Wisconsin Wolverine

April 14th, 2012 at 12:28 PM ^

That flight path doesn't look quite ... natural.  Although I'd be willing to bet the start & end points are correct, that looks a little funny.  Then again, I'm SUPER AWFUL at golf & know nothing.  What do you more knowledgeable folk think?

Anonymosity

April 14th, 2012 at 1:56 PM ^

I believe you are correct.  If this wasn't the case, we'd often see a hacker hit a slice that kept curving until it came back towards him.  I've never seen anyone boomerang a ball.  No matter how much sidespin you put on the ball, it eventually stops curving.

gbdub

April 14th, 2012 at 3:23 PM ^

Well my aero professors can kill me if I'm wrong, but basically the ball leaves the club face with forward velocity and spin (in this case a lot of side spin). The spin creates "lift" force that accelerates the ball sideways. But the direction of the spin is fixed relative to the earth, that is the lift force will always be in the same direction. Thus the ball can never curve more than its initial spin direction. Or something like that.

Section 1

April 14th, 2012 at 8:46 PM ^

First of all, that Google Earth picture is nothing but somebody's imagining.  And no, golf balls do not hook suddenly and then stop hooking.  And no, Bubba's ball did not hook that much.

The photograph above is not down the target line.  I appreciate the reference-point of the Mackenzie bunker.  (Yes, that  bunker on #10 is called the Mackenzie bunker in tribute to the designer of ANGC -- and the University of Michigan Golf Course.  ANGC #10 was changed after Mackenzie had died, by his design partner at Michigan, Perry Maxwell.)  But Bubba Watson is a player with a notoriously "open" stance and if that photograph were really down the taget line, Bubba would be closing his stance massively.  (And actually, you would close your stance to hit a hook.)

But this is all just simply untrue.  Yes, he hit a big hook.  And hitting a big hook with a wedge is pretty freaky, especially off pine straw and not a fairway.  You would be "hooding" the club face, and effectively turning the loft into about a 9-iron.

That ball-flight-path that somebody photoshopped into the picture is total fiction.

Sorry.

HarmonHowardWoodson

April 14th, 2012 at 12:39 PM ^

The blue line probably is not accurate, but my guess is that ball went completely across the fairway as it hooked back towards the green. If you extend it out a little farther it becomes more of a rounded trajectory and becomes a little more believable, especially if you consider the way the ball rolled after it landed (like it was coming from far out on the left of the green).

 

Either way, from where he was, that shot was nothing short of spectacular!

Benoit Balls

April 14th, 2012 at 12:43 PM ^

makes that an excellent shot, not the shot itself. For a pro with blades and a urethane ball, its really not that difficult.  Plus he's a lefty, so thats a pull hook he hit, which is easier than hitting a fade.

Doing it on Sunday at the Masters is a completely different story, but again, thats more about the situation than the shot itself. If he hit that shot on Thursday, no one would've remembered it once second round play started on Friday. 

maizedandconfused

April 14th, 2012 at 12:54 PM ^

C'mon man.

I have a pretty solid ability at controlling what the ball does based on stance, where it lies in my stance and controlling the face of the club.

To be able to punch-spin the ball like that (has to be a ridiculous spin level and initial ball speed to make this happen) to make it through the trees, then turn over and take the ball path you want makes this probably one of the greatest shots I've seen in a very very long time. 

TJFB

April 14th, 2012 at 12:53 PM ^

I'm not disagreeing with the fact that the shot was impressive, but as benoit balls said, the pull hook makes it A LOT easier to pull off.

Granted, it's under different circumstances, but I would like to see a "blue line on an aerial photo taken from a funny angle" of this shot by tiger: (forgive me for not knowing how to embed) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FEQ9jbRkgaw

maizedandconfused

April 14th, 2012 at 1:00 PM ^

to embed, click share.
then embed.
The embed code will come up, but
click options first and make sure "use old embed code" is clicked.
Copy this

Go to your response, underneath the dialog box, there is a "switch to plain text editor". 

Click this, copy paste, then save. voilla. Welcome to the blog,

rob6reid

April 14th, 2012 at 2:13 PM ^

Im guessing most of the people that say they hit shots like that off the tee are right handed. Remember that Bubba is a lefty, so he is actually hitting a huge draw (in plain terms, you would be hitting  way left off of the tee from your orientation if you were right handed) not a fade/slice. In golf, it is much harder to get the ball to draw with that trajectory, than it is to fade the ball with that trajectory. 90% of amateur golfers play a fade/slice.

MMB 82

April 14th, 2012 at 8:37 PM ^

Bubba basically hooked the hell out of that ball on purpose to get it to the green? Also, as a non golfer, I think this was the best shot ever at the Masters....