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Think Bill James, a pioneer of baseball statistics or the Moneyball story of how Billy Bean used stats to make the Oakland A's a viable MLB franchise. Now think about the man who revolutionized the use of statistics in the game of golf. That man is Mark Broadie, who joined Bo and Farrell to explain Strokes Gained, the revolutionary tool that changed how the best players in the world evaluate their performance and strategy across the various areas of their games. Sean Foley, who wrote the foreword to Broadie's book, Every Shot Counts, calls the Columbia Business School professor one of the most influential minds of the last 20 years in the game of golf.
Think Bill James, a pioneer of baseball statistics or the Moneyball story of how Billy Bean used stats to make the Oakland A's a viable MLB franchise. Now think about the man who revolutionized the use of statistics in the game of golf. That man is Mark Broadie, who joined Bo and Farrell to explain Strokes Gained, the revolutionary tool that changed how the best players in the world evaluate their performance and strategy across the various areas of their games. Sean Foley, who wrote the foreword to Broadie's book, Every Shot Counts, calls the Columbia Business School professor one of the most influential minds of the last 20 years in the game of golf.