← Stats

Stats glossary

How every stat is calculated.

Plain-English definitions, one example per stat, and the fine print on each. Every entry has an anchor — every leaderboard links straight to its definition.

1v1 record

Definition
How a player has done head-to-head over the season: wins, losses, and ties across every finished match they played.
Formula
For each finished match, count one win, one loss, or one tie depending on whether the player's side took the match, lost it, or split it.
Example
If Grant Horvat plays six matches and his side wins three, loses two, and ties one, his 1v1 record reads 3-2-1.
Fine print
  • Matches that haven't finished yet aren't counted — they only show up once they're called.
  • Players who sat out a match (the day's benched player) don't take a loss for sitting.
  • When a wildcard guests on another team for a match, that match goes on the wildcard's record too.

Scramble contribution %

Definition
In a scramble — where everyone hits and the team picks the best ball each shot — this is the share of the picked shots that came off your club. It's the answer to "who actually carried this team today."
Formula
Take the number of times your shot was the one the team played from, divide by your team's total shots in the scramble, multiply by 100.
Example
If a side hits 32 shots in a scramble round and Wesley Bryan's ball got picked 14 times while Brad Dalke's got picked 18, Wesley Bryan = 43.8% and Brad Dalke = 56.3%.
Fine print
  • Only scramble holes count — alt-shot and singles rounds are tracked separately.
  • Sitting out a hole means no shots, so a benched player shows 0% for that round.
  • Sums fairly across multiple scramble rounds: a player who's been the heart of three rounds beats someone who carried one big number.

Alt-shot contribution %

Definition
In alternate shot, teammates take turns striking the same ball. Contribution % shows how the rotation actually shook out — partners normally land near 50/50 unless one teammate sat out a hole.
Formula
Same idea as scramble: your shots divided by your side's total shots in the alt-shot round, times 100.
Example
If Wesley Bryan and George Bryan combine for 30 alt-shot strokes with Wesley Bryan hitting 16 and George Bryan hitting 14, Wesley Bryan = 53.3% and George Bryan = 46.7%.
Fine print
  • When a wildcard joins for an alt-shot round, their strokes count toward the team they joined.
  • The stat shows what happened, not what was supposed to happen — if a duo got out of rotation, the percentages will show it.

Clutch shots

Definition
Long-range makes. Any putt sunk from 10 feet or further out, plus anything holed from off the green — chip-ins, pitch-ins, hole-outs from the fairway or a bunker. The shots that make the highlight reel.
Formula
Count two things and add them up: putts made from 10+ feet, and any shot from off the green that ends up in the hole.
Example
Grant Horvat rolls in a 22-footer on 15 (+1 clutch) and chips in from the front fringe on 17 (+1 clutch). A 4-foot tap-in for par on 18 doesn't count — too short to qualify.
Fine print
  • Tap-ins and short par putts don't count. The 10-foot bar is deliberate — at that distance even Tour pros are below 50%, so anything that drops from 10+ is a real make.
  • A shot holed from off the green always counts, whatever the distance — a 4-yard pitch-in is just as much a YouTube moment as a 40-yarder.
  • Missed putts and shots that finish close don't count — clutch only fires when the ball drops.

Putts inside 10 feet

Definition
Make rate on putts struck from 10 feet or closer. This is the standard short-range cutoff in pro golf — for context, PGA Tour pros make roughly half their 8-footers and around 40% from 10 feet, so anyone hitting 60%+ inside this window is putting well.
Formula
Putts made from inside 10 feet, divided by total putts attempted from inside 10 feet, times 100.
Example
If Brad Dalke takes 18 putts inside 10 feet across the round and makes 12, his short-range make rate is 66.7%.
Fine print
  • Only putts count — chip-ins and other made shots from short range show up under clutch shots instead.
  • Putts where the distance wasn't recorded are skipped.
  • Lets you tell who's actually rolling them in versus who's leaving them short or sliding them past.

Fairways hit

Definition
Percentage of tee shots that came to rest in the fairway. The simplest read on driving accuracy.
Formula
Tee shots that ended in the fairway, divided by total tee shots, times 100.
Example
If Grant Horvat hits 14 tee shots and 8 of them find the fairway, his fairways-hit percentage is 57.1%.
Fine print
  • Every tee shot counts — including par-3 tee shots aimed at the green. It's the unfiltered version of the classic "fairways in regulation" stat.
  • Re-tees after a penalty don't count toward drives.

17th Man race

Definition
A season-long count of how many times each player has been picked as a team's wildcard. The unofficial badge for whichever player gets called on most often by someone else's team.
Formula
Add up every wildcard appearance for each player across the season.
Example
If Micah Morris joins Team Horvat for event 1's alt-shot round and event 2's finals, his 17th Man count is 2.
Fine print
  • Every wildcard appearance counts as one — including when the same player guests twice in the same event.
  • Filtering by event narrows to just that event's wildcard picks.

Captain grade

Definition
A letter grade for each team based on how often they win. Ties count as half a win — splitting matches is better than losing them.
Formula
Take wins, plus half of ties, divide by total finished matches, multiply by 100. A+ is 90%+, A is 75%+, B is 60%+, C is 45%+, D is 30%+, anything else with at least one match is an F. No matches yet shows a dash.
Example
If Team Dalke finishes 4 wins, 2 losses, no ties — that's 66.7%, which is a B.
Fine print
  • Filtering by team pins the grade to just that team's matches.
  • It's the team's grade — the captain doesn't get separate credit beyond what their team does on the course.

Channel views

Definition
The latest YouTube view, like, and comment totals for each round's video. Multiple snapshots can be tracked over time (24-hour, week one, all-time); the most recent one is what you see here.
Formula
For each round's video, show the most recently recorded view, like, and comment counts.
Example
If event 1's scramble video had 180k views after 24 hours and 520k after a week, the leaderboard shows 520k once that newer snapshot lands.
Fine print
  • Rounds with no snapshot yet don't appear as zero — they're just missing until the first count is logged.
  • Numbers are per-round, not per-event. Add them up across an event's three rounds for the event total.

Head-to-head matrix

Definition
A player-by-player grid showing each pair's wins, losses, and ties against one another. Read across the row to see how that player has done against everyone else.
Formula
For every finished match where two players were on opposite sides, add the result to their shared record. Ties go in their own column.
Example
If Grant Horvat and Wesley Bryan face off in four matches and Grant Horvat's side wins twice, loses once, and ties once, the cell at Grant Horvat's row × Wesley Bryan's column reads 2-1-1.
Fine print
  • Teammates on the same side don't show up against each other — there's no head-to-head when both balls are on your team.
  • Wildcards count for the team they played for that match.