Is More Distance the Best Thing for your Game? A Former LPGA Pro Weighs In
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Is More Distance the Best Thing for your Game? A Former LPGA Pro Weighs In

Is More Distance the Best Thing for your Game? A Former LPGA Pro Weighs In

Picture it: You’ve been doing the Bryson DeChambeau regimen and now you’re on the first tee. You feel jacked. The protein powder is pulsing through your veins and the latest and greatest equipment is in your bag. That puny white ball is no match for the new you, despite a few aches from all of those squats you’ve been doing. As the ball explodes off the clubface, you watch it soar towards the trees with that spectacular slice you’ve yet to cure. After a couple of tries, you punch out of the woods and end up with a double bogey.

But, hey, you hit it 280, amiright?

Photo by Lily Farr on Unsplash

Is Distance Everything?

Like many golfers looking to lower their score, you fell victim to the lie that you need to hit it far and that when you do it hit far, you’ll be happy. As you can see from my example, 280 into the woods is not as productive as 250 in the fairway.

Increasing distance should not be your top priority if you’re trying to improve your game. I preach fundamentals. Grip, posture, ball position and alignment should take precedence over 20 extra (wayward) yards off the tee. When those things are out of whack, you can’t and won’t make consistent solid contact with the ball. So all the pushups and pullups in the world won’t help you hit that par-5 in two.

The guys on the PGA TOUR crush it in a way that we mere mortals can’t. They can focus on distance because their fundamentals are rock solid. And if they do get in trouble, they know how to get out of it.

Distance on the LPGA Tour

I say this as someone who averaged around 270 in driving distance during my quick stint on the LPGA Tour. That, by LPGA standards, is far. The amateur male golfer averages around 225 yards off the tee and the average LPGA player about 255. The average PGA TOUR pro? Around 295.

Although I was one of the longest hitters on the LPGA and averaged more than 70 percent of fairways hit, my short game was abysmal. I would have given anything to trade 15 yards off my tee game in exchange for being able to get up and down whenever I needed to. My length was only a strength if I knew how to capitalize on it.

There are a few stats I look at when making the argument as to why distance is often oversold as the thing that will make you a better golfer.

Take the men’s world No. 1, Dustin Johnson. This season he averaged 321.4 yards off the tee, hit 73.6 percent of greens in regulation, averaged 29 putts per round and from 30 yards in, got up and down 50 percent of the time. His short game is awesome.

Now, let’s look at the women’s world No. 1, Jin Young Ko. She averaged 246.8 off the tee, hit 84 percent of greens in regulation, averaged 28.6 putts per round and got up down from the sand 71.43 percent of the time.

Distance or Consistency?

While Johnson’s distance is alluring, I would choose Ko’s game every time. She’s consistent and, more often than not, is playing her second shot from the fairway. If she’s in trouble around the greens, chances are good she will get up and down.

You don’t have to hit it far to enjoy the game and to play well. Yes, it can help your game but only if you also work on other parts of your game at the same time. If you’re still missing the green and not getting up and down, you’re still going to shoot the same score. And sometimes focusing on distance will cause you to forget about the other parts of their game, like putting.

No one can convince me it’s more fun to hit from the trees or hit a second tee ball because they went out of bounds — all for the sake of hitting it farther.

Your goal should be eliminating “Fore!” from your golf vocabulary and replacing it with “I have honors.”

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Anya Alvarez

Anya Alvarez

Anya Alvarez

Anya Alvarez is former LPGA golfer turned sportswriter and producer for outlets such as ESPN and CBS Sports. In an effort to grow the game, Anya hopes to shine a light on how the golf industry can attract more women to the game.

Anya Alvarez

Anya Alvarez

Anya Alvarez

Anya Alvarez

Anya Alvarez

Anya Alvarez





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      Captain Obvious

      3 years ago

      It says your average driving distance on the tour was 258, maybe bring those hands in 2-3 inches and flatten out your swing, get you some more distance!

