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“Focus on Your Driver and Your Approach Play” – How to Use Stats Your Way

Arccos collects data from millions of golfers – and Lou Stagner gives us an insight into what it reveals. Stagner is Data Insights Lead at Arccos and is probably the most readable golf statistician, and not just on Twitter, with his informative and funny content. In an interview with Golf Post, he talks about how important it is to know your own stats, why you should work on your expectations and how much fun he has with his new Stimp Meter.

Interview with Arccos Data Insights Lead Lou Stagner

Golf Post: Lou, it’s sometimes great, especially when you’re a golfer or a golf journalist, to get lost in numbers. But in order to get a better player, where do I start with the numbers?

Lou Stagner: I would say there’s a couple of different types of players. There are some players that are not interested in something like Arccos. They don’t want to use an app, they don’t want anything to do with that. And I get questions from people like that that saying ‚I want to get better, I want to track some stats, but I don’t want to use anything like Arccos.

For those not ready to make that jump, I would tell them that they should be measuring greens in regulation. Greens in regulation is a very big predictor of what your skill level is going to be. Better players hit more greens. That’s one of the traditional stats that has some value.

I would say track penalty shots. How many penalty strokes are you accruing each round? We want to limit those. Better players have much fewer penalty shots. So we want to hit the ball relatively solid and keep the ball in play. And that sort of dovetails into the last thing I would tell you: A lot of amateur players will track fairway percentage and there’s not a lot of value in that.

I would just tell you to track, because it is so important, how many tee shots you’re keeping in play. In play, it just means you have a reasonable chance at hitting a green in regulation. So you haven’t hit it into the water. You haven’t hit it into the trees and you need to come out sideways. So for those that don’t want to get to using something like Arccos, those are the basic things I would tell you to start with.

But I would encourage everyone to get to shot level tracking where you’re able to get strokes gained on each part of your game. Where the four parts of your game are off the tee, approach play, your short game around the green and putting. Within each area, you’re going to be able to get information on, for example, your approach play from different distances.

And it’s also fantastic information that you can use to deliver to your coach. If you’re working with a swing coach, you can give them very detailed information to help guide them on what they would work on with you. And doing all of these things helps you to focus on the areas you need improvement on the most and helps you to improve those quicker, which is going to help improve your scores and lower your handicap, which is what all of us are trying to do.

Why it’s important to “focus on the right thing”

Golf Post: How do I identify the stats I need to work on, that tools like Arccos provide? Does it necessarily have to be those where I lose most strokes?

Lou Stagner: That’s an interesting question. There’s so many variables in golf. Every shot you hit is different. You know, we’re not doing the same thing over and over again. It’s not like shooting a free throw in basketball where the rim is always 10 feet high and you’re always 15 feet from the rim. Everything is different in golf and that’s true for every player, but a good starting point is when you open up an app like our coach, you’re going to get your strokes gained for each part of the game.

And typically for a lot of players, you’re going to see a weakness there. You’re going to see something that is much lower than the rest. And that’s really common with players. And that’s typically a good place for you to start. Now, it doesn’t always mean that it’s the lowest hanging fruit for you.

Typically for most amateurs, I would tell you that you want to focus on your driver and your approach play. If you want to go from a 15 handicap down to a scratch player, that is going to be the lowest hanging fruit. Your full swing is going to be what’s going to move the needle the most for most players. But that’s not to say that everybody is like that. Everybody is different. Everyone has their own unique fingerprint.

You and I could both be 10 index players. And if you happen to be in the top 10 percent of putters for 10 index players, and I’m in the bottom 10 percent of putters, there’s about six shots of skill difference in putting between us roughly.

So remember we’re both 10 handicaps, but we’re about six shots different in putting skill. Me as the bad putter, if I could snap my fingers and become the same skill level in putting as you overnight, I would go from a 10 handicap down to a four. That’s how much opportunity there is for me to improve my overall handicap by focusing on the right thing.

Golf Post: Is there any stat that’s stuck in your head because it’s so eyeopening for any amateur player, that you think everybody should know it?

Lou Stagner: I’ll answer that in a way without necessarily giving a specific answer.

