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Edoardo Molinari: “Many Amateurs Overestimate How Far They Hit the Ball”

Edoardo Molinari has been an integral part of the DP World Tour for almost two decades. Now that his active career is coming to an end, as he says himself, he is also focussing on other things. The Italian began keeping his own statistics early on in his career. He now advises numerous top golfers and helps them to use the numbers to their advantage. He has also become a secret weapon for Europe’s Ryder Cup team. In this interview, Molinari talks about complex Excel lists, his collaboration with Arccos and provides insights into his role at the Ryder Cup.

Interview with Arccos Chief Data Strategist Edoardo Molinari

Golf Post: Edoardo, the so-called Chief Data Strategist and Leader Ambassador at Arccos, you got into the business with statistics with your own company, the Statistics Golf Service, and quickly earned some fame for your platform, which is used by loads of world-class professional golfers. Now it’s called the Arccos Pro Insights. What do players find on the platform, and why do they like it so much?

Edoardo Molinari: Yeah, so I started doing this basically for myself many years ago. I have an engineering degree, so I always liked the numbers and the stats and the data side of golf. I found it very useful. Then, a few years ago, some players asked if I could help them. They were using a different company at the time, and I started almost as a hobby, a part-time job. It became very popular with the players, and now it’s become quite a big thing.

I think the unique aspect was that they could speak to someone who understood golf at the highest level but also understood the numbers and could help with them. A lot of them mentioned that it was great to talk with someone who understood the game, not just someone behind a computer. Combining the two things was key to the success so far.

Regarding Arccos, they first approached me two or three years ago, but at the time, I was just starting and didn’t know what I was doing. Then Sal Syed, the CEO, spoke to me again at the end of last year. We developed a very good relationship, having similar views on many things. I needed help to develop further because I had limitations with time and coding capabilities. They put their team at my disposal to help develop my product further. It’s been a successful and enjoyable relationship so far, and we’re developing new things for amateurs and pros. It’s going to be an exciting few months.

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Edoardo Molinari on How He Started Keeping Track of His Game

Golf Post: How did you get into statistics as a hobby? Was it all Excel sheets in the beginning?

Edoardo Molinari: Yeah, in the beginning, it was Excel sheets. I started recording my own stats back in 2002, so over 20 years ago. It began with simple spreadsheets—fairways, greens, number of putts, birdies, bogeys—very simple. Over time, I added more things. Up until a few years ago, it was still an Excel spreadsheet, probably one of the most extreme and complex ones you’ve ever seen. When I showed Sal what I was doing in Excel, he couldn’t believe it was possible. It was very rewarding. I was proud of it, and many developers were amazed by it. When you need something and have to make it work, you find ways.

Golf Post: Your approach to statistics was praised by Sal Syed, one of the founders of Arccos, and many others. What’s so different about your way of using statistics and drawing conclusions?

Edoardo Molinari: I think it’s the unique combination of understanding both the numbers and golf. We have some KPIs and indicators that haven’t been seen before and are quite useful, like how aggressive you are into the greens, whether you’re too aggressive or too conservative, and similar insights for putting. It’s not only about your game but also about strategy and optimizing your game.

For example, seeing how you’ve played the last couple of months and figuring out the best way to play certain holes on a new course. It’s about combining usual stats with course management. For amateurs, it’s easy to see what they’re doing wrong and provide simple tips that could save them shots each round.

Golf Post: What could one of these tips for an amateur be?

Edoardo Molinari: The most important thing for an amateur is to keep the ball in play off the tee. Amateurs lose many shots due to penalty shots and OB (out of bounds) off the tee. The key to lowering your handicap is keeping the ball in play, feven if it means aiming for the rough instead of risking OB. Respect the hazards and penalty areas. Many amateurs overestimate how far they hit the ball, often missing short, which costs them a lot of shots.

“Strokes Gained is Great, But There Are Improvements to be Made”

Golf Post: Your work was compared to the invention of the Strokes Gained Method by Mark Brodie by Lou Stagner. Do you see a transformation in the use of statistics coming as well?

Edoardo Molinari: First of all, I’m very proud to hear that from Lou. I respect him a lot. Mark Brodie revolutionized the world of stats in golf, making it take a massive leap forward. In the last 10 to 12 years, we’ve stayed with Strokes Gained, but I think another leap forward is coming. Strokes Gained is great, but there are improvements to be made, especially for the highest level and even for amateurs. New stats and methods will likely emerge in the next two to three years that will make us look at golf differently.

Golf Post: Like what?

Edoardo Molinari: For example, in short game, comparing shots using Strokes Gained, the baseline is the same regardless of the situation. But different situations require different baselines, like the amount of green you have to work with. The same goes for putting. A six-foot putt uphill is different from one on a 3% slope. These subtle differences can make a big impact. In my work with pros, we use different baselines for different scenarios, which will improve and get better over time.

Golf Post: Where do your work with the pros and Arccos for amateurs meet?

Edoardo Molinari: It’s the same ideas and foundations. What I do for pros is extremely detailed and precise. For lower pros and elite amateurs, it’s simplified but still detailed. For amateurs, it’s even simpler. The approach is the same, focusing on course management and optimization. With the right foundation, even amateurs can see significant improvement, saving several shots per round.

Vice Captain Edoardo Molinari Checks Bethpage Golf Park

Golf Post: You recently visited the Bethpage Golf Park with Captain Luke Donald. How did that go?

