Arthur Wedge
Well-known member
It’s still very critical at the moment but taking small steps forward
To add to this , the lad is now awake and today stood up and said his first words - some really encouraging steps for him
It’s still very critical at the moment but taking small steps forward
It never ceases to amazed at what people score in the winter. The group I've just joined up with dock the winner each time they play. Todays winner with 38 points is currently playing off 6 (H/C 11). Me? 27 points off 13 (H/C 15) How do they do it?First proper competition of the year yesterday, however, it was non qualifying due to being off the new winter tees.
I played well, 36 points with a blob but I knew there were going to be some high scores and lo and behold, two people came in with 46 points. For me to have a chance, I need to shoot 1 under gross......
I'm definitely shocked when a high handicapper beats his handicap in winter. For a good ball-striker I can understand it, with the greens soft and tees shortened, they only need to go up one club for the cold and lack of roll and it's easy for them to hit and hold greens. But when I was a higher handicapper I found winter golf impossible to score well - when the slightest fat contact means hitting mud and your balls goes 60% of the distance. Zero roll means all long par 4s are three-shotters. I don't know the handicaps of the ones Deano was talking about, but for 46 points to even be possible they'd have to be fairly high you would think. Unless his course is a hell of a lot shorter for winter and a 6 handicapper shot 4 under.It never ceases to amazed at what people score in the winter. The group I've just joined up with dock the winner each time they play. Todays winner with 38 points is currently playing off 6 (H/C 11). Me? 27 points off 13 (H/C 15) How do they do it?
Depends on course.I'm definitely shocked when a high handicapper beats his handicap in winter. For a good ball-striker I can understand it, with the greens soft and tees shortened, they only need to go up one club for the cold and lack of roll and it's easy for them to hit and hold greens. But when I was a higher handicapper I found winter golf impossible to score well - when the slightest fat contact means hitting mud and your balls goes 60% of the distance. Zero roll means all long par 4s are three-shotters. I don't know the handicaps of the ones Deano was talking about, but for 46 points to even be possible they'd have to be fairly high you would think. Unless his course is a hell of a lot shorter for winter and a 6 handicapper shot 4 under.![]()