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Adam Scott’s odd driver tweak pays off

Adam Scott’s odd driver tweak pays off

Adam Scott said he wouldn’t call it a low point — that Thursday in March during the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill when he didn’t put a driver in his bag.

He said the conditions necessitated avoiding rough and finding fairways, so he elected to go with his 2-wood.

But still, after carding a blemish-free, 6-under 66 at Detroit Golf Club on Friday morning and walking off the course tied for second at 9 under par at the 2022 Rocket Mortgage Classic, he admitted had he carried the confidence on that day that he does now with his driver, it likely would’ve been in play.

“Yesterday was for sure the best I’ve driven it for a couple of years,” Scott, the 2013 Masters champion, said. “That felt good and I drove it well again today.”

Scott, 42, is second in strokes gained tee-to-green on the week, and fifth in strokes gained off the tee — numbers he hadn’t seen in some time, but something he hopes becomes the norm following the fix he made shortly after the U.S. Open in June.

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It’s not that he played badly, he finished T-14th, but committed to the change because while he consistently felt like he was playing well, he found “a couple of errant drives a day was costing me a chance of shooting rounds like today.”

So, he got in the lab with his swing coach Brad Malone.

“Changing the angle of attack, I’m hitting more down on it than I have been and that’s certainly brought things under control a little bit and that’s kind of a comfort spot for me,” he said. “Whenever you’re comfortable on the golf course, that’s a good thing.”

Scott said the rationale was simple: Maximize his room for error.

As he explains it, in today’s game, by always trying to maximize spin rate and distance, his game is always on a “knife’s edge” so it doesn’t take much — a millimeter here, a degree there — for things to go awry.

But by building in that cushion room, the thinking was he’d be in better position more frequently.

“Just bringing the ball a little more under control,” he said. “It’s funny because I don’t feel like I’ve sacrificed any distance, even though we all think you’ve got to launch it high to hit it far.

“But I’ve certainly hit more fairways and feel like I’m going to.”

He hit 10-for-14 fairways on Thursday and 8-for-14 on Friday, which ranks in the middle of the pack for the tournament, but he has avoided those…

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