What constitutes a great shot is one of the most subjective aspects of the game but, courtesy of Clippd, we now have a different and very clever way of measuring things. Cam Young began his Open campaign with a brilliant 64 at St Andrews; there were eight birdies, no dropped shots, he hit 8/16 fairways (ranked 109th), 18/18 greens (1st), 30 putts (15th) and averaged 336.4 yards off the tee (35th).
Now we begin to draw our own conclusions as to why it all played out so well, and where he could improve, but Clippd take it several steps further by ranking every shot through a Shot Quality measurement. This is ranked from 0-200 with 0 the worst possible outcome, 100 being the expected standard of a tour player and 200 being perfection, ie a hole-in-one or holing a shot from distance.
They also take into account start lie, end lie, course difficulty and the weather conditions. When compared to Strokes Gained, Shot Quality is not as sensitive, Clippd say, to shots at either end of the quality spectrum. Shot Quality thereby reduces volatility in the measure of a shot’s objective quality.
Young’s 64 added up to an Average Shot Quality of 115 (100 is what Clippd’s algorithms expect of a tour player) – his individual parts were 121 (Off The Tee), 115 (Approach), 172 (Around The Green) and 108 (Putting).
The 115 may seem low, given what the score finished as, but this is an average across all of the shots that he hit and each of the individual categories represent different numbers of shots. Most of his shots were APP and PUTT so they have a disproportionate influence on the overall shot quality.
The Around The Green numbers fly off the page but, such was his accuracy with his irons, they were only based on two shots.
Where the 64 begins to emerge more clearly is through his Shot Quality Tracker which demonstrates all 64 shots and this is the real genius of the technology. Here we get an immediate at-a-glance view of Young’s 64, a score that might not be bettered all week. Of those 64 shots 27 scored 120 or above for Shot…
..
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Golf Monthly RSS Feed…