PROS vs. JOES  (3-Putts)
Labs

PROS vs. JOES (3-Putts)

PROS vs. JOES  (3-Putts)

3-Putts suck. #FACT

They can ruin a great round, but they are avoidable. PGA Tour player Brian Gay, for example, has tallied only 14 three-putts in 1,188 holes! Yes, Brian is a pro, but how do you compare to the Joes (aka: Amateurs)? Today we are putting the PROS vs. JOES to show you how you can narrow the three-putt avoidance gap between vs. the PGA Tour player – or even the next handicap bracket. It could help you shoot lower scores.

First, you need to start collecting putting stats. You can do this the traditional way which can offer insights into the differences between pros and amateurs, but advanced stats are where actionable insights are discovered. That’s where Arccos can shine: the award-winning platform automatically records and analyzes every shot you take on the course, revealing trends that can lead to improvement.

Thanks to ShotLink, the PGA Tour’s system that’s powered by 350 shot tracking volunteers working every day of every tournament (10,000 every year!) and a bevy of full-time employees, we can easily judge the best from the worst among the world’s top players and compare that to the massive dataset in the Arccos ecosystem.

Tour Pros vs. Average Joes

The three-putt avoidance leader on the PGA Tour this season is Brian Gay. As we said, he’s played 1,188 holes during 66 rounds and only carded 14 three-putts. That’s good for a staggeringly low avoidance rate of 1.18%. This year, in fact, there are 16 players on Tour with less than a 2% avoidance rate. Among these are usual suspects Steve Stricker, Jordan Spieth, and Luke Donald, as well as less expected names like Ernie Els and Martin Kaymer.

Bringing up the rear is Boo Weekley. He ranks 202nd, having logged 64 three-putts in 69 rounds this season for an avoidance rate of 5.31%. Weekley’s number may lag on Tour, but it would almost certainly be the best rate in your typical weekend foursome. We’re able to determine that with great accuracy thanks to Arccos. With its system of one ultralight sensor in the grip of each club and a free smartphone app, the company has compiled an extraordinary (and growing) amount of amateur data. Today that includes info about more than 75 million shots recorded during nearly 1 million rounds played in 115 countries.

Average 3-Putt Percentages

In terms of putting, what we see is a player with a handicap in the 1-to-5 range averages a 9.44% three-putt avoidance rate. Not surprisingly, that average increases in a fairly linear fashion, jumping to 11.71% for the 6-to-10 handicapper, 14.51% for the 11-to-15 bracket, and 19.58% for players with a 15+ handicap.

Arccos_MGS_3puttPercent

Another way of looking at this is to break down the average number of three-putts per round by handicap range. The 15+ handicapper averages 3.2 three-putts each round – a rate that’s exactly double that of a 1-to-5 handicap player’s 1.6 average.

Arccos_MGS_3puttPerRound

A Closer Look

While the three-putt percentages are higher, just measuring the number of putts without taking putt distance into account can lead to incorrect or incomplete insights. For example, in this case, it’s likely that the higher your handicap, the farther away you leave your approach shots from the hole. As a result, the traditional stat of 3-putt percentage conflates the strength of the approach game and putting. Through advanced analytics, Arccos can separate the two to give players a better gauge on each aspect of your game.

Arccos can layer traditional stats with advanced metrics to compare amateurs to the pros, as well as amateurs within different handicap brackets. Focusing on three-putt percentage from 20-25 feet and 25+ feet – the biggest brackets the PGA Tour tracks – we see some interesting figures. From 20-25 feet, the 1-5 handicap three-putts 9.43% of the time, rising to 15.08% for the 6-to-10 handicapper and 16.20% for the 11-to-15 bracket

This range is ripe for amateurs to three-jack, but the pros make it look easy. In the 2016 season, there were 26 players who went the entire year without a three-putt from 20-25 feet, and the Tour average was 2.36%. The worst offender was Steve Wheatcroft, and he only carded six three-putts in 95 attempts from that range.

Arccos_MGS_3putt_20-25

From 25+ feet, the pros show why they are on the Tour. Their average for last season was 9.46%. Compared to the 1-5 handicap’s 19.61%, the 6-10 handicap’s 25.59% and the 11-15 handicap’s 26.90%. (In 2016, Adam Hadwin went 314 holes without a three-putt. Some amateurs can’t even make the turn without carding one!)

