Hot and cold hands on the PGA Tour: Do they exist?

In this paper, we examine the "hot hand" (and "cold hand") phenomenon as it relates to the PGA Tour using data from the 2013-4 PGA Tour season. For this study, we define "hot hand" in golf as having a greater probability of recording a birdie or better on a hole immediately following a birdie or better. Similarly, a "cold hand" is thought of as having a greater probability of recording a bogey or worse following a bogey or worse. The basis of our hot/cold hand model is centered around each hole`s relative difficulty on a particular day, the actual par rating of the hole, and a random player effect. Our results seem to agree with most of the related work on hot hand effects in basketball, golf, and other sports; namely, that there is simply not enough evidence to suggest that the hot hand phenomenon exists. On the other hand, the presence of a cold hand effect is highly significant, particularly on par 4 holes. Finally, we present the development and results of a large-scale power analysis simulation study in support of our proposed methodology.
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Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:technical and natural sciences sport games
Tagging:Hot-Hand-Phänomen
Published in:Journal of Sports Analytics
Language:English
Published: 2018
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3233/JSA-180214
Volume:4
Issue:4
Pages:275-284
Document types:article
Level:advanced