Abstract

Golf putting occurs under highly variable conditions. Therefore, adapting to different putting distances is a challenge that the golfer faces and understanding the variables underlying performance in this task is important. The main objective of this study was to analyse the golf-putting performance in skilled golfers at different distances to the hole. Fourteen highly skilled golfers, adult male and right-handed (41.5 ± 13.2 years with an average handicap of 2.3 ± 1.7) performed the golf putting on a natural grass green, completing a total of 120 randomly ordered trials, 30 trials at each of the four different practice conditions (1, 2, 3, and 4 m away from the hole). A smart engineered putter (InPutter) was used as the data acquisition instrument to record several process variables at 100 Hz. Results indicated that golf-putting distances constrained movement organisation variables in specific ways. For example, as the distance to the hole changes, so do the informational constraints, shaping how a golfer needs to regulate performance. We concluded that the effects of different golf-putting distances required the implementation of functional solutions uniquely adjusted to each player. Furthermore, the perception that the player withdrew from the properties of the context (e.g., distance to the hole) was important to adapt the golf-putting process variables (e.g., amplitude and duration of the movement, among others). All these factors led to a decisive influence on how the golfer hit the ball and adjusted his performance. A major implication of developing a better understanding of the role of performance in golf putting is that coaches and players should allow functional movement behaviours to emerge during practice.

Highlights

  • Pelz [1] claimed that a golfer who participates in the PGA Tour faces several constraints, being susceptible to a high variability of practice conditions that requires constant adaptations to putting distances

  • We hypothesize that the manipulation of putting distance required the adoption of solutions exclusively adjusted to each player

  • Regarding the variation of the inter-individual motor performance obtained in the backswing and downswing phases, the variation coefficient ranged between 36% (PC1) and 23% (PC4)

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Summary

Introduction

Pelz [1] claimed that a golfer who participates in the PGA Tour faces several constraints, being susceptible to a high variability of practice conditions that requires constant adaptations to putting distances. An important challenge is to understand how each golfer learns to adapt performance under different distances to the hole [2]. Based on results obtained in the USPGA golf tour putting data analysis, Suzuki et al [3] indicated that the short putting ability is an important factor in golf performance, adding to the key skills of the golfer the control of distance and direction in the putt. Suzuki et al [3] indicated that the proportion of missed putts from a short distance in professional golfers when compared to novice golfers, as well as the comparison with putts from the nondominant stance, has not been scientifically reported in previous studies. Professional golfers generally present a significantly lower distance error than novice golfers in both dominant and nondominant putting stance from a 2 m target

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