Arccos_MGS_3putt_25

Arccos can drill down even deeper with its Tour Analytics feature. After each round, Arccos analyzes the five key performance aspects of a player’s game (driving, approach, chipping, sand and putting) using an enhanced version of the strokes gained methodology. This assigns an individual handicap to each facet by accounting for the fact that each situation has a distinct value. The putting handicap, for example, weighs each three-putt differently. A player is expected to three-jack from 40 feet, not so much from 10 feet.

With this as a measurement tool, we see clearly that the best amateur players are, on average, also the best putters. That tracks for the PGA Tour as well. It’s very common for players atop leaderboards at the end of the week also to rank highly in Strokes Gained Putting.

Arccos_MGS_PuttingHandicap

A three-putt is tough to swallow and can be a definite scorecard-killer. But in the case of performance improvement, knowledge is power. So, take a look at your stats, particularly your putting handicap if you’re an Arccos user – and perhaps reevaluate your practice regimen with the flat stick. By narrowing the three-putt avoidance gap between you and a PGA Tour player – or even the next handicap bracket – you’re very likely to shoot some of your best scores.

Your Putting Stats

For You

For You

Golf Wedges
Apr 16, 2024
Vokey WedgeWorks Low Bounce K Grind Wedge
News
Apr 16, 2024
It Was A Masters To Forget For LIV Golf
Golf Apparel
Apr 16, 2024
adidas Pioneers Next Generation of Lightweight Golf Garments
MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

Our mission is #ConsumerFirst. We are here to help educate and empower golfers. We want you to get the most out of your money, time and performance. That means providing you with equipment reviews you can trust, as well as honest reporting on the latest issues affecting the game today. #PowerToThePlayer

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

Driver Ping G30 Hybrids PXG 0317
3/4 IRON PXG 0311XF 5-GW Srixon Z 565
SW PXG 0317 LW PXG 0311
Putter EVNROLL  
MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy

MyGolfSpy





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      Mark Liquorman

      7 years ago

      Additional data that would be interesting. Broken down by handicap, after putting from 25’+, how close to the hole did putt #1 get?

      Reply

      Jon

      7 years ago

      The right tools help. At 66 I had been a yippy putter in my early 50’s. Finally bought a Bocieri Heavy Putter. My putts per round went from 36 to 32.5.

      Just regripped with a Super Stroke Flatso 3.0 and shaved off another stroke.

      To attack the three putt problem one needs to figure out if the problem is the lag putt or the short putt.

      For me it was the short putt and with the heavy putter those are so much easier.

      The other thing is if you have limited practice time cut out the time spent on 12 to 20 foot putts.

      The chance of making them with extra practice is nearly zero and you can nearly always get them close enough to two putt.

      Work on the 3 to 6 footers and the 25+. Best way to avoid 3 putts.

      Sure pros have advantages based on the green conditions. But they are also playing greens super high on the stimp meter with tricky pin placements.

      I am guessing the average Joe would 3 jack as much on those greens as his mini.

      Reply

      Brad Smith

      7 years ago

      MyGolfSpy;
      You’re data centric. Now match that with your description of the data, which in the case of this article, is often stated backwards. In this article, your text consistently describe the percentages incorrectly. In fact, 180* off from being correct. For example, a quote from the article: “a player with a handicap in the 1-to-5 range averages a 9.44% three-putt avoidance rate”. Wrong. That is a “three putt RATE”. The three putt AVOIDANCE rate would be 90.56%. By the way, all of the ARCCOS charts use the correct terminology.

      Reply

      Dan

      7 years ago

      Couldn’t agree more with these stats. When ever I play with a higher handicap then me they consistently lose strokes on the green mainly because they don’t have a routine that includes reading putts from different angles. They get behind the ball take a 30 second look and then putt. A lot of times had they just looked on the other side of the ball it would have helped. Secondly I can’t agree more with the distance putts. Most higher handicaps swing harder at the ball instead of just increasing the swing length with same tempo. This causes them to either blow the ball past the hole or come up short if they didn’t make good contact. Good read and really liked how short game was taken into consideration. That in of itself could be a whole other talking piece.

      Reply

      Bob Pegram

      7 years ago

      It would be interesting to factor in greens hit in regulation to 3-putt percentage (even with Brian Gay). As somebody else mentioned, missing the green and chipping tends to put the shot to the green much closer to the hole than if the green is hit from a great distance.