I put a lot of content out there around managing your expectations and in giving people actual stats from different skill levels about how likely somebody is to hit the green or how many shots they might average from a certain distance or how many shots they keep in play or how many tee shots go out of bounds.

I think it’s extremely important to understand those numbers because there’s so many amateur players that have pretty warped expectations on what a good shot is and what a bad shot is. What happens with a lot of amateur players is their expectations do not match reality.

I don’t want someone to hear this and think, well, I shouldn’t really care about the outcome. I shouldn’t really try. That’s not what I’m saying. Every single shot you hit, you should pick a good target and you should try to execute as best you can and have the ball go exactly where you want it to go.

But the key part there is you have to realize and accept that that is not going to happen very often, even for the best players in the world. They do not hit the ball exactly where they want to at a high frequency. You have to understand what reasonable expectations are for your skill level. It’s removed a lot of the frustration and it’s helped me play better because I’m not beating myself up over something that may actually be a good shot.

Understanding expectations, I think is a key component to helping you to play better.

“Golf is only relatively recent to the party”

Golf Post: You’re transforming a lot of the Arccos stats on Twitter into great content. People get quite mad at you on Twitter sometimes. Not only mad at you, but sometimes even at the numbers. Why do you think some people are so afraid of and mad at the stats and numbers and the maths and physics behind golf?

Lou Stagner: That’s a great question. I think what we’re seeing now in golf is what we have seen and continue to see in other sports. There are other sports that adopted analytics, advanced analytics, leveraging numbers to help improve performance. There are a number of sports that are well ahead of golf.

Golf is only relatively recent to the party. Mark Brody invented strokes gained. I think his first paper was around 2007 or 2008, somewhere in that range. And it started to be used on the PGA tour in 2011. It initially was only used with putting and then they expanded it to the rest of the game.

His book „Every Shot Counts“ was published 2014, I believe. Over the last 10 to 12 years, you’ve seen sort of this steady increase in understanding and adoption of leveraging math, numbers, analytics to help understand the game better and then help to drive improvements in performance. It’s a part of how we get better. The number of detractors will just continue to decline. I don’t think they’ll ever disappear, but they’ll just naturally continue to decline because we have a whole generation of golfers that are growing up with this as part of what they do.

“The partnership between Edoardo Molinari and Arccos is going to be transformative”

Golf Post: Because you mentioned Mark Brody – the Strokes Gained Method revolutionized the use of statistics within golf. Do you see something like it coming in the next years? Anything that will change the use of statistics within golf as much as the Strokes Gained Method did?

Lou Stagner: I think there are opportunities to improve what is looked at and what is included in Strokes Gained and how you calculate it. You’ll see people start to make those next steps in strokes gained.

I think the partnership between Edoardo Molinari and Arccos is going to be transformative. Edoardo is a very, very intelligent man and a world class golfer. As you know, he’s one of the key forces behind the European Ryder Cup team and what they’ve done leveraging analytics.

I’m a USA fan on the Ryder Cup and I need to figure out a way to sabotage him on the European side, so we have a better chance, I say that to him jokingly. I think the things that Edoardo has started to do with tour players is transformative and is going to help to shape the game.

I can tell you where you started and where you finished relative to the hole if we’re talking about approach shots, for example. But I can’t tell you what your intention was. If you’re 150 yards out and you have a pin that’s tucked into the corner and there’s water on that side and your target is 20 or 30 feet away from the hole and you hit it exactly where your target is, it’s going to look like you missed the hole by 30 feet when you may have hit exactly where your target was.

Those are the kind of things that you’re going to see work their way into stat tracking and game tracking. Everything that Edoardo is doing with tour players is going to start to trickle down to the rest of us and and you’re going to see a shift in what all of us are doing with respect to what is tracked, how it’s tracked, and then how we use it. To me, this partnership is a big inflection point.

And I think they’ll consider that similar to Brody inventing Strokes Gained. I don’t mean to take anything away from Mark Brody with what he did and what he’s added to the game. This is an evolution of the foundation that he built.

Golf Post: Do you think one could overrate statistics?

