College

"Clippd is a great tool for showing progress and keeping young players positive"

Words by
Dan Davies
"Clippd is a great tool for showing progress and keeping young players positive"

Georgia State Senior Padgett Chitty on winning the GSGA Women’s Matchplay title, returning home for her final year, and how Clippd shows how she’s growing as a player.

Padgett Chitty has her name inscribed into the history of the Georgia State Golf Association, or on one of its most prestigious trophies to be precise. “It was one of the best experiences of my life,” she smiles at the memory of winning the GSGA Women’s Matchplay Championship in 2021. 

“I qualified as the bottom seed,” she continues. “After winning the final, it was raining. I had purple hair at the time and the dye was bleeding all over my shirt while I was being asked all these questions!”

Padgett has now returned home, having transferred from Michigan State to see out the final year of her college career with Georgia State. “It means everything,” says the graduate student. “There's something different about coming to your home state and being on this team that has very similar ideals to you. Having such an amazing coach, such as Ket [Vanderpool], is such an amazing feeling, too.”

Coach Vanderpool is the reason Padgett now uses Clippd to track her game and identify areas for improvement. “I was not familiar with Clippd at all,” says the senior, “but since I’ve started using it, I absolutely love it. I ended up having a fall season that was not the best, but I was able to utilize Clippd to see exactly what was going wrong in my game.” 

Clippd’s data-driven feedback showed where Padgett was falling short. “Oh gosh, I had 39 putts from 12 to 13 feet and I didn't make a single one during the season,” she says. “Added to that, I had very low makes on eight-foot putts. I really needed to work on that, especially as someone who puts myself in good positions on the green.”

Padgett has worked hard, identifying what she needed to work on and then using the menu of practice drills and games in Clippd to train the parts of her game that have the biggest impact on her scoring. 

“I use the What To Work On feature in Clippd all the time,” she explains. “I like how it shows the importance of actually working on different parts of your game. It shows percentages and how important each part of your game is when you play well.” 

Padgett took up the game relatively late but was fortunate to have two great mentors. The first was Bob Spence at Kinderlou Forest, who then advised her to seek out the legendary Jack Lumpkin at Sea Island. Padgett’s father remembered that Jake Howard, Padgett’s late grandfather, had talked about being great friends with Lumpkin since they had played on the same University of Georgia golf team. 

On her first visit to Sea Island, Padgett told Lumpkin about working with Bob Spence. The swing coach immediately stopped what he was doing and walked off the range. “Suddenly this tall guy starts walking towards me with Jack,” recalls Padgett. “It was Davis Love III. It turns out that Bob Spence gave Davis the driver that he won his major with.”

Padgett feels fortunate to have grown up around people and in environments steeped in Georgia golf. “I adore the Georgia State Golf Association,” she says. “It provides such high quality tournaments at such a low cost. They have great organizers. Everyone there is so nice, they all remember you. 

“You also get to go against some of the best players to ever come out of the state, like Jenny Bae, who got second in the ANWA, as well as some of the best upcoming girls. I played with a 14-year-old in the Women's Am last year and she was phenomenal.”

What Clippd really provides young players is a chance to see their growth

Golfers are getting better at a younger age these days and Padgett believes Clippd can help them to make the next big step forwards. “I wish I had access to it sooner,” she says. “What Clippd really provides those young players is a chance to actually see their growth. Some girls are young and they don't quite know what they need to work on, so they just kind of guess on it. Clippd gives them full-on access to what they need to work on.”

But what Padgett like most about Clippd is the platform can really be used to track a player’s growth. “When you're 14, 15, 16, there's so much growth within your game and yet some girls really don't realize it,” she says. “They'll have a bad tournament and think they’re never going to get to play collegiate golf. But that’s not true. They can simply go back and look at Clippd and see how great they are and how much they’ve grown. 

“Clippd really does a good job of showing you the positives. I just think Clippd is a great tool for showing progress and keeping young players positive.”