      Reply

      Regis

      7 years ago

      Many years ago I went to a one day seminar with a top teaching pro. He was great. But his son ran the putting section and was a waste. He could tell I wasn’t paying attention so he screams at me “You. How can we cut down on three putting? I calmly replied “Hit our approaches closer to the pin’

      Reply

      Pete Morris

      7 years ago

      I may have a 3 putt once in three or four rounds. Mainly 2 or 1 putts. Happy with my performance.

      Reply

      Lance Kulman

      7 years ago

      I have played over 800 courses since 2007 and my average in putting is about 27 putts per round. Three putts are rare, probably nearer the pro stats. I find that in the warm up you need to concentrate on speed first then adjust your putting line as you go. Always warm up with short putts, medium and long putts to get the speed of the greens down and your putting stroke. You will three putt less with better speed control. Oh! I liked your answer.

      Reply

      Todd Stuart

      7 years ago

      I agree with the comments regarding the quality of the greens one plays. I play a lot of courses and the better the greens the better my score and the fewer 3 putts. The professional golfers have a big advantage regarding the quality of greens they play on vs the average quality of greens most of us amateurs play. Thus, it is hard to really compare 3 putt averages due to the variables of greens.

      Reply

      Walt Pendleton

      7 years ago

      To putt consistently you need verified practice of four basic putting skills: green reading, verified alignment, ball speed control, and stroke tempo. In the fall of this year you’ll be able to buy a putting stroke…guaranteed at http://www.Nside10.com. Call me for details.

      Reply

      golfraven

      7 years ago

      If you build it ,they will come.

      Reply

      Dan

      7 years ago

      I think one of the most important aspects of this article is that Arccos deviates the length of 3 putts with relevance to short game and distance. I am a 2 handicap and while (3) putts are rare maybe 1 every couple 3-4 rounds which is a big score saver for me. While I know putting is a big part of the game I feel more shots are lost 15 yards and in by most of the 6-10 handicapped players that I personally play with. Which is why I liked more so that this was at least recognized in this article.

      Reply

      Kenny B

      7 years ago

      Obviously, everyone 3-putts from long distance at a higher rate than from shorter range. What’s interesting is that there is not that great of a difference between all Joes, and the Pros are only about twice as good.

      Reply

      Gordon

      7 years ago

      I three ( 3) putt entirely too often. And I will notably do so on occasions that I have already played the hole badly from tee to green.
      This leads to high scores, and just one or two blow up holes in a round, for someone who plays a bit better than bogie golf on the remaining holes… just leads to the higher scores, and higher handicap.
      Also, I get on greens, but I have long lag putts many times. It absolutely makes it difficult when the second putt is 4 to 5 ft away still.
      Putting is absolutely the difference high to lower handicaps and low to pro…

      Reply

      LAbillyboy

      7 years ago

      Pros are nails on the 5-6 footers when they make a bad leave… I missed a 12 incher yesterday… and missed everything inside 10 feet… I’m a 5 Hcp. Of course the greens on the muni I was on had unrepaired ball marks everywhere, sand tracked all over, scuff marks within 24 inches of the hole and probably haven’t been mowed or rolled in a couple of days… Pro’s putt on pool tables, we putt on a workbench…

      Reply

      TonyG

      7 years ago

      Excellent comment. Let me add that the pin locations are often marked days ahead of time so they can practice to the various locations. They also have Topo maps of the greens. That said, they are still awesome.

      Reply

      Tim Dotson

      7 years ago

      It helps that PGA tour players putt on greens that look like the indoor putting green at a PGA Superstore….consistent speeds and nice and smooth!

      Looking at my Golfshot app it looks like I average about 1.5 3 putts per round

      Reply

      Eric Loft

      7 years ago

      Guess my putting is what keeps my handicap at a reasonable level – I’ve been using Game Golf for a couple of years now and just checked my stats – only 107 three putts out of 1391 total holes for a 7.47% three putt average. Might be because of or part of the reason why I used the same putter for 22 years until it was stolen along with the rest of my bag. Now if I could just get off the tee in good position with regularity…

      Reply

      Drew

      7 years ago

      I am so sick of myself for three putting…I must three putt 6-7 times during a round! I’m now thinking of a lesson but would love to know if someone can recommend a training aid. I miss a lot of 5-7 footers to save par or bogey. Argh!

