Bogey Comp's and Handicaps

TheJezster

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I played a bogey comp today, never played one before, so was a little unsure about how it all worked, but got an explanation and plodded away.

Do they count towards handicaps? If I played a good round, would I get cut and go up if a crap round?

Have no frame of reference to judge whats good, average or bad, so any pointers would be good.

Thanks
 
Yes they do count for handicap purposes, Im pretty sure there is a clear directive on how its calculated but cant lay my hands on it

In terms of whats a good score - all square with the course is the same as playing to your handicap, usually would take 5 or 6 up against the course to win these when Ive played (similar to 41/42 points)

I think for handicap purposes is you are say 5 up v the course then you would be cut 5x your category cut amount, ie a cat 1 player would be cut 5*0.1=0.5 and so on

Hopefully someone will be able to clarify this
 
Surely it can only count towards handicap if all gross scores are written down.

Just marking the hole as a loss could be bogey or double.
 
Thanks for the explanation. I actually managed to beat the course by 6 holes, and whilst I felt I was playing well and enjoyed the round, i really had no idea as to what that meant.

Looks like I might get my first ever handicap cut then, I'll take that :-)
 
Surely it can only count towards handicap if all gross scores are written down.

Just marking the hole as a loss could be bogey or double.

not much different to stableford where it can be double or triple

True, but there is no difference in bogey between 1pt and a blob.

If I'm playing (in a bogey comp) a par 4 and have a chip in for half and miss it I pick up because I've lost the hole but in stableford I could still get 1pt.

In theory you could win a bogey match and only score 29pts, and also lose one scoring 35pts.
 
It's surprising how many people think that you can enter cards into Club 2000 etc without putting down gross scores.
 
Surely it can only count towards handicap if all gross scores are written down.

Just marking the hole as a loss could be bogey or double.

The only requirement is to record the gross scores on holes on which a win or half is the result.
 
Surely it can only count towards handicap if all gross scores are written down.

Just marking the hole as a loss could be bogey or double.

The only requirement is to record the gross scores on holes on which a win or half is the result.

So am I right in thinking that they can't be used as qualifiers in that case as the difference between a 5 and a 6 on a non-shot hole par 4 is important to handicap calculations?
 
Surely it can only count towards handicap if all gross scores are written down.

Just marking the hole as a loss could be bogey or double.

The only requirement is to record the gross scores on holes on which a win or half is the result.

So am I right in thinking that they can't be used as qualifiers in that case as the difference between a 5 and a 6 on a non-shot hole par 4 is important to handicap calculations?

Wrong - they can be qualifiers. The CONGU handbook contains a table for converting stableford and bogey results into Nett Differentials. If CSS=par then playing to handicap is 36 stableford points or all square on Bogey. If CSS is 1 less than par it's 37 points or +1.
 
Surely it can only count towards handicap if all gross scores are written down.

Just marking the hole as a loss could be bogey or double.

I'm trying to remember. We played it as often as stableford years ago.

I guess you and I (to a lesser extent!) have to par a good few of the holes to halve the hole.
If we've played 4, an get no stroke, just pick up. For h'cap'ing, that must make it tricky....did we have a tap-in for bogey or destined to make double?
 
Wrong - they can be qualifiers. The CONGU handbook contains a table for converting stableford and bogey results into Nett Differentials. If CSS=par then playing to handicap is 36 stableford points or all square on Bogey. If CSS is 1 less than par it's 37 points or +1.

I'm confused now.

I make 9 x 3 pointers for wins, a 2pt hole for a half and 8 blobs for losses.
I win 1 up but score 29pts.

By changing any number of my 8 blobs into 1pt holes (still for losses) I could score anything up to 37pts and still win 1 up.

What I'm trying to say is how can my handicap be adjusted on the basis that I completed a bogey round 1 up but didn't record the scores on the holes I lost, since I could have any stableford score from 29 to 37.

:D
 
Wrong - they can be qualifiers. The CONGU handbook contains a table for converting stableford and bogey results into Nett Differentials. If CSS=par then playing to handicap is 36 stableford points or all square on Bogey. If CSS is 1 less than par it's 37 points or +1.

I'm confused now.

I make 9 x 3 pointers for wins, a 2pt hole for a half and 8 blobs for losses.
I win 1 up but score 29pts.

By changing any number of my 8 blobs into 1pt holes (still for losses) I could score anything up to 37pts and still win 1 up.

What I'm trying to say is how can my handicap be adjusted on the basis that I completed a bogey round 1 up but didn't record the scores on the holes I lost, since I could have any stableford score from 29 to 37.

:D

You didn't make any 3 pointers - you were playing a bogey - win, half or loss are the only 3 possibilities. Medal, stableford and bogey are all different animals.
 
You didn't make any 3 pointers - you were playing a bogey - win, half or loss are the only 3 possibilities. Medal, stableford and bogey are all different animals.

Sorry to go on, but I'm genuinely interested.

I play a bogey Saturday, win 4 up. CSS = Par. Do I get cut 4 x 0.2?

I play stableford Sunday, score exactly the same on every hole as in the bogey comp and come in with 33pts. CSS = Par and I go up 0.1.

If that's right then I'm not confused any more, but it's ridiculous.

If that's wrong, what have I wrongly assumed?
 
You could also come in with a nett 75, 76, 77, 78 etc. in a medal, any of which could equate to 33, 34, 35 points etc.. It's a form of competitive golf - when you play it you know the rules - it's been around probably longer than stableford.

Just to annoy you even further: if you have a birdie on a stroke hole you get a win, not 4 points.
 
Its like saying that someone who plays off scratch for instance (to make things easier), could score 36 points but still shoot an 80 simply by having a nightmare hole(s) - so does this mean that Stableford is also a silly format?
 
today my mate off 10 had a net 69 (par) but had 38 points (2 under h/c) due to a 9 on one of the holes off a 10 h/c

so sort of ties in with what your saying John0
 
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