We've all heard the saying. It's popular enough that ESPN named one of their shows Numbers Never Lie. But here's the deal: Numbers are little more than trivia, basically meaningless in and of themselves. In sports, they tend to take on meaning only when they become statistics... and statistics are numbers that someone has interpreted to produce that meaning.
And interpretations are... Properly, a count of interpretation. Interpretations can lie... And regularly do.
Most of my friends and I picked potential Masters winners based on stats. Our results were about as good as those of John Antonini at GC's Fantasy Central who, using a number of stats like GIR, number of wins prior to a Masters, and par-5 scoring, chose Phil as his favorite with Sergio and Zach Johnson close seconds. (All missed the cut.) And his choices for a possible first-timer were Harris English, Graham DeLaet, and Jimmy Walker. (Only Walker made the cut and sits at +2, T19.)
I'm now not positive any stats may want to have anticipated state-of-the-art leaderboard. Just look at the last 4 pairings:
- (-5) Bubba Watson, Jordan Spieth
- (-4) Jonas Blixt, Matt Kuchar
- (-3) Rickie Fowler, Miguel Angel Jimenez (pictured above)
- (-2) Jim Furyk, Lee Westwood
Apparently, in the last 27 years the winner has come from the Top12 on the 36-hole factor. This yr that group had 14 gamers and gave the look of this:
- (1) Watson
- (2) Senden
- (T3) Bjorn, Blixt, Scott, Spieth
- (T7) Couples, Walker, Furyk
- (T10) Streelman, Gallacher, Henley, Stadler, Donaldson
If all of that's true, Jonas Blixt will win today because Watson and Spieth are in the final group and Kuchar wasn't in the Top12 at the halfway point. In fact, of the last 4 groups only Blixt and Furyk even have a chance despite a mere 3-stroke spread between those groups. Would you like to put money on that???
Let me give you a few statistics and figures that may not lie:
- Bubba would win his 2nd Green Jacket in 3 years.
- Spieth would become the youngest Masters winner ever.
- Blixt would become the first male Swedish major winner. (Remember, Annika already has 10 for the ladies.)
- Kuchar or Westwood would leave the "best player without a major" list.
- Fowler's following might start to resemble Arnie's Army. (Puma would certainly break out the champagne!)
- Jimenez would become the oldest major winner ever.
- Furyk would likely lock up entry into the Hall of Fame.
If you need proof that numbers do not constantly inform the reality, just don't forget this: The TV enterprise continues to be ready to study what the Masters viewing numbers will be with out Tiger in the field, and maximum assume they'll take a massive hit from ultimate year. I suspect they'll, because maximum occasional golf enthusiasts only care about how Tiger does.
But if you assume those numbers will thoroughly degree the significance of this 12 months's Masters, think once more.
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