Please Note: This is not another thread about the greens at Chambers Bay. It is instead a thread about randomness in architecture and maintenance that uses the greens at Chambers Bay to initiate its examination. Please do not make this a thread about the greens at Chambers Bay. I want instead to use this thread to examine how features that encourage randomness - undulation and contour and firm and fast conditions, etc. - ACTUALLY affect outcomes of golf tournaments.
Previous installment in this series: http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,59158.0.htmlFollowing the US Open at Chambers Bay, much was made of the bumpy greens with numerous golfers and media members suggesting that the conditions emphasized luck over skill.
This is the same argument that we've heard for years about links golf from advocates for lush and green - that the random bounces on links courses reward luck instead of skill. We've been told that if a course intends to "identify the best player," "good shots" must be rewarded with predictable results.
Still, I've always been compelled by looking at the long list of legendary ballstrikers who have also been winners in the Open Championship. I've always personally suspected that the ability to control ballflight in turn gives a player more control than his opponent over the outcome of shots on a fast and firm and unpredictable course. To simplify, I've always figured that great skill makes the unpredictable more predictable, in the same way that slippery roads may lead to more random skids, but ultimately also reveal the drivers who can best handle their vehicle while exposing the ones who are incompetent.
The controversy surrounding the greens at Chambers Bay seems to present an opportunity to explore the effects of randomness in design/maintenance on outcomes in golf. By consensus, the greens were bumpy and inconsistent. Also by consensus, the greens at Augusta National during the Masters roll as true as any greens in the world. With that in mind, I decided to do a quick look at the outcome of the season's first two majors, and examine whether good putters were significantly favored on one course versus the other.
"Methodology"I made a spreadsheet and compared a player's finish against their rank in strokes gained putting. Then I plotted the points and calculated the correlation coefficient.
ResultSo, Chambers Bay clearly didn't uniquely favor good putters. In fact, there was a slightly negative correlation coefficient between a player's finish and their rank in strokes gained putting. Meanwhile, good putters at the Masters were slightly more likely to finish higher on the leaderboard.
However, the correlation between strokes gained putting and final position for BOTH tournaments is so tiny and over such a small data sample that we can effectively say it's completely insignificant. Whether the greens are perfect or bad enough to make Billy Horschel take a dump in the hole, putting skill still wasn't of much importance to where a player finished in each tournament. At Chambers Bay, the top five featured the 158th, 121st, and 189th ranked putters on Tour. At Augusta, 8 players who finished T12th or better were ranked 120th or worse in putting.
All this raises the question for me of how other random features affect the importance of skill in a golf tournament's outcome. Do windy or firm conditions raise or lower the importance of good ballstriking? Does lush and unpredictable rough around greens increase or decrease the importance of short game skills? What about green contours? If smooth greens don't necessarily reward great putters, do flat greens reward them? Or does contour better emphasize putting skill?
Also, I put "methodology" in quotes for a reason. What data has my crappy spreadsheet study failed to take into account? I'm not smart enough to control for a player's world ranking or things like that. A real statistician may look at my conclusion and see that I've completely overlooked several factors and reached a totally incorrect conclusion as a result.
I continue to believe that a modicum of randomness doesn't negate skill, and may in fact emphasize it. What other data should be examined to determine whether this is true?