In “Ways to Win,” we track the PGA TOUR winner’s rounds using the Roundabout mobile app and then analyze how they got the job done using the same tools available to Roundabout users. Download Roundabout today in the app store and use Tour-level analysis to improve your game.
A short golf course by PGA TOUR standards, at roughly 6,900 yards, TPC River Highlands seemed like a match made in hHeaven for 54-hole Travelers Championship leader Brendon Todd. Todd had not made a bogey since the fourth hole of the tournament and seemed in complete control until Dustin Johnson lit up the short track on Saturday to jump into the final group. Johnson continued that tear into Sunday, taking the solo lead by the ninth hole and holding on through an eventful back nine that included a weather delay for lightening.
Roundabout in Action
Scorecard Heatmap
For the last two weeks, PGA Tour winners have separated themselves with birdies and shot-making down the stretch, however this weekend was different. Johnson took the lead at the turn and held on to overcome some sketchy ball striking to capture the title. The Roundabout scorecard Heatmap clearly shows Johnson hit poor tee shots on holes 13 and 16 with short game and putting helping him hang on to a single-stroke victory.
Strokes Gained
Dustin Johnson winning a PGA Tour event is not surprising. This was his 21st career victory and he has won at least one tournament each year for the last 13 PGA TOUR seasons. However, the way he did it would surprise the casual golf fan who thinks of Dustin Johnson as a prototypical bomber. Taking a look at Johnson’s round-by-round Strokes Gained performance using the Strokes Gained Stacked plot from Roundabout gives more clarity into how he got it done.
Glancing at the bars in the Strokes Gained Stacked chart, each color represents a different area of Strokes Gained performance (blue – Driving, green – Approach, yellow – Short Game, red – Putting). In round 1, DJ struggled in all areas of the game, gaining just 0.6 strokes on the field. That put him in 79th place and in danger of missing the cut. In Round 2, Johnson put together a well-rounded performance, gaining strokes in all four areas and comfortably making the weekend to set up for a tremendous third round. In Round 3, Johnson blitzed the field and rocketed up the leaderboard, however he didn’t do it with just his driver… he did it primarily with his iron play and his putter.
He shot a 61 with nine birdies and no bogeys. In his final round 67, Dustin Johnson actually lost almost three strokes off the tee, making up for it in the other three areas, particularly with his new putter. Not exactly the work of your stereotypical bomber. Johnson has a tremendously well-rounded game and it showed this weekend.
Shot-by-Shot
With Roundabout, we can look even deeper to see just how Johnson lost strokes off the tee. The main culprit being the 13th hole, where he piped a driver down the left, rolling out of bounds by just a few inches. Forced to re-tee, this penalty automatically cost him two strokes, as indicated in the shot-by-shot window to the left. Roundabout quantifies the quality of every shot using Strokes Gained data to allow users to see exactly how they performed on every shot. Luckily for DJ, he minimized the damage of a poor tee shot by following it up with a good one and a clutch seven-foot putt to save bogey. Holing that putt relieved a great deal of stress and likely sealed the tournament for Johnson.
Three Keys
The key to playing quality golf and winning tournaments is minimizing mistakes and Johnson did that this week. Looking at Roundabout’s “Three Keys,” Dustin Johnson had one three-putt, one two-chip, and just one penalty for 72 holes. Two of those three errors came in his final six holes, when the tournament was largely out of reach for the majority of the field.
Roundabout identifies problem areas and gives instant performance feedback in the post-round summary. For Johnson, it is clear that he had a “Poor Driving Day”, losing 2.7 strokes.
Roundabout also tells us why. He had two driving errors (hitting a tee shot into a penalty or recovery situation) and he missed to the left 43 percent of the time. This would be an area he would want to closely monitor under pressure situations to see if that trend holds. However, if you’re making 102 feet of putts, you can afford a mistake or two down the stretch.
Much can be learned from seeing how the pros manage the course and get it done from day to day with different parts of their game. As amateurs, the fastest way to improve is to know where you need to work. The Roundabout mobile app answers these questions with easy-to-understand visualizations, bringing Tour-level analytics to amateur golfers. Actionable analysis can lead to measurable results.
Download in Roundabout in the app store today and start tracking your golf performance like the pros.