      Reply

      Bob

      7 years ago

      I have a couple of suggestions for you.
      1. Switch to a larger grip. SuperStroke is the most popular and comes in four sizes.
      2. Purchase a device, available at any golf retailer, that you use to place an alignment line on your ball with a magic marker.

      Both of these have helped my so that I very seldom three putt. I am a 20 handicap so just an average player. Try these, then take a lesson if needed.

      Reply

      David W

      7 years ago

      I haven’t tried this yet, but 2 different very low handicap players told me that that putting mirror training aids help more than anything they have ever used because you can see your setup, face angle, where your eyes are over the ball, etc all with one tool. They run about $10 to $20 on amazon.

      Reply

      David W

      7 years ago

      Sorry, that was supposed to be $10 to $50 on Amazon.

      Drew

      7 years ago

      Thanks for the responses Bob and David. I should have a putting mirror delivered today from Amazon…will see how that goes before trying a fatter grip. Willing to try anything at this point!

      John D.

      7 years ago

      Using Arccos 360 has really allowed me to see the importance of avoiding 3 putts. Started as an 8.9 Handicap with the system and am now a 4.5. Putting bears so much weight in Handicap calculation. Using Arccos and an eyeline mirror have both revolutionized the way I practice and putt on the course.

      Reply

      R Morris

      7 years ago

      My experience with Arccos is putting the one shot that it misses or double counts on a regular basis. The distance of putts has never even been close. My putts per hole (very basic stat) runs between 1.6 to 1.8. High so far this year was 1.85. An easy 3-putt avoidance is to miss the green and chip it close.

      Reply

      strokerAce

      7 years ago

      I wonder how many of the amateurs in the Arccos database were fit for their putter. I recently had a fitting and it has worked wonders. I have not had a 3 putt since! I think it has helped tremendously with pace/distance, line and being able to roll the ball true.
      If you 3 putt more than you’d like I suggest going for a putter fitting on a SAM lab to determine if you have the right style of putter and if all of your measurements are correct. You might just save yourself some strokes like I did!

      Reply

      Birdieputt

      7 years ago

      Great advice Stroker. I did a SAM lab putter fitting at Hilton Head two years ago and it really helped me with adjustments to my putter which has improved my putting significantly. I also went with a SuperStroke putter grip (mid 2.0) and that has helped “quiet the hands”. Also thinking about switching to a “Salty Grip” cork grip which is like the StrokeSaver only made out of cork.

      Reply

      John F.

      7 years ago

      A couple of things to note if you’re like me. I seldom play the same course twice in a row and every course has a different putting “feel” that I try to adjust to before my round. Normally, I have 5-10 minutes to get this “feel” done. The PROS play a practice round or two before their scores are recorded… I’m sure that would help with my putting not to mention the fact that their greens look pristine while mine are often littered with ball marks and lots of imperfections. Unfortunately, a lot of golfers are good at making ball marks on greens, but piss poor when it come to fixing them. I typically average less than 36 putts a round which I feel is pretty good, especially when you consider the conditions and my 15 or so handicap. I spend a lot of time practicing putting to make up for my other deficiencies. It’s paid off in fewer putts and lower scores.

      Reply

      Art

      7 years ago

      Overall, I 3-putt 6.2% of the time. How do I convert that to the “3-putt avoidance” stat noted in the article?

      Reply

      Pete S

      7 years ago

      I think it would be the same thing.

      Reply

      Miguel Dabu

      7 years ago

      The greens these pros putts on are tour quality. I am pretty sure my superb putting on my local muni does not even compare even one bit. Much more reason to appreciate how good these guys are. Nice article, really enjoyed reading it. Thanks MGS!

      Reply

      Albert Sandberg

      7 years ago

      Another way of putting it as I heard today, is that a pga tour professional needs 18 meters to have a 50-50 chance/risk of a 3-putt, while we average golfers need just 12 meters to average 50-50 on our usual turf.

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Golf Wedges
    Apr 16, 2024
    Vokey WedgeWorks Low Bounce K Grind Wedge
    News
    Apr 16, 2024
    It Was A Masters To Forget For LIV Golf
    Golf Apparel
    Apr 16, 2024
    adidas Pioneers Next Generation of Lightweight Golf Garments
    ENTER to WIN 3 DOZEN

    Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls

    Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls
    By signing up you agree to receive communications from MyGolfSpy and select partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy You may opt out of email messages/withdraw consent at any time.