W|A|M Rankings: The OPEN Championship
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W|A|M Rankings: The OPEN Championship

W|A|M Rankings: The OPEN Championship

By: Joe Monk

Here at MyGolfSpy we’ve long looked for ways to expand beyond equipment and cover the PGA Tour on a regular basis, but only on our terms. That means you won’t see a Tiger Woods article anytime he comes within 20 feet of a golf club. You probably won’t see a weekly what’s in the bag post either. And you’ll definitely NEVER get our rundown of the hottest women in golf.

That’s not what we do. None of it fits with our #DATACRATIC model.

But what if the same statistically-driven methodologies that help us identify the best performing golf clubs each season could be applied to the PGA Tour?

We wanted to develop an algorithm that, after all the numbers are crunched, could identify the future champion of any given PGA tournament. No hunches, no personal affinities for Jordan, Rickie, or Rory, just 100% data-driven answers.

We believe we’ve done just that.

The system we’ve developed internally has successfully identified the winner of the past 3 Major Championships. Statistically, the odds of that happening are less than 1%. Pulling off 4 in a row… the number is .16%, so we’re saying there’s a chance.

Confident in our past – though admittedly private – success, we’re ready to share what the data is telling us with you.

About Our Analytics

Without giving away the farm, here’s a breakdown of what our algorithm considers:

  1. Stats Ranking – First we consider the obvious stuff. We generate a rating based on Strokes Gained Putting, Driving Distance,  Sand Save Percentage and several other PGA Tour statistics.
  2. Current Form and the host course – While the stats are important, trends show that a golfer is more likely to play well when he’s in good form. We also consider whether or not the course suits a given players style and eye. This ranking is based on past performances from similar courses.
    For example, Royal Lytham – the venue of the 2012 Open – is similar to Royal Troon because of the severity of bunkering and long, tough, stretch of holes in the middle of the back nine. A player that played well at Lytham has shown his ability to drive the ball well in the wind and tame tough holes under pressure.
  3.  Proprietary Analytics – The final part of algorithm is entirely proprietary. It’s the secret that brings this all together, and sorry, we’re not sharing.

The Top 5

This week at the Open Championship at Royal Troon there are 156 competitors in the field. We’ve plugged in the numbers for each and every one of them, and, based on our calculations, here are the golfers most likely to win the Claret Jug:

Adam Scott

adam-scott-1Far and away the leader on the list. He’s a past major champion and a player who bested the field for 68 holes at Royal Lytham and St. Annes in 2012 (most comparable course in the Open rotation to Troon). People forget his early season victories in windy Florida; did I mention his low ball flight?

Jason Day

jason-day-2The only high ball hitter to make our Top 5. Superb putting statistics and an innate ability to scramble, coupled with a high finish in the Ranking Stat, pushed Day up our board. His ability to handle the 10-20 mph winds with his ball flight is key if he wants to win a second major.

Matt Kuchar

kuchar-3A Top 10 finish at Lytham in 2012 and a Top 20 in last year’s Open only moved Kuchar up the list. Kuchar’s accurate iron play, positive putting trends, and above average sand save percentage already had him near the top of the Stats Ranking. He’s all but guaranteed a Top 20 finish.

Branden Grace

grace-4Grace is 190th on tour in Apex Height (distance of ball from the ground at it’s highest point) which will be great in the wind. A former winner of the Alfred Dunhill Championship – a links style tournament held on Open venues sanctioned by the European Tour – Grace is built for the Open. He’s also surprisingly long and contended at Chambers Bay last June.

Henrik Stenson

stenson-5The big hitting Swede is running out of time to claim the elusive first major. Stenson is fantastic across the board in the Stat Ranking with the lone exception of putting. If he can hole putts he will contend. His number 2 in Strokes Gained Approach makes him more likely to stay out of Troon’s cavernous bunkering. Even if he does find the bunkers though, Stenson sits at 30th on Tour in Sand Save Percentage.

