...and now for something completely different & really quite sensational (if true).
I was watching the LPGA (Ladies) golf at the weekend, the Joburg Ladies Open, & the commentators mentioned a really weird stat featuring New Zealander Amelia Garvey. She's not a world-beater (World Ranking 142) but had a good Tournament, finishing 13th.
So I went over to Wiki to check it, & sure enough, the stat was confirmed on there...
In 2024, during the final round of the Royal St Cloud Women's Championship on the NXXT Women's Pro Tour in Florida, Garvey made history being the first professional golfer to record a par, birdie, eagle, hole in one, and albatross all in one round, a one in 4.5 trillion likelihood.[9] She also had a 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and a 6 on her scorecard.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amelia_GarveyIt's so unlikely that it's a struggle to believe it happened, but all the google searches seem to confirm it, as did the commentators on the TV.
I'm also a bit perplexed how they worked out the odds of 4.5 trillion to one, or whatever it actually was. How would they work that out?Doobs is better qualified to answer this, but they are multiplying the odds, as they see them, of each event.
The key question is about how they arrive at the odds of each event.
A quick search says that a hole in one is a 1/12500 shot across all golfers and a 1/2500 for a pro.
No doubt similar stats can be found for birdies pars and albatrosses and all will be in a similar range.
That being said, I think it’s safe to say that it is an unlikely set of scores in a single round.
But then, were led to believe that the sequence of each shuffled deck of cards is ‘unique’ but that doesn’t stop my opponent hitting a one-outer on the river at a frequency that is annoyingly recurrent.