Hey Joe, thank you so much and sorry for my late reply! When I'm trying to figure out how far the ball flies, it's basically a quick two-step mental calculation: 1) Multiplying the wind with a factor (as we know each wind direction has a different factor), which gives me a percentage of how far the ball flies further or shorter than normal, and 2) converting the percentage in a yard-number, depending on the distance toward the flag. Quick example: 400 yards distance to the flag / 3 metres wind into 12 o'clock direction 1) 3 (wind) x 3 (factor for 12 o'clock) = 9 2) 9% of 400y = 9 x 4 = 36y which the ball flies further than without wind Of course there are some exceptions and adjustments to be taken into consideration depending on which club you choose. What regards the direction of the stroke, as you can see I'm doing it per clicks right at the end of my aiming process, observing that each club compensates a different amount of cross wind. The higher the curve of the stroke, the more clicks are needed, so for 1 metre wind to the left or right a sand wedge needs about 2 clicks, whereas a 5 iron should be okay with 1 click, e.g. ;)
How exactly you putting m8, are you using putting chart for distance? Do you count the slope lines or how exactly are you adjusting left rigth. Very Good play again.
Hey, what I mean by "Pin 3" is the pin location on the course / round, as I thought it might be of interest for the viewers and more rounds on different pin locations for each course might follow. ;)
That's true, every of the 5 possible pins per course (shown at the beginning of the round) has its own fixed hole position which never changes. So for pin 3 e.g. which you can see in this round the flag on hole 2 will be in short front position every time, whereas pin 1 on this hole is far right, pin 2 middle right, pin 4 middle left, and pin 5 far left. Comparing the pins with each other for the whole course, you can indeed say that there are better and worse ones for scoring, depending of course also on the weather you get in combination. Usually I like pin 1 most on Gleiger (also because it has the short positions on par-5-holes 4 and 17), followed by pin 3 and 5. But that doesn't mean you can't play decent scores on more hard-to-play pins like 2 (far left on 9, front left on 18 e.g. which is horrible) and 4, I'd say it's only less probable to get a -30 or better maybe. So when I'm attacking a highscore on certain courses there will be pinsets which I try to play more often to optimize chances (Gleiger pin 1 and 3, Rufus e.g. pin 3 because it is often located in the middle of the green here), whereas on other courses it doesn't make such a big difference. I also haven't analyzed every course on that matter in depth, as I'm usually playing everything and of course no pin should be neglected in practice. :) On WRT like on every other round it is a matter of luck which pinset you get, as it is randomly chosen. I remember WRTs when I got 3 times pin 1 on Gleiger e.g., and others where I got nothing different than pin 2 and 4, but the more you play over time, statistically, it should be evenly balanced.
what a nice putt on the 17th, awesome^^
Wow riesen Respekt 👍einfach nur grandios gespielt!!!
Vielen Dank fürs Zuschauen und das Lob :)
Starke Runde Alex!
Vielen Dank Falko, war auch sehr happy bis auf die 14 ;)
masterclass, very impressive federinho! would love to hear a run down on how you adjust your shot for the wind!
Hey Joe, thank you so much and sorry for my late reply! When I'm trying to figure out how far the ball flies, it's basically a quick two-step mental calculation: 1) Multiplying the wind with a factor (as we know each wind direction has a different factor), which gives me a percentage of how far the ball flies further or shorter than normal, and 2) converting the percentage in a yard-number, depending on the distance toward the flag.
Quick example: 400 yards distance to the flag / 3 metres wind into 12 o'clock direction
1) 3 (wind) x 3 (factor for 12 o'clock) = 9
2) 9% of 400y = 9 x 4 = 36y which the ball flies further than without wind
Of course there are some exceptions and adjustments to be taken into consideration depending on which club you choose. What regards the direction of the stroke, as you can see I'm doing it per clicks right at the end of my aiming process, observing that each club compensates a different amount of cross wind. The higher the curve of the stroke, the more clicks are needed, so for 1 metre wind to the left or right a sand wedge needs about 2 clicks, whereas a 5 iron should be okay with 1 click, e.g. ;)
@@federinhoshotonline2941 Merci beaucoup pour cette réponse, cependant, pourriez vous nous indiquer le facture de vent pour chaque club?
Tu as fait le parcours avec quelle stats puissance, précision, talent et endurance?
HGW grandios gespielt ,eine Augenweide
Dankedanke, freut mich :)
Einfach nur...Wahnsinn! Fettes HGW
Hehe ich danke dir :)
JAMANN !!! Fett gerockt, HGW Alex :D
Ergebensten Dank :D
We can say that you averaged birdie on par 3's xD
GG dude, great WR
Thanks man, yeah that's a good way to say it xD
@@federinhoshotonline2941 Maybe I can consider changing my putting technique after seeing this^^
How exactly you putting m8, are you using putting chart for distance? Do you count the slope lines or how exactly are you adjusting left rigth. Very Good play again.
What do you mean by "Pin 3"?
Was meinst du mit "Pin 3"?
Hey, what I mean by "Pin 3" is the pin location on the course / round, as I thought it might be of interest for the viewers and more rounds on different pin locations for each course might follow. ;)
Really? Do you mean a "Pin 3" setup will have the same pin 3 location on every hole each time you play it?
That's true, every of the 5 possible pins per course (shown at the beginning of the round) has its own fixed hole position which never changes. So for pin 3 e.g. which you can see in this round the flag on hole 2 will be in short front position every time, whereas pin 1 on this hole is far right, pin 2 middle right, pin 4 middle left, and pin 5 far left. Comparing the pins with each other for the whole course, you can indeed say that there are better and worse ones for scoring, depending of course also on the weather you get in combination. Usually I like pin 1 most on Gleiger (also because it has the short positions on par-5-holes 4 and 17), followed by pin 3 and 5. But that doesn't mean you can't play decent scores on more hard-to-play pins like 2 (far left on 9, front left on 18 e.g. which is horrible) and 4, I'd say it's only less probable to get a -30 or better maybe. So when I'm attacking a highscore on certain courses there will be pinsets which I try to play more often to optimize chances (Gleiger pin 1 and 3, Rufus e.g. pin 3 because it is often located in the middle of the green here), whereas on other courses it doesn't make such a big difference. I also haven't analyzed every course on that matter in depth, as I'm usually playing everything and of course no pin should be neglected in practice. :) On WRT like on every other round it is a matter of luck which pinset you get, as it is randomly chosen. I remember WRTs when I got 3 times pin 1 on Gleiger e.g., and others where I got nothing different than pin 2 and 4, but the more you play over time, statistically, it should be evenly balanced.
wurd auch mal zeit :P
Yeah, paar Monate später als geplant, aber immerhin noch 2019 :)
i want a coaching :)
구독했습니다^^
good ~
Sauber hgw 👍👍
Danke sehr :)
HGW
Commentary on your thoughts as you play would make your vids even better. :)
Are you "Sip" on USA server?
u god
they ruined this game with there high prices,no body plays any more