Dark Horse Picks

dh-1

Ross Fisher (11) – At 97 in the World Golf Rankings, Fisher isn’t a typical dark horse, but he does sit higher on our list than many would expect. Other than his putting stats and his 68th place finish at St. Andrews last July (still a made cut), Fisher sits significantly above the average in ten of the categories we consider.

dh-2

Francesco Molinari (14) – He seems to play within himself and his style of play fits the tournament. Molinari is going to hit it well, but the putter is a question mark. He does have multiple high finishes on links style courses, so it’s likely Molinari holes more putts on the slower greens.

dh-3

Luke Donald (31) – The former world number one – for 40 weeks in 2011 and 2012 – has slid to 85th in the World Rankings. In our rankings, however, Donald’s power numbers are really all that is holding him back. His 5th place finish at Lytham and his 12th place finish last July at St. Andrews suggest that Donald is poised to make a run at the Claret Jug.

dh-4

Joost Luiten (37) – The Dutchman is relatively unknown to PGA Tour followers, but has been a prominent fixture on the European Tour for years. Luiten claims a spot in our Top 5 statistically, but poor play at St. Andrews last year, and a missed cut at the Scottish Open last week, make us hesitant to go all-in. If he is in form come Thursday at Troon, look for him to make a run.

dh-5

Russell Henley (41) – Henley holds one of the of the top spots in the Stats Rankings, but lacks strong finishes in the past tournaments we considered. We like him because he beat Rory and Tiger at the Honda Classic a few years ago, so he’s shown he has guts. Flighting his ball in the wind will be key because he’s just above average in Apex Height and Strokes Gained on Approach.

Your Picks?

Who is your pick to hoist the Claret Jug Sunday afternoon?

For You

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      bart Casiello

      8 years ago

      So how do you feel about the machine’s performance? I would like to see a follow up article with your insights.

      Adam Scott finished tied for 43rd with a +5
      Jason Day finished tied for 22nd with +1
      Matt Kuchar finished tied for 46th with +6
      Branden Grace finished tied for 76th wit a +13

      But then you have Henrik Stenson winning it all with an incredible -20 performance!

      Reply

      Daniel

      8 years ago

      STENSON! Finally iceman made it. So well deserved. Yes, I’m a swede and I’m so colored in my opinion. Fun to see how he and Phil crushed the field…

      Reply

      bart

      8 years ago

      I think this is cool! Lets just see how it goes.

      Round 1
      Adam Scott: -2 tied for 22nd.
      Jason Day: +2 tied for 94th
      Matt Kuchar: E Tied for 51st

      Reply

      Bart Casiello

      8 years ago

      Round 2

      Adam Scott: Even tied 27th
      Jason Day: +1 tied for 41st
      Matt Kuchar: -3 tied for 11th
      Branden Grace: +2 50th place
      Henrik Stenson: -9 2nd place

      Reply

      Mike Caverhill

      8 years ago

      Were the first two predictions made in advance of the previous major or was the model used to project backwards?

      Reply

      Sam

      8 years ago

      Adam Scott sucks in every category that matters. His scrambling accuracy and putting strokes gained is ranked outside the top 100. Agree on the rest but depending on weather my research shows Rickie Fowler having a great shot.

      Reply

      Joe Golfer

      8 years ago

      I don’t think I’ve ever guessed one of these things right yet.
      I’m going to just guess Lee Westwood.
      I think the local crowd will be strongly with him, which might spur him on to play above his usual level.

      Reply

      Troy Vayanos

      8 years ago

      Being an Australian I’m a big Adam Scott fan so I hope the predictor is correct.

      I do think Adam is a great chance and he’s almost won this championship a couple of times in recent years. He’s got 4 x top-10’s the last 4 years in a row and he’s already won twice on the PGA Tour this year with a Top-10 last week at Firestone.

      It’s hard to go past the form of Dustin Johnson who has 4 x top-15 at this event in the last 6 years. Rory, Jordan and Jason are all playing well so I’d expect them to figure in the finish sometime come Sunday.

      Reply

      jsfvegas

      8 years ago

      Henrik Stenson

      Reply

      Woodstock

      8 years ago

      He’s on our list for a reason. If he holes putts he will contend.

      Reply

      jsfvegas

      8 years ago

      So far so good. After 2 rounds he’s in 2nd place one shot behind leader Phil M.

      jsfvegas

      8 years ago

      He’s leading by one after 3 rounds. :-) Should be a fun round 4 to watch.

      jsfvegas

      8 years ago

      We have a winner. ;-)

      Asef

      8 years ago

      Is the full WAM list posted somewhere?

      Reply

      The Machine

      8 years ago

      Why is everyone questioning me?

      Reply

      Eric

      8 years ago

      So wait, you guys select 5 players and then 5 more dark horses, based on a proprietary algorithm etc., and one of them happens to be the winner? Many of us would have a decent chance of choosing the winner if we had 10 guesses — and that’s without an analytics machine. In the last three majors, where have the other 9 players that you’ve chosen finished? I’d bet a couple of them finished way down the leaderboard, or even missed the cut. There’s a lot of missing information here.

