise approach shots, and the
V-shaped grooves on the clubface now mandated for use by all
professionals may get their first true test three months into
the season, players and equipment makers said.
The new grooves are more narrow and shallow than the U-
shaped ones used until Jan. 1, and make it more difficult for
players to get spin on shots, especially with wedges used around
putting greens. Those shots, such as the chip by the then 29-
year-old Woods up and down a slope into the cup on the 16th hole
en route to his 2005 Masters victory, might be harder to pull
off this year, club manufacturers said.
“This will be the true, true test of what’s happened with
the groove change,” Paul Loegering, PGA Tour manager for
TaylorMade Golf Co., maker of the most-used driver on the U.S.
men’s pro circuit, said in an interview at the Arnold Palmer
Invitational in Orlando, Florida. “It’s going to enhance what
everybody’s been looking forward to on how much it’s going to
affect the players and their score.”
Through the Palmer two weeks ago the scoring average on the
U.S. PGA Tour was up to 71.32 per round from 71.17 last year. At
the tournament, many players faced fast greens for one of the
few times in the early season, after wet conditions at events on
the U.S. West Coast that make it easier to stop approach shots
near holes on slower putting surfaces.
Higher Scores
Of the first eight events of the season, played on damp
courses in Hawaii and California and flatter layouts in Arizona,
the scoring average rose higher than a year earlier in just
three tournaments.
Once the tour hit the greens of Florida, made firm by
constant winds and lack of spring rains, scoring averages
started to move up. In three of the four events that make up the
U.S. circuit’s “Florida Swing,” the scoring average rose from
2009.
One of the most noticeable changes in the way players hit
chip shots around greens is the absence of the “two-hop-and-
stop” shot. Previously, players were able to use a pitching
wedge to loft the ball toward the flag with a high amount of
spin. After about two bounces, the ball would stop in its
tracks.
“That shot is done,” said Rob Waters, PGA Tour manager
with clubmaker Cleveland Golf Co. “It’s a thing of the past. It
was taken away with what the U.S. Golf Association did with the
groove change.”
Different Plan
That doesn’t mean players are unable to hit the shot they
need. They simply have to do it in a different manner, said
Brandt Snedeker, 29, who finished third at the 2008 Masters.
“The days of hitting it with two skips and having it come
back to you aren’t there anymore,” he said, “but there’s still
enough spin on them where you can do what you need to around the
greens.”
Golf’s governing bodies, the USGA and the Royal & Ancient
Golf Club of Scotland, banned square-grooved clubs because of
criticism that they had allowed professional golfers too much
ability to use backspin to control approach shots, even out of
deep rough after missing the fairway from the tee.
Recreational golfers can continue to use U-shaped grooves
until Jan. 1, 2024.
Players said the groove change has forced them to adjust
how they attack the course. Nowhere will that be more evident
than around the greens at the Masters, said Waters, who spends
his days adjusting and building clubs for players looking for
the perfect combination of loft and spin.
Roll It
“You’re going to see a lot more guys at Augusta playing
the ball on the ground, rolling it and feeding it to the pin,”
he said. “In the past, they would fly it up onto the top shelf
and stop it.”
Augusta National, in Augusta, Georgia, is one of the few
top courses where fairways are lined with toe-high rough instead
of ankle-deep grass. Its undulating greens can make even simple
shots outside the fairways more difficult, players said. In
turn, there’s a greater importance on accuracy than distance at
Augusta, 2003 Masters champion Mike Weir said.
Players need to pay “attention to the architecture of a
particular hole” and not just “bomb it out there and not worry
about whether he lands it in the rough or not,” said Weir, 39,
who ranks 128th in driving distance on the tour with an average
of 275 yards. “There’s always room for the longer player, but
he needs to hit the fairway, too.”