Lou Stagner: I think like anything else you can put too much focus on it. I think you can do that with your swing. You can do that with how you’re looking at the stats. I think too much of a good thing might be too much. Going over the top with anything is, depending on your personality, potentially something that won’t work for you.

Somebody like Matt Fitzpatrick, he’s a very analytical person. Or Bryson DeChambeau, they want all that information and that’s their personality. I don’t know if Dustin Johnson is thinking about golf the same way that Matt Fitzpatrick is. Dustin’s just like ‚Give me my club and where’s the hole?‘. I don’t mean to trivialize because he’s obviously a fantastic player, but he’s very different than Matt Fitzpatrick or Bryson DeChambeau. And so I think it’s important to make sure that how you are approaching the game kind of aligns with your personality.

I would say if you’re not a math person, if you’re not an analytics person, you shouldn’t ignore stats and just say, then that’s not for me. You have to figure out a way to do it in a way that is going to help you because there’s a lot of value there. But make sure that you’re staying true to your personality. If you’re more of a DJ like player, don’t try to make yourself a Matt Fitzpatrick type player. Hopefully that makes sense the way I said that.

Lou Stagner on The Maters

Golf Post: Absolutely. Lou, it’s Masters week. Is there anything we should look out for in Augusta statistics wise?

Lou Stagner: We could spend an entire two, three hours just on that.

Golf Post: Give us one or two interesting things to look out for.

Lou Stagner: One thing that always comes up every year is the third hole. The third hole is a short par four. It’s quasi reachable. Some people can get it onto the front edge or onto the green, depending on wind conditions.

When you look at the numbers over the last few years, putting it down there as far as you can to every pin position, tends to be materially better than laying up. I would say that players that are laying up are probably costing themselves a few tenths of a shot, fractions of a shot, which at that level is really what they’re trying to do. They’re trying to scoop up little fractions of a shot. So you want to make good decisions, select good targets, and all of those good decisions are going to result in a fraction of a shot improvement. And those little fractions of a shot add up to full shots. So the players that have put in the effort to understand those things, give themselves an advantage.

Golf Post: Have you done your calculations on who’s going to win the Masters yet?

Lou Stagner: It’s tough to make predictions. I mean, Scotty Scheffler is playing so well right now.

It’s hard to not pick somebody other than Scotty, because he’s just performing at another level. We know his ball striking is going to be there. If he can roll the putter and have a decent putting week, he’s going to be near the top of the leaderboard, no matter what. I’m interested to see how Jon Rahm does, obviously a fantastic player.

If I had to go with a secondary pick. He hasn’t been playing all that great this year, but I’m curious to see how Victor Hovland does there. And that’s maybe more of a fan pick than a numbers pick. Because I’m a huge fan of Victor Hovland.


Golf Post: One of my favourites among your recent tweets was the one on you buying a stimp meter and I’m curios to know if you have found the fastest surface in your house yet?

Lou Stagner: It’s funny. I’ve gotten stimp readings on everything and you’ve heard people joke before ‚It’s like putting on a hardwood floor‘ and I’ve tried to get a stimp reading on a hardwood floor. It’s impossible. The ball just goes forever. It doesn’t stop. I am the assistant coach of the Princeton men’s golf team. We have a big gymnasium on campus that is in the same building as our indoor practice facility. And there’s a huge, huge expanse of hardwood floor there – massive, multiple basketball courts together. From one end to the other, it might be 150 feet. Next time I’m there in that building, I’m bringing my stimp meter and I’m going to try to get a reading on hardwood floor to see what it actually is.

I think it could be well over a hundred. In my house, I have a stretch of about almost 30 feet, like kind of down a hallway and through another, I have about 30 feet of hardwood floor and I tried to get a stimp reading and the ball, when it hit the wall, it was still traveling at top speed. So I think a stimp reading on a hardwood floor is gonna be over a hundred.

Golf Post: That should prepare you for a US Open then.

Lou Stagner: It should, or Augusta. I’m not playing in either of those so it doesn’t quite matter. But it’s been fun to have and play around with and see what things are.

