East Lake Golf Club was built in the early 20th century, and the type of play that is rewarded around the Donald Ross design as it hosts once again the Tour Championship—straight hitting off the tee and precise approach play—still reflects old-school approach. When I analyzed the statistics of recent editions of the Tour Championship using Arccos Pro Insights, it’s clear that a bomb-and-gouge strategy doesn’t work here. Length helps, yes, but watch for players who pair sufficient distance with precision off the tee to keep the ball in the fairway and set up scoring opportunities inside 150 yards. These are the three skills players need to win the Tour Championship.

Accuracy off the tee 2169298844

Mike Mulholland

Strong play off the tee is required to play well at many tour courses, but it is especially important at East Lake where during the Tour Championship, accuracy has been rewarded more than length. Don’t get me wrong, length is still very useful at East Lake, but playing from the fairway is critical to controlling the ball into the greens. That’s why you’ve seen very accurate drivers succeed here in recent years, like Scottie Scheffler, Viktor Hovland and Xander Schauffele.

Approaches from 100 to 150 yards 2169784641

Mike Mulholland

At East Lake, short-iron and wedge play is very important. When you analyze the parts of the game that contribute to differences in scoring between players, more than 16 percent of the difference comes from this distance range. That is much higher than the average PGA Tour course, and there are very few courses where approaches from this range are more important.

There are a couple of reasons this range is so crucial at East Lake:

1. The difference between a good shot and a bad shot from this range at East Lake is much bigger than other courses. If you miss the greens, the penalty is high, but quality shots often leave straightforward putts for birdie. The players who are a little off with their short irons will be scrambling more than usual, while those who are sharp will have plenty of makeable birdie putts.

2. Players have an unusually high number of shots from this range at East Lake. During a typical tour event, players average about four shots per round from this distance, but at East Lake, players average more than six per round. Players who are dialed in this area will have plenty of opportunities to separate themselves.

Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Tom Bendelow actually laid out the original course at East Lake, back when it was known as Atlanta Athletic Club, and that was the layout upon which Stewart Maiden taught the game to the now-legendary Bobby Jones. Donald Ross basically built a new course on the same spot in 1915, which remained untouched until changes were made before the 1963 Ryder Cup. When Atlanta Athletic moved to the suburbs in the late 1960s, the intown East Lake location (many of the members stayed behind) fell on hard financial times until being rescued in the 1990s by businessman Tom Cousins, who made it a sterling fusion of corporate and inner-city involvement. Rees Jones redesigned most holes beginning in the mid-90s, making the course more reflective of his views of championship golf. After the PGA Tour reversed the nines for the 2016 Tour Championship (flipping the unpopular par-3 finish into the ninth hole), the club made the new routing permanent for regular play. East Lake underwent another major restoration following the 2023 Tour Championship, this time by Andrew Green, that focuses on bringing back the course’s Donald Ross heritage. Green used a 1949 aerial to inform the replacement of bunkers and the shape of greens, which are much larger and possess a wider variety of hole locations and slopes than before. Almost every hole was dramatically revamped, creating a course that poses driving options and requires the careful calibration of each shot rather than a mere test of straight hitting. The result is a massive jump in our rankings. View Course Putting from seven to 13 feet

Given the number of approaches into the greens from 100 to 150 yards, players can have quite a few close birdie looks. The best players from 100 to 150 yards will hit plenty of approaches inside 13 feet, making this short-range putting a big separator between a good performance and a win. The stats show a high correlation between a player’s putting from seven to 13 feet and his final position on the leaderboard.

Players I like at East Lake 1640605561

Kevin C. Cox

All in all, the course tends to favor great ball-strikers. Scottie Scheffler up until last year didn’t have a great history at East Lake, particularly on the greens. Last year was the first time he gained shots on the greens, and he won comfortably. If Scheffler is not firing on all cylinders, you don’t have to look too far down the list of players to find other great ball strikers that are a good fit to the course. Tommy Fleetwood and Corey Conners are in a good run of form and they are some of the best ball-strikers in the game; they both excel inside 150 yards. They could be a real threat to Scottie at East Lake.

EDOARDO MOLINARI, a former U.S. Amateur champion, Ryder Cupper and three-time winner on the DP World Tour, is Arccos Golf’s Chief Data Strategist and is a statistician for players on the PGA Tour and DP World Tour.

This article was originally published on golfdigest.com