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      8 years ago

      Statistically speaking, given 10 chances you’d have roughly a 6% chance of picking the winner in a blind draw. Picking favorites…we can assume those odds go up a bit. Bookmakers have Day and Johnson listed as co-favorites at 9/1. Adam Scott is 20/1. Kuchar at 66/1 has the worst odds. Luiten, just as an FYI, is 150/1.

      The machine has identified Adam Scott as the most likely winner, and so he is our choice to win. We are not predicting the full Top 5 (nor did we claim that’s what this is). We’re saying that we’ve identified these 5 (in descending order) as having the highest probability of winning. The rankings come from a predictive data model. Of course some of the guys identified as most likely to win, won’t win…or won’t even finish in the Top 5.

      The horse with the best odds doesn’t always win the race. The horse with the 2nd best odds doesn’t always finish 2nd. Does this really need to be explained?

      Regardless, none of that supersedes the pick of Adam Scott.

      Dark Horses are those players outside the top tier of the world rankings who the machine has identified as having the highest probabilities of winning. None of those picks supersede the pick of Adam Scott either.

      The info is the info…use it (or don’t) as you see fit.

      Reply

      Long John

      8 years ago

      Could have added all that info from the start, and it would have clarified things for everyone!

      wayne starr

      8 years ago

      Or just tell us of the last 3 successful tips where in th 10 was each ranked?

      Tony Covey

      8 years ago

      In our internal tests for each of the last 3 majors (dating back to JDay at the PGA Championship), the eventual winner was ranked #1 by the algorithm. After we came up with Danny Willett for the Masters we thought we might have something.

      The same formulas selected Dustin Johnson (we tweeted out that pick ahead of the US Open). Obviously both JDay and DJay were high probability picks to begin with, so a lot of people picked those guys to win. Willett less so of course. We’re excited to see if the machine’s streak continues.

      talljohn777

      8 years ago

      How do you not have the hottest stick at the moment, Dustin Johnson, as a Dark Horse???

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      8 years ago

      We do not question the machine.

      Reply

      Woodstock

      8 years ago

      A player ranked in the Top 5 in the world can’t be considered a dark horse. Johnson is still ranked high on our list (he came in at 21 I believe) but his poor play out of greenside bunkers (150+ rank on Tour) will plague him if he gets into contention.

      Reply

      Tyler

      8 years ago

      Oosty is one of my favourite dark horse picks

      Reply

      Thomas Crisan

      8 years ago

      at .16% success I wouldn’t even better a penny or maybe if the odds were 100m to 1

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      8 years ago

      You wouldn’t wager 1 cent at a shot to win $1,000,000? Fascinating…I’d make that wager regardless of any odds. Not that we’re talking about wagering anyway.

      Reply

      Justin

      8 years ago

      This is my favorite comment ever by you Tony, haha…. nice job

      Dan

      8 years ago

      If Spieth keeps the driver in play he wins by 2 shots. If not, Scott could bring home the trophy.

      Reply

      Fran

      8 years ago

      Lee Westood finally wins his first major.

      Reply

      GilB

      8 years ago

      My sleeper pick is Russell Knox

      Reply

      Dan

      8 years ago

      While it’s entirely possible for those guys to win, my study of cryptology has taught me to instinctively distrust anything with the words “propriety algorithm.” In this case, that proprietary algorithm could just be your gut feeling. Besides, isn’t that against this site’s stance to be open with the data you generate? (BTW, I really enjoy reading your site. This just seems out of character to me.)

      Reply

      Sam

      8 years ago

      Do not question the machine, Dan.

      Reply

      Dan

      8 years ago

      But, the machine was created by people…

      Cary Sternberg

      8 years ago

      DJ can over power the course, especially on the front nine. Wedge play has been great. If his putter stays hot he’ll win by 4.
      Speith will relish the underdog label and after last year, he wants to add The Open title to his resume. If DJ’s putter balks Jordan has a great shot at it

      Reply

      Tucker Monk

      8 years ago

      Mais says “wonderful article-fascinating! Your pics and my hopes are similarly aligned! Love, Mais”

      Reply

      Ken Mykietowich

      8 years ago

      I like Sergio.

      Reply

      Woodstock

      8 years ago

      Sergio sits sixth on our list. He’s shown recent form and he has a good record on links courses. With how solidly he strikes his irons he’ll succeed when the weather gets tough.

      Reply

      Gil Bloomer

      8 years ago

      Knox

      Reply

      EagleM.

      8 years ago

      RORS. His new swing is even better

      Reply

      Mike

      8 years ago

      Also.. no DJ?

      Reply

      Tony Covey

      8 years ago

      We do not question the machine.

      Reply

      Mike

      8 years ago

      Gotta love that Russell Henley pic

      Reply

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