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Equipment

Arccos Announces Exclusive Partnership with ‘Stats Genius’ Edoardo Molinari to Expand Golf’s Most Powerful and Intuitive Analytics Platform

Arccos – the leader in connected A.I. golf products and the Official Game Tracker of the PGA TOUR – today announced an exclusive partnership that will see Edoardo Molinari, a DP World Tour player and Analytics advisor for more than 35 top professionals including Matthew Fitzpatrick (U.S. Open champion), Viktor Hovland (FedExCup champion), Nelly Korda (Women’s PGA Championship winner) and the European Ryder Cup Team, become Arccos’ Chief Data Strategist & Lead Tour Ambassador to help expand the game’s most powerful and intuitive analytics platform.

In his new role, Molinari will become an investor in Arccos and his StatisticGolf service will be renamed Arccos Pro Insights as he continues working with top-ranked players worldwide. Molinari will also leverage the Arccos system – which was recently approved for use on the PGA TOUR – to seamlessly capture his personal shot data during competitions and practice rounds. He will showcase the Arccos logo on his apparel, promoting the company’s mission to empower golfers at every level with datadriven insights.

“I’m very impressed with the Arccos game tracking system as it is delivering tremendous benefits to so many players around the world,” said Molinari. “It’s the perfect complement to the platform I’ve built for the game’s most elite pros. Joining forces with Sal Syed and his team of amazing data scientists, analysts, engineers and designers, will make an immediate impact. I know we’re poised to pioneer groundbreaking advancements in analytics, helping every golfer become smarter about practice, preparation, and on-course decision-making.”

Recently named European Ryder Cup Team Vice Captain for the second time, Molinari has frequently been called a “stats genius” by tour stars and golf media. As a player, Molinari won the 2005 U.S. Amateur Championship, claimed three DP World Tour titles, was on the winning 2010 Ryder Cup team and reached #14 on the Official World Golf Ranking.

A graduate of a five-year engineering program at the Polytechnic University of Turin, the 42-year-old Italian began recording and analyzing his own stats in 2003. During golf’s COVID-19 hiatus, Molinari conceived and launched StatisticGolf, which quickly became the most used and trusted analytics platform on professional tours. In 3 years, his clients have captured 27 worldwide wins including: US Open, Ryder Cup, FedExCup, and DP World Tour Championship.

“The sophistication of what Edoardo has built surpasses anything that I’ve seen in the field of golf analytics,” said Sal Syed, Arccos CEO & Co-Founder. “Edoardo is not only brilliant with data, he has the perspective that comes from being one of the world’s best players. That combination is totally unique and a big reason why major champions and Ryder Cup winners give so much credit to his work. By pairing Edoardo’s approach with what we’ve built at Arccos, we’ll redefine analytics, to perfectly address the needs of pro golfers, as well as elite amateurs, junior golfers and recreational players.”

Golf’s #1 game tracker, Arccos has built the game’s largest on-course dataset. Today that includes almost 900 million shots and over 1.5 trillion data points recorded during 18 million rounds by Arccos members. The system, which consists of a lightweight smart sensor in each club grip that pairs with a mobile app, has long been trusted by amateurs and elite players worldwide.

Arccos recently launched Link Pro, a revolutionary device that tracks a player’s shots automatically without a phone and works inside a player’s front pocket to seamlessly capture on-course data. Ideal for use in professional competitions, Link Pro is the size of a car key fob and comes standard with a wireless charging case that provides up to 12 rounds on a single charge.

Late last year, Arccos announced a strategic fundraising round featuring several of golf’s biggest brands and most impactful businesses, headlined by the PGA TOUR alongside PING, Inc., TaylorMade Golf Company, Cobra PUMA Golf and Topgolf Callaway Brands Corp. (NYSE: MODG), among others. The company’s focus: fully leverage and accelerate the growth of the game’s largest data set to help the entire golf ecosystem by allowing players, coaches, club fitters and product designers make smarter decisions that are based on real performance data.

About Arccos Golf LLC

Arccos Golf LLC is revolutionizing the game tracking experience by integrating Artificial Intelligence with real-time on-course data to deliver unparalleled insights that help players maximize their potential. Listed among the “World’s Most Innovative Companies” by Fast Company, Arccos boasts the golf industry’s richest data set. Its official partners include PGA TOUR, PING, Cobra PUMA Golf, TaylorMade, Srixon-Cleveland Golf, Club Champion, EA Sports and Golf Digest.