      Reply

      Jacques

      3 years ago

      Golf IS a distance game. Why do we have different length clubs with different lofts? For particular distances, no?
      But, the length off the tee? That is a determinant of which tee markers to use. Ideally, we drive to 6-7-8 iron distance. But driving from the tips leaves most of us far too long to the green.
      Now, if our tee length is both long and accurate, we have a chance to increase GIR. If we miss these approach shots only slightly, out come the wedges. Then the putter and lower scores.
      If I hit my driver with the same authority and accuracy as I do my 8 iron or wedges, and have that driver close to 300 yards, that would make me VERY unpopular with my pals and I would have to give up strokes to win the pint at the 19th.

      Reply

      greg

      3 years ago

      Mike I think you have the right idea and you basically underscore the author’s premise. Work on swing improvement, consistent, quality ball striking and the score card is rewarded.

      Reply

      Mike

      3 years ago

      There isn’t an LPGA player nor has there ever been one that could compete successfully on the PGA TOUR. The reason. Distance. The writer can say that she would rather have J Y Ko’s game over DJ’s but who would anyone bet on straight up on even a course set up for the LPGA? This is NOT a criticism of Ko or any other female player. 99% (+) of men would take her game in a heartbeat. Certainly myself included. Mark Broadie, along with other things proved that proper technique not only improves accuracy and consistency but also distance. For the most part on TOUR longer hitters while they get further off line the angle of their inaccuracy is actually less. Improve your swing and you will hit the ball longer AND straighter.

      Reply

      Donn Rutkoff

      3 years ago

      Irons and wedges today are so good that I agree with the author. Hitting a 7 wood from fairway, instead of a 8 or 9 wood from trouble, you ought to be able to hit the green and not have to avoid the tree, hit from in the creek, etc.. We are not hitting too many 3 iron second shots on par 4s these days are we.

      Reply

      Greg

      3 years ago

      I disagree, distance is everything but it has to be tempered and used
      appropriately.

      Golf is a game of probabilities and youre much more likely to get the ball in the hole in fewer shots the further up the course you are for the 2nd shot. That being said there is a time and place for power, if youre on the tee with OB left .and water on the right its the smarter move to hit the fairway finder shot or take a different club.
      However when you come to that open par5 with a wide fairway and no trouble (maybe even fairways for other holes left & right) you want to have that bomber swing in your locker and smash it 280. You’d still be on the fairway just maybe not yours :)

      Reply

      Tiger168

      3 years ago

      I disagree with your analogy. On a par 5, if your tee shot goes 280 (you are assuming the drive somehow after you use every muscle in your locker and still goes somehow straight-ish), but, not on the fairway (no matter how wide it is, counting the fairway in the adjacent holes), even if you muscle the second shot, your chance to get back on the fairway and close to the green is less than the chance of a 250-yard drive in the fairway and second still on the fairway. Thus, your chance of the third shot approach from the less than ideal position is not going to be closer than the approach from the fairway. The probability multiplies that you have less of a chance for eagle or birdie than the shorter hitter who has more chance of staying on the fairway. Math doesn’t lie.

      Reply

      Abraham

      3 years ago

      Great message to all golfers. A consistent swing off the tee is extremely valuable. The DJ versus Ko comparison doesn’t really support her argument . . . I would say that DJ has been more successful on the men’s tour than Ko has been on the women’s tour . . . I would have probably used a different example.

      Reply

      Trusty rusty

      3 years ago

      Us mortals should also swallow our pride and play from the correct tee box, that’s one way of getting the distance, remaining fun, and still puts a premium on your 2nd shot to make par. I am above average in length off the tee 235-245 for my age 62. I typically play 62-6300 yard hilly courses. Personally, I would much rather play out of the fairway, than 15 yards more out of “our” rough

      Reply

      Mike

      3 years ago

      From several sources I have read two different formulas.
      1) Play from tees where course length is Avg. Drive distance 25X
      2) Course length = 36 X 5 iron carry
      Of course that would mean admitting how far you ACTUALLY hit the ball.

