As to your previous post, Broadie and others show that statistically, longer hitters are straighter, with exceptions of course.
Yep. Faster players tend to be better players, so they also tend to be more skilled and thus hit it straighter.
https://share.getcloudapp.com/kpuDvbYK - There's the image from ESC.
The illustration provided by Erik says "Longer hitters tend to be straighter. Driver distance and driver accuracy improve with golfer skill."
The illustration also shows only tour pros hitting it 300 yards. It does not show the 100 shooters that can drive it 300 yards. It does not show the 90 shooters that can drive it 300 yards. It does not show 80 shooters that can drive it 300 yards. It looks somewhat like data tailored to the premise.
Where are the
... I know a couple of players who only use irons because they struggle to keep shots with woods/metals in play. Not much worse than looking for your golf ball …. well, unless it’s looking for someone else’s!!
Atb
PS - there’s a great line in Tommy Armours modestly titled 1954 book ‘How to play your best golf all the time’ where he states “Play the shot you’ve got the greatest chance of playing well, and play the shot that makes the next shot easy.”
We all know Arnold's dad taught him to hit it long, long before he taught him to hit it straight.
Ben Hogan was one of the longest on tour, but couldn't stick on tour until he learned to hit it straighter.
Length is mostly athleticism, accuracy is mostly trained skill.
Babe Ruth and Mickey Mantle could hit it farther than most pros, but couldn't hit it straight and score.
Most players graduating from the lower tour to the pga tour learn that they have to restrict their distance if they want to stick to the big tour.