For more information, please visit: www.arccosgolf.com.

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Equipment

Arccos launches third generation of the Link Pro Device

Arccos, the leader in connected A.I. golf products and the Official Game Tracker of the PGA Tour, announced the launch of the Link Pro. This device marks the 3rd generation in Arccos’ successful product line and introduces a host of new features designed to enhance the golfing experience.

The features of the new Arccos Link Pro

Available for purchase today at Arccosgolf.com and select retailers globally, Link Pro is designed to automatically track a player’s shots without the need for a phone, seamlessly capturing on-course data from the convenience of the player’s front pocket. The redesigned device addresses member feedback, delivering a superior experience for shot tracking. Key features of the New Link Pro include:

  • Works in Pocket: Automatically tracks shots in the pocket without the need for a phone.
  • Wireless Charging Case: Boasting up to 12 rounds on a single charge, the case is quickly rechargeable and about the size of an average wallet, providing exceptional convenience.
  • Enhanced GPS: A new GPS chip ensures an incredibly quick satellite lock at the start of each round, enhancing data accuracy on the course.
  • Multi-Mic Configuration: This leading-edge approach ensures highly accurate shot detection while the device remains in a player’s front pocket.
  • Pin Set Button: The introduction of a dedicated button with click feedback allows users to accurately mark the hole location while Link Pro is in the pocket.

User-Friendly Design

Dave LeDonne, Arccos Vice President of Product, expressed, “Our product vision is to continuously remove friction from on-course data capture, and Link Pro is a giant step in that direction for amateurs and elite pros alike. It’s a major technical breakthrough by our in-house hardware team. When you add all the other benefits, the result is a device that’s precise, less intrusive, easier to use, and always ready for your next round.”

Compact and comparable in size to a car key fob, Link Pro (MSRP: $224.99) comes standard with the wireless charging case. Once paired with the Arccos app, Link Pro seamlessly integrates with Arccos Smart Sensors (sold separately) to track your game on the course. It allows players to choose how they want to use their phone during a round – keeping it in the bag, listening to music, taking a call, or leveraging Arccos’ A.I. Powered Rangefinder and caddie recommendations.

Largest dataset in golf

Link Pro is compatible with both iOS and Android devices and has already been approved for use under the Rules of Golf (Decision #2023-0650). The Arccos system, including Link Pro, is the only game tracking platform, other than ShotLink powered by CDW, approved for use on the PGA Tour, PGA Tour Champions, Korn Ferry Tour, and PGA Tour Americas.

As golf’s #1 game tracker, Arccos has compiled golf’s largest on-course dataset, with over 850 million shots and 1.5 trillion data points recorded during nearly 18 million rounds played by Arccos members. Trusted by amateurs and elite players worldwide, the Arccos system, consisting of a sensor in each club grip that pairs with a mobile app, has revolutionized performance tracking in the golfing community.

Last year, Arccos announced a strategic fundraising round featuring golf’s biggest brands, including the PGA Tour, Ping Inc., TaylorMade Golf Company, Cobra Puma Golf, and Topgolf Callaway Brands Corp. , among others. The company’s focus is to fully leverage and accelerate the growth of the game’s largest dataset to benefit the entire golf ecosystem, allowing players, coaches, club fitters, and product designers to make smarter decisions based on real performance data.

(Text: Arccos Golf)

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Fun Uncategorized

Arccos partners up with EA Sports for new game

How would you like to take your love for video gaming out onto the golf course and track your own performance? Well, now you can thanks to our ground-breaking tech partnership with global leader in video gaming EA Sports.

Buyers of the new EA Sports PGA Tour, the exclusive home of all four majors in a video game, launched worldwide on April 7. EA Sports PGA Tour players will access golf’s #1 on-course shot tracking system with Arccos, realistically enhancing their performance both in-game and the real-world.