Edoardo Molinari: It was great. We spent two full days in New York. Luke looked at the hotel and facilities, while I focused on the golf course. Being an away match, there’s less to organize compared to a home match. Bethpage is a great course, having hosted majors and big events. It’s a modern test—long with elevated greens and quick greens. It might be less spectacular than some courses, but it’s probably tougher, making for an exciting Ryder Cup.

Golf Post: Your role in last year’s winning Ryder Cup team has been praised by many. Can you give us insights into what you did there?

Edoardo Molinari: It wasn’t all about numbers. We had many conversations with all 12 players to ensure they were comfortable. We combined the numbers with what the players felt comfortable with. My first time doing this, I thought it would be easy, but it was complex. Different players use different balls, and moving one player affects others. It was great fun. From announcing the team to the practice trip in Rome, we had many discussions and developed a plan, which worked perfectly.

Golf Post: It definitely did! One last question. You’re advising other players, playing a role in the Ryder Cup, and still a professional golfer. How do you manage it all?

Edoardo Molinari: It’s a lot of time management. I’ve cut out social media and TV shows to the bare minimum. I spend a lot of time talking to players, practicing my game, and keeping time aside for Ryder Cup and Luke. It’s busy but enjoyable. Being towards the end of my career, it keeps me excited about events and playing with top players. I enjoy it, so it doesn’t feel heavy—it’s a pleasure.

Golf Post: Thank you so much for taking the time. It’s been really fun following your path, and we’re excited for everything to come. Thanks a lot.

Edoardo Molinari: Thanks, Tobias. Bye.

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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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Uncategorized

Edoardo Molinari named as new Vice Captain for the 2025 Ryder Cup

Luke Donald has appointed Edoardo Molinari as his first Vice Captain for the 2025 Ryder Cup which will be played at Bethpage Black, New York, USA from September 26-28, 2025.

Molinari will return to Donald’s backroom team after a highly-successful stint in the role for the 2023 Ryder Cup in his native Italy, where Team Europe secured a memorable 16 ½ – 11 ½ victory against the United States at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club.

The Italian, alongside his brother Francesco, was part of the victorious European Team as a player in the 2010 Ryder Cup at The Celtic Manor Resort in Wales. He has also won three times on the DP World Tour and made 402 Tour appearances to date.

The 42-year-old, a popular figure within the game, proved crucial to Team Europe’s success in Rome, with Captain Donald placing a key emphasis on Molinari’s statistical analysis model in the months leading up to, and during, the biennial contest.

Molinari said: “I’m very happy. It’s something that I’m very proud of and probably means I did a pretty decent job last time, so I cannot wait to help the team and Luke again in Bethpage and I’m really looking forward to it.

“Luke called me the very day he was named captain, a little before the official announcement, and said he really enjoyed working with me in Rome and would like my help again. We had another chat about a week later, maybe 30 or 40 minutes on the phone, chatted about a few things and he asked me and I said of course, I would happily do it all over again.

“I think Rory put it best in the press conference after Rome, he said the most difficult thing in golf these days is to win an away Ryder Cup. It hasn’t been done in many years now, Luke was part of the team in Medinah, the last one that Europe won away, and hopefully we can produce something similar.

“I cannot wait. I’ve never been part of an away Ryder Cup. I heard it will be very tough, very difficult, you need to have a lot of patience and calmness, but I cannot wait to get started. I cannot wait to be at Bethpage with the whole team, it’s going to be a long two years waiting for that week, but it will be extremely exciting and hopefully we can win again.”

European Ryder Cup Captain Luke Donald said: “Edoardo is someone I have got to know very well over the last couple of years and he’s going to be a great addition again for the 2025 Ryder Cup.

“He plays a very significant role. He’s playing full-time out here on the DP World Tour, he’s a good player, a Ryder Cupper and he knows what it’s all about. He’s around the players a lot and he works with a lot of players on their statistics as well.

“I’ll lean heavily on him with the qualification criteria and then when we get close to the matches, how the team is forming, how their skillsets match to the golf course at Bethpage and whether they’re more foursomes-related pairings, fourballs-related players, and putting those pairings together.

“We spent a lot of time together over the last couple of years, we grew very close. He was extremely important to the whole journey and the process and he’ll be even more important on this away one. If we can create some history and try and win away from home, it’s going to be a very, very sweet four years together.”

Molinari and his brother Francesco followed compatriot Costantino Rocca into Ryder Cup folklore when they represented Europe in the Ryder Cup in 2010 at The Celtic Manor Resort in Wales.

The Molinaris became the first brothers to compete against the United States since Bernard and Geoffrey Hunt played in the 1963 Great Britain & Ireland team, when they played in the 2010 contest at The Celtic Manor Resort in Wales. They halved their fourballs match against Stewart Cink and Matt Kuchar, while Edoardo contributed another crucial half point in his singles match against Rickie Fowler as Europe triumphed 14½-13½.

In addition to his three victories on the DP World Tour, Molinari was also the Challenge Tour Number One in 2009 and is a respected member of the DP World Tour’s Tournament Committee.

Before turning professional, Molinari won the 2005 US Amateur Championship and alongside Francesco, claimed the World Cup of Golf for Italy in 2009 at Mission Hills in China.

Text: European Tour Group Communications