      Reply

      mike witkowski

      3 years ago

      There is this thing called the sufficiency argument and it applies to many things in life. If you have enough of (fill in the blank – IQ as a function of success, happiness as a function of money, etc.), having incrementally more beyond that point doesn’t change things much; other attributes become more important. I think that is your argument.

      On the other hand, if you only drive the ball 210, then chasing additional distance is a worthwhile pursuit according to “Lowest Score Wins”. Not to mention that becoming a better ball striker improves iron play as well.

      Reply

      Mark

      3 years ago

      Great article. Thank you!

      Reply

      JIM

      3 years ago

      I dont like looking at the new driver with such a large club head. Is there a driver with smaller club head with new materials?

      Thanks

      Reply

      Kiwi Phillip

      3 years ago

      Taylormade mini driver

      Reply

      Tiger168

      3 years ago

      Any strong 3 wood (new material and design) with an adjustable sleeve system can get you between 11~15 degrees of loft (if you hit down/up on it, you might get the idea launch condition (spin/angle), one way or the other). pair it with a super low torque shaft, optimize the shaft length, you get both distance and accuracy. A la, Henrik Stenson…

      Reply

      Alex

      3 years ago

      While I agree that shots from the trees or OB and long don’t help your game– would you rather have 15-20 yards extra but in the rough or be 20 yards back in the fairway? Unless you are playing US open rough or have really elevated greens– I might take the extra distance and two clubs shorter into the green.

      Reply

      HardcoreLooper

      3 years ago

      This is the premise behind DECADE/Lowest Score Wins. It’s all about:

      1. Knowing your dispersion off the tee with different clubs.
      2. Knowing the size of the playing corridor of the hole.
      3. Hitting the longest club that will keep your tee shot in the corridor.

      A golfer who hits their driver 200 yards with a 40-yard dispersion should definitely work to gain distance, even if it means their dispersion increases to 60 yards.

      A golfer who hits their driver 280 yards with an 80-yard dispersion is hitting some serious foul balls that are going to lead to penalties. They’ll want to work on that dispersion, but they’ll also want to develop a 260-yard tee shot with a 60-yard dispersion for narrower holes.

      Reply

      Karsten's Ghost

      3 years ago

      100% agreement. Distance is king, but there are rules as have been stated. Brodie’s book spells it out.

      That said, ignoring your second shot work in order to get distance is a fool’s errand. Distance is the *method* by which you are more likely to hit greens. If you can’t capitalise on that, there’s a bigger problem.

      JitteryWheel

      3 years ago

      Every single top money earner pga player in the top 10 is above the average pga driving distance. 6 of the top 10 money earners on the LPGA are above the lpga average driving distance. Jin Young Ko isn’t on the driving distance list for some reason. Inbee Park, Minjee Lee, and Lydia Ko are below the average driving distance. I expect that their iron play is next level otherwise they wouldn’t be on the money list. Approach play then driving distance are the most important aspects to creating a good score. Don’t take my work for it take Mark Boardie’s :

      The long game, which represents driving and approach shots combined, contributes 68% to total strokes gained; short game and putting combined contribute just 32%.

      Broadie, Mark. Every Shot Counts (p. 116).

      Reply

      Andrew

      3 years ago

      I couldn’t agree more! As a mid 40’s male with testosterone flowing through my veins, I still want to drive the ball 260-270 like I did in my 20’s and 30’s but for every ball striped down the fairway back in the day, four other drives were wayward, it was cool to bang it far but my score often suffered. I had an “older” friend who would always poke it down the middle, hitting easy irons from the fairway, and beat me every time. I finally decided to take his approach.
      I got fitted for the most forgiving driver (now playing the Cobra Speedzone Extreme), shortened the shaft an inch and a half and have never looked back, 230-240 down the middle 4 out of 5 times! This has allowed me to become a better irons player because most shots are from the fairway at a distance I can hit. (I also tee it forward to the whites) Most importantly, I enjoy the game now more than ever.
      Don’t buy the hype! If you are a weekend warrior, accuracy wins over wayward distance every time.

      Reply

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