Darren Feeney, Vice President of Marketing at Arccos Golf, commented: “We’re delighted to expand our member opportunities to the EA Sports community with this attractive offer, which we believe to be a first of its kind in the golf industry. EA is the true leader in the digital interactive entertainment space and involvement with the new EA Sports PGA Tour golf game acts as a perfect way to bridge the virtual gaming world with the on-course performance tracking of Arccos.”

As part of an exciting partnership, EA players will receive an in-game offer taking them to a co-branded webpage where they can redeem a free set of Arccos Smart Sensors and trial the award-winning Arccos Caddie app. The EA Sports collaboration enhances the interactive golf experience and connects players to the sport they love through interactive entertainment.

“We’ve gone above and beyond to bring the premier PGA Tour experience to players, with real-world golf data powering amazingly realistic gameplay,” said Ben Ramsour, Producer at EA Sports. “At the same time, we’re excited to encourage players of EA Sports PGA Tour to take their passion for golf out onto real-world courses. With Arccos, they can experience the same type of automatic shot tracking and strokes gained analytics that’s trusted by the world’s best players.”

Arccos has the largest on-course data set in golf with more than 670 million shots recorded during 14 million rounds in 162 countries worldwide. Over 700 billion separate data points power the most accurate Strokes Gained insights, providing golfers with personalized analysis for every scenario down to each club in the bag. Arccos helps golfer’s shoot lower scores and improve their handicap by an average of 5.71 strokes in their first year of membership.

The EA Sports PGA Tour will be the only game where golf fans can play all four Majors in men’s golf – The Masters, PGA Championship, US Open Championship and The Open – on world-famous courses.

The game incorporates new features like Pure Strike giving players all the tools required to attack each hole the same way PGA Tour stars do, plus a Road to the Masters career mode bringing tradition and unmatched stakes featuring Augusta National, challenges, tournaments and gear tied to The Masters.

It’s no secret that our Arccos team of Data Analysts and Engineers are very excited to play EA Sports PGA Tour and take on some of the best courses in the world from the comfort of their living rooms! (Text: Arccos)

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Equipment

ARCCOS UNVEILS NEW APPLE WATCH APP WITH MAJOR UPGRADES

Arccos – the pioneer of big data and Artificial Intelligence for golf – has today unveiled a new Arccos for Apple Watch app update highlighted by UX enhancements that provides golfers with the ability to start an Arccos Caddie round on the world’s #1 selling smart watch without ever touching their iPhone.

A completely re-developed caddie app

The preferred shot-tracking hardware for almost 20% of Arccos members, Apple Watch also allows Arccos Caddie members to view A.I. Rangefinder distances, receive personalized club recommendations, add penalty strokes, see shot history and holes scores, and make any necessary edits.

“From a product standpoint, we have completely re-developed the Arccos Caddie app for Apple Watch architecture from the ground up,” said Dave LeDonne, Arccos’ Vice President of Product. “With well over half a million rounds played by Arccos members on Apple Watch last year alone, this redesign makes the experience dramatically better,” he added.

Additional app functionality includes the ability for players to mark the hole locations on the green with a simple click of a button on the watch device when standing directly next to the pin. This provides more accurate short game and putting insights along with highlighting areas for player improvement via the powerful Strokes Gained analytics insights.

More than 650 million shots for Arccos members

To access the new experience – which is optimized for Apple Watch Series 5 and newer – members simply open the Arccos Caddie app for Apple Watch, confirm the course and tees being played and press start round. The app then syncs with the smart sensors in the grip of each club to pinpoint exactly when and where a shot has been played.

Arccos members have now recorded more than 650 million shots during 13.5 million rounds in 162 countries worldwide. The largest on-course dataset in golf has collected over 700 billion separate data points to power Arccos’ industry-leading Strokes Gained engine that allows a player to select their personal handicap goal, then provides personalized analysis for every game aspect and each club in the bag.

Golf’s first Artificial Intelligence platform, Arccos automatically tracks your shots while delivering in-round insights and personalized Strokes Gained analytics for every game facet and each club in your bag. The system is highlighted by an A.I.-powered rangefinder, smart club distances and caddie advice for every golf hole on earth. These innovations helped new Arccos members who played at least 10 rounds lower their handicap by an average of 5.71 strokes in their first year of membership.

(Text: Arccos)