Mar
A Look at the Players Championship
The scenario this week is that the largest (by far) purse in the history of professional golf is on the table, and there is not one player out there who has been anything close to dominant over the last year.
When they tee it up Thursday morning at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach FL, a purse of $15 million – yes, 15 – will be available. That’s up 17 percent from the $12.7 million that was distributed in 2019, when the event was last played. Using the normal purse distribution, 18 percent goes to the winner – that’s $2.7 million to one guy. Second and third are over a million, too.
As it always is, the field will be the strongest of the year in professional golf. What’s missing is any guy you can point to and say, “He’s been playing great for a long time.” The absence of steady, dominant play by anyone is reflected in the 1491.7 Hawley Rating by world no. 1
Based on overall play in the last two years (emphasis on recent play), history in this event, and fit for the course, we have six guys who basically could call themselves co-favorites. All should be at odds of between 22-1 and 25-1 (although you wouldn’t get anything close to that at a betting outlet) based on a detailed statistical study of how often guys win, based on rating data. Here they are (alphabetical order because the numeric data doesn’t favor any one of them by much):
Dustin Johnson – Doesn’t play a lot (seven appearances in six months since the last Tour Championship). Had a very nice stretch going back to last August where he was in the top 10 in eight of nine events with two wins and three seconds. Then he dropped out of sight two weeks ago in the WGC event, finishing 54th. And he had back-to-back missed cuts last July before the hot streak started. On the plus side, he is third in the field in terms of fit for the course, per the Hawley course fit numbers. He’s more than a stroke per round better than the field average.Rory McIlroy — Since the re-start of professional golf last June, he’s played 18 times with merely five top-10s and exactly half of his finishes in the top 25. Last week he started at or near the top of the leaderboard at the Palmer, then shot 72-76 on the weekend and ended up in an eight-way tie for 10th place. The week prior, he was sixth in the WGC-Workday. Three weeks ago he missed the cut by seven strokes in the Genesis. A plus, he has a strong record in this event, as nominally the defending champion based on the 2019 win. He was in the top 10 three years in a row from 2013 to 2015, and just missed in 2016.- Jon Rahm – The nominal world no. 1 (or if you go by the Official World Golf Ratings, he’s no. 2 to Johnson) has been racking up top-10s but without a win since last August’s BMW. He also won the Memorial in July. The 26-year-old Spaniard has been in the top 10 five times in nine appearances since the Tour Championship, including second at the Zozo. He’s third on the Tour in consecutive cuts made (behind
Xander Schauffele andViktor Hovland ) with 18. - Xander Schauffele> — Frequently on the leaderboard but missing the big paydays; since winning the Champions two years ago, he has been second eight times. Had his worst outing since last June when barely inside the top 40 in his last time out, at the WGC Workday two weeks ago. Leads Tour in consecutive cuts made, as noted above. Also good for the course.
Webb Simpson – Sorry if these guys all sound the same, but Simpson is always at least an even bet for the top 10, having been there four times in nine events since September. Last win was at Phoenix a year ago.Justin Thomas – Big Crimson Tide fan has been a bit off this year. After finishing third at the Champions, he’s got two missed cuts and two finishes a little outside the top 10 in four events.
Lurking down at 30th place in the ratings is classy, 27-year-old Texan
Four guys who also have the arrow pointed in the “up” direction are
The course fit statistics for the famous TPC Sawgrass course reflect high value in getting past fairway trouble and promptly onto the green. Over the past eight years, the stat most closely correlated with success here is shots gained in approach, and greens in regulation is second.
Here’s a surprising name of the player ranked no. 1 in the field in course fit:
Chris Kirk – Quietly, this 11-year Tour veteran is having a good year. He’s got two top-10s, two top-20s and a missed cut in 2021.- Matthew NeSmith – The no. 1 player in the field in terms of course fit is 28 and from South Carolina. He managed one Tour appearance per year in 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, and 2017 before playing regularly last year. He has two top-10s (Shriners, Phoenix) in 13 appearances this season. NeSmith is in the top 5 percent of all PGA and Euro pros in shots gained in approach and in the top 1 percent in greens in regulation.
Carlos Ortiz – 29-year-old Mexican and product of the U. of North Texas won at Houston in November and has had kind of an up-and-down record of two top-10s, two top-20s, and three lesser finishes since then (one MC).
You may recall that they played one round here last year, with Hideki Matsuyama pacing the field with a 9-under score, before the Tour shut down for three months due to the covid pandemic.