By
Hal Phillips
Editor's Note: The article was originally published in 2006.
Seven thousand, four hundred and forty-five—Not too long ago, that number was as distant as the Sun and
as
far-fetched as 460cc drivers and a player more than halfway to Jack Nicklaus’
record of 18 majors before his 30th birthday. But now, as 30-year-old
Tiger
Woods goes after his 11th major wielding a driver as big as his
head, Augusta
National Golf Club’s 7,445-yard layout doesn’t even seem
that long.
Still, it’s big news every time Augusta National changes its
layout,
and most of the build-up prior to the 70th Masters, which begins April
6, will focus on the lengthening of six holes—1, 4, 7, 11, 15 and
17—for a total
of 155 additional yards. Among the talking points will
be whether the added
length will help or hurt Woods’ chances of winning
his fifth Masters, whether
the change is good for the game and the
possibility of a rolled-back, uniform
“Masters ball.”
But forget those questions. There’s another one that’s more
intriguing. Whether attending the event or watching on television, who
among us
hasn’t wondered: “What would I shoot?”
The answer, or at least the question, provides a window into
an
ongoing trend: the disparity in the pros’ and amateurs’ games. The average
driving distance on the PGA Tour went from 260 yards in 1993 to 290
yards last
year. At the top, John Daly averaged 289 yards per drive in
1993, nearly nine
yards longer than second-place Davis Love III. Last
year, Daly averaged 310
yards per drive, good for fifth place; Scott
Hend’s average of 318.9 yards led
the tour.
At the same time, amateurs’ distances have remained stagnant.
According to Golf Digest, the average driving distance of amateur
golfers in
1993 was 193 yards. In a 2004 study conducted by former U.S.
Golf Association
Technical Director Frank Thomas, the average driving
distance of male golfers
shooting from 90 to 95 is 192 yards.
The pros’ increase has resulted in a change in the way they
play the
game, even at majors, normally the most difficult playing conditions
tour players encounter all year. Rather than worry about precision,
long the
quality major winners used to negotiate these demanding
setups, the bombers hit
their drivers as far as they can.
At last year’s U.S. Open, Woods’ coach, Hank Haney, told Golf
World,
“The game has changed because everybody plays the power game. They’ve
realized it’s better to be in the rough 100 yards from the hole than it
is to be
in the fairway with a 5- or 6-iron in their hands.”
In 2005, two of the biggest proponents of this strategy,
Woods and
Phil Mickelson, won three majors between them. Defending U.S. Open
champ Michael Campbell isn’t exactly a bunter either: His average
driving
distance at Pinehurst was 294.3 yards.
“It’s just a smash, just a slog,” says Campbell.
“There’s no
finesse in the game. I played with Tiger in the first two
rounds at the PGA, and
he’s hitting it so far it’s frightening. He’s
40, 50 yards past me.” In short,
winning golf is more John Daly, less
Ben Hogan.
In response, the game’s officials have fortified classic
courses in
advance of nearly every recent major championship, moving tees back
and
narrowing fairways. As layouts get longer, power becomes more important as
well, prompting more lengthening—and creating a vicious circle. No
venue
provides a better example than Augusta National during the
Masters, golf’s
most-watched event. It’s held on the same course year
after year, so any changes
are instantly apparent and much
discussed.
But where does this arms race leave the average player, whose
game—equipped with the same technology as the pros—has changed
very
little over
the years? As architects keep moving the back
tees farther
back, they haven’t
done the same for the other
sets of markers—at
Augusta, the gap
between the member and Masters
tees is 1,215 yards.
For decades, one of the biggest allures of golf has been that
it was
a similar sport for all, regardless of skill level. Now, as the pros
fly
iron shots past average players’ best drivers and play 7,000-yard
courses as if
they were pitch and putts, that premise doesn’t
seem
quite so certain. “The
average golfer can’t do to the
golf ball what
the pros can do,” says Jack
Nicklaus. “It’s
just not the same
game.”
To determine just to what extent the game is diverging for
the pros
and amateurs, we asked players, architects and teachers how they
thought the average amateur would play Augusta National and
what he
would shoot
from the back tees in tournament
conditions.
Their analysis shows there truly is a chasm between the pros
and
amateurs. The consensus is that the average player would shoot about
120,
nearly 30 strokes higher than normal—not unexpected. The real
surprise
is that
those extra strokes have less to do with
Augusta’s added
length
than with the challenges
instituted from the start by
course designers
Bobby Jones and Dr. Alister
Mackenzie. In
short, despite all the alterations, the core of what makes good golf hasn’t
changed
all
that much since Augusta National opened in
1932.
The Long and Short of Augusta According to the USGA, the average handicap index is 15.2. A
player
with that index can expect to shoot 90 at most layouts. At Augusta, now designed to
test the best players in the world, the strokes will start to pile up
quickly on
top of that baseline.
Length is part of it. While the tour’s bombers can hit short
irons
into most of these holes, amateurs should not expect to reach par 4s
like
the 455-yard first, 455-yard fifth, 450-yard seventh, 495-yard
10th,
505-yard
11th, 440-yard 17th and the 465-yard 18th in
regulation. The
same goes for the
par-3 fourth, which now
plays 240 yards.
