Some non-golfers can be forgiven for thinking that a scratch handicapper is equal to a touring professional, but the truth is that there is miles between the two.
Thanks to numbers from Arccos Golf, with data gleaned from more than 540 million shots from 11.5 million rounds worldwide, we’ve been able to take a look at some vital scratch handicap stats and compared them with data from the official PGA Tour website.
As you can imagine, the differences are vast – after all the handicap of PGA Tour players has been estimated at +5.4 – and the PGA Tour pro numbers are quite frightening, especially when you consider that they play on some of the world’s hardest golf courses kept in pristine condition with long rough and challenging tournament hole locations.
Probably the biggest difference between a tour pro and a scratch player is driving distance, with Arccos finding that scratch players average 259 yards off the tee. That’s some 40 yards behind PGA Tour average and over 60 yards behind the 2022 driving distance leader Cameron Champ.
Unsurprisingly, PGA Tour pros are more accurate off the tee, too. The scratch golfer finds 51% of fairways while the touring professional hits just under 60%. During the 2022 season, Ryan Armour led the accuracy chart with an incredible 73.95% of fairways found across the year.
As well as more fairways off the tee, tour pros find more greens in regulation just as you’d expect. Scratch golfers hit an average of 56% of greens in regulation, with the PGA Tour average standing at 65.57%. Masters champion Scottie Scheffler led the tour with an incredible 72.29% for the 2022 season.
On the greens, touring pros are also well ahead of scratch players when it comes to the number of 1-putts, 3-putts and total putts per round. Scratch golfers average 1.3 3-putts per round, with the PGA Tour average standing at 0.54. Talor Gooch averaged just 0.27 3-putts per round in the 2022 season.
Zero digit golfers have 5.2 1-putts per round, again well behind the pro. During the 2022 PGA Tour season, the 1-putt average was 7.04, with Australia’s Lucas Herbert averaging an incredible 8.09 1-putts per round. Herbert also topped the putts-per-round statistic, perhaps unsurprisingly, with an average of just 27.7 – a full three less…
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