rulefan
Tour Winner
And Amazon or other deliveriesNo different to a physical scorecard.
And Amazon or other deliveriesNo different to a physical scorecard.
I don't understand the need for a scribble when either submitting a score via the EG or attesting it, given that the players have logged in to their personnal account. My bank never asks me to sign the screen when transacting via their app, so why does EG.No different to a physical scorecard.
I'm going to start drawing amusing doodles on there instead and see if anything happens.I don't understand the need for a scribble when either submitting a score via the EG or attesting it, given that the players have logged in to their personnal account. My bank never asks me to sign the screen when transacting via their app, so why does EG.
The Rules of Golf require that you (and your marker) certify your score. That requires an action beyond merely logging into your account.I don't understand the need for a scribble when either submitting a score via the EG or attesting it, given that the players have logged in to their personnal account. My bank never asks me to sign the screen when transacting via their app, so why does EG.
The definition of scorecard includes ""electronic certification", which to me the password protected app provides without the signature. Given that that the club does not keep a copy of members signatures, how having the player scribble on the app help the process, seems completly pointless to me. But then so does a scribble on a screen when accepting deliveries.The Rules of Golf require that you (and your marker) certify your score. That requires an action beyond merely logging into your account.
I don't quite see the point of putting in a score which shows your handicap to be considerably lower than it should be. If he was manipulating a handicap to be higher than his ability, that would lead to more wins/better scores then that would make more sense.any thoughts on what i should do here?
There is a guy in our club whose SG HCI is low 4s
He puts a lot of GP in, and his HCI is solely based off GP scores.
A few comp scores that i could see this year - 88, 19 pts, 83, 93, 25pts - ive played with him a few times, realistically he probably about a 12.
As i know his traits, I saw him on sunday playing by himself, and lo and behold he put a card in (a decent score obv).
Do i grass him up or leave him to it given its only his own enjoyment he is ruining?
Some have known to have done so in order to be successful in ballots for presidious scratch events.I don't quite see the point of putting in a score which shows your handicap to be considerably lower than it should be. If he was manipulating a handicap to be higher than his ability, that would lead to more wins/better scores then that would make more sense.
You can't certify scores that do not yet exist; and login occurs before score entry. Plus credentials are commonly saved by the app so login is not always required - I haven't been prompted to login to the MyEG app for months (and I use the app regularly).The definition of scorecard includes ""electronic certification", which to me the password protected app provides without the signature. Given that that the club does not keep a copy of members signatures, how having the player scribble on the app help the process, seems completly pointless to me. But then so does a scribble on a screen when accepting deliveries.
that would be a theory but the guy doesnt have any other courses on his SG hcp recordSome have known to have done so in order to be successful in ballots for presidious scratch events.