But length isn’t the only factor. Plenty of courses are more
intimidating from tee to green, and most have holes the
average player
can’t
reach from the back tee. “The holes [at
Augusta] are
plenty wide,
the rough isn’t deep,
there are no big carries to
make off the tees,
and you can give most of the
severe hazards
a wide berth,” says
architect Tom Doak.
“Amateurs can negotiate the course reasonably well,” adds Tom
Watson. “From a penalty-stroke perspective, Augusta is pretty
reasonable.”
The potential for penalty strokes is concentrated on the four
shots
over water, all on the back nine—the par 3s, the 155-yard 12th and the
170-yard 16th; and the par 5s, the 510-yard 13th and the
530-yard 15th.
Distance
is not a factor on those shots, since
most will be played with
mid or short
irons.
But they can be tricky, especially the tee shot on 12, where
Tom
Weiskopf put five shots into the water and made 13 in 1980. “How the
amateur
plays 12 is going to be the key to the round,” says Rich Beem.
“If he
keeps
dumping balls into Rae’s Creek, we’ve got a
problem: He may not
finish.”
Which means the average player needs to start quickly on the
front
nine, where there is little danger of accruing penalty strokes, and let
his confidence carry him toward the turn and into Amen Corner, where
plenty of
trouble awaits.
But a good start isn’t a given, both for physical and
psychological
reasons. Greg Norman believes the terrain will give players
trouble. “I
think the golf course is a lot harder than people
realize, in large
part because of elevation changes and uneven
lies,” he says. “The only
true
level lies you get are on the
tees. You can’t really appreciate
these nuances on
television,
and they make club selection very
difficult. And it’s a whole
different ballgame now that they’ve added
so much length.”
If you start poorly, watch out. “As soon as they realize just
how
hard it is, they’d fall apart,” says noted instructor T.J. Tomasi.
“That
sort of thing gets in the head of an average player. I call it
cumulative
disreward. You play a few holes and it hits you: ‘I
can’t
play this golf
course.’ I’ve seen guys play a course too
difficult for
them and more often than
not they collapse. A 16
becomes a 26.”
The Real Trouble Jones and Mackenzie designed Augusta National to be playable
from
tee to green, especially for average golfers, with the test becoming
more
difficult approaching the greens. While the additional
length has
made
the
course more demanding from tee to
green, negotiating
the greens at
today’s
speeds is
more of a challenge as well.
That includes trying to putt and chip to them, especially off
the
tightly mown turf that surrounds most greens. There is little margin
for
error, so if a player’s execution is less than perfect, he
will hit
plenty of
fat or thin shots, either skulling
a lot of short
shots
through greens or having
them
come back to his feet. The
smart play
will be to putt whenever
possible.
Which may not necessarily yield better results. Jones
designed the
greens with plenty of undulation to reward smart, well-executed
approach shots. Even in his day, when the greens were slower
and seeded
with
coarser Bermuda grass, they were
difficult to
negotiate. Today,
the bentgrass
putting
surfaces are among the
scariest in golf—during
the Masters,
there is
reason to
believe they measure well above 13 on
the Stimpmeter. (Greens at most
courses measure 8 or 9.)
At Augusta,
reaching the green will be
relatively
simple compared with the
task of
getting
the ball in the hole. This is where the
strokes will add up
and
demonstrate the biggest difference
between the way pros
and amateurs
play the game today. “People
would be
amazed at the number of putts
they would take,” says
architect Jim Hardy, also a noted swing teacher
and
former
tour player. “The average 16 playing to tournament hole
locations, with
Sunday green speeds, could easily
take 55 putts at
Augusta.”
Contrast that with the Masters putting stats. Last year,
Woods took
just 115 putts, fewer than 29 per round. Chris DiMarco, who lost the
playoff against Woods, averaged 27.5 putts, less than what
some experts
estimate
an amateur would take for nine
holes.
Despite their overall prowess, even the best putters in the
world
have looked foolish at times on the greens, so how the average player
would fare would hinge on how well (or poorly) he can putt.
“If he’s a
good
putter, I believe he might break
100,” says
Doak. “If you can’t
putt on fast
greens,
well, remember how
Tiger putted into the water on
13 last
year? A poor
putter
could do that on four different
holes!”
Final Words Billy Casper may be 74 now, but in his prime, he was one of
the best
players in the world and arguably the best putter. Last year,
the 1970
Masters champion made unwanted news by shooting 105
in the
first round.
“And he
can still play,” Tomasi
points out. “He’s
a lot better than a
16.”
Still, Casper’s game, along with those of fellow past
champions, provides the best perspective about how an amateur would
play Augusta
National. “I don’t have the length you need to
play that
course,” he says. “Even
a good player would
have
trouble. A 16 would
shoot 95 normally, and it could be
15 to
20 shots higher, another putt
on every green.
Easily. Could be as much
as
25 to 30 shots higher if he
played poorly.”
Put it all together and a score of 120 is the over/under,
with our
experts on both sides of the number. “I think it would come down to
needing to two-putt from 35 feet above the hole on 18,” says
Norman.
“And with
that tricky left pin, I don’t think
it’s
likely—he’ll knock
the first one six
feet past
the hole, miss
the putt coming back, tap in
and begrudgingly
sign for
a 121.
But he’ll still be happy.”
Why?
“Because he played Augusta.”
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