rulefan
Tour Winner
ExactlyI read it that DS was advising the Handicap Committee. He was doing a great job and I interpreted because of his diligence it was The Handicap Committee that needed a “slip on the wrist”
ExactlyI read it that DS was advising the Handicap Committee. He was doing a great job and I interpreted because of his diligence it was The Handicap Committee that needed a “slip on the wrist”
You have pointed out the problems your club had.In what way?
I understand what I wrote. I didn't understand your response.From post 1550 - And what D-S has shown is that there are very many cases of potentially bogus scores being submitted into the system in his own experience. So, extend that out to over 2,500 clubs across the UK, you could be looking at tens of thousands of dodgy scores going onto people's records
Has D-S highlighted anything that says these cards are dodgy - and by dodgy I mean much higher/lower than their usual cards? I know full well that they are dodgy in format, registration, etc but are they actually changing the handicaps in a big way?There will be someone along soon to point out that DS is wrong.
There were lots of bad comittiees under UHS but they still went ahead and installed a system to bypass them using an APP that is so easy to manipulate it’s a joke.
And as DS has shown you have to go looking for them but when you find them a blind eye is shown by lots of them.
Don’t know.Has D-S highlighted anything that says these cards are dodgy - and by dodgy I mean much higher/lower than their usual cards? I know full well that they are dodgy in format, registration, etc but are they actually changing the handicaps in a big way?
Extrapolation from a single situation.I understand what I wrote. I didn't understand your response.
OK. I shall make another conclusion then.Extrapolation from a single situation.
In what way is a committee "by-passed" that makes it any easier to manipulate a handicap by putting in false scores than pre-WHS? Attested falsified scores on a bit of card are no different from attested falsified scores submitted through an app. Both simply comprise 18 numbers. A dodgy number is a dodgy number whether going straight into a database or from a bit of paper into the database with no discernible difference between them. Besides, entering handicapping scores, whether competition or supplementary ones, electronically pre-dates WHS. And, it is a great deal easier to scrutinise scores online than on bits of card. "They" did not not create a system in order to by-pass committees; the system no more bypasses them than did its predecessor.There will be someone along soon to point out that DS is wrong.
There were lots of bad comittiees under UHS but they still went ahead and installed a system to bypass them using an APP that is so easy to manipulate it’s a joke.
And as DS has shown you have to go looking for them but when you find them a blind eye is shown by lots of them.
Somewhere in between those two extremes lies the actual.OK. I shall make another conclusion then.
This is ONLY happening at D-S's club, and so is isolated to the members at his club and a few visitors at his club. But, these visitors follow the Rules of Handicapping at all other courses, and all other golfers up and down the UK follow the Rules of Handicapping to the letter.
Yup, that seems just as logical...
Every single Supplementary Score has to go in front of a Committee member before it touched a players handicap under UHS. Under WHS, scores go straight to a players record and impact their handicap without anyone on the Committee reviewing it. I believe that is what he means by by-passed.In what way is a committee "by-passed" that makes it any easier to manipulate a handicap by putting in false scores than pre-WHS? Attested falsified scores on a bit of card are no different from attested falsified scores submitted through an app. Both simply comprise 18 numbers. A dodgy number is a dodgy number whether going straight into a database or from a bit of paper into the database with no discernible difference between them. Besides, entering handicapping scores, whether competition or supplementary ones, electronically pre-dates WHS. And, it is a great deal easier to scrutinise scores online than on bits of card. "They" did not not create a system in order to by-pass committees; the system no more bypasses them than did its predecessor.
OK, we'll not say tens of thousands of scores. We'll say thousands of scores instead. My point remains the same, but a useful intervention nonethelessSomewhere in between those two extremes lies the actual.
But do they?OK. I shall make another conclusion then.
But, these visitors follow the Rules of Handicapping at all other courses,
But the majority of problems were from members from other clubs. The problems did not stem from poor administration procedures as you said but from player ignorance, laziness and sometimes deviousness. The administration procedures did not create this but one discovered it and my guess that is that it remains undiscovered at many clubs. Perhaps they need to ensure they do not ever have similar issues before casting stones.You have pointed out the problems your club had.
There were a variety of issues as I have said. In terms of visitors and their reasoning behind submitting acceptable scores I do not know. It is up to their own clubs handicapping committees to evaluate and take action. All we have done is to mark the scores as matchplay and leave any action to them as it is not for our club to interevene.With the 'anomalies' you are finding, how are the scores affecting people's handicaps? Are they maintaining vanity handicaps, using cards to increase their handicaps or are they similar to their actual handicaps?
The sheer numbers of GP cards means they are not all checked so by pass the comittiee.In what way is a committee "by-passed" that makes it any easier to manipulate a handicap by putting in false scores than pre-WHS? Attested falsified scores on a bit of card are no different from attested falsified scores submitted through an app. Both simply comprise 18 numbers. A dodgy number is a dodgy number whether going straight into a database or from a bit of paper into the database with no discernible difference between them. Besides, entering handicapping scores, whether competition or supplementary ones, electronically pre-dates WHS. And, it is a great deal easier to scrutinise scores online than on bits of card. "They" did not not create a system in order to by-pass committees; the system no more bypasses them than did its predecessor.
When you say "checked" what do you actually mean?The sheer numbers of GP cards means they are not all checked so by pass the comittiee.
That wasn’t the case with supplementary cards.
Sometimes tech just causes unintended problems
Are you saying “every GP card is checked ?”
GP scores go straight on your record unchecked.When you say "checked" what do you actually mean?
If it was a SC how can the Committee verify the scores other than by looking at the scores on their playing partner's card - assuming they were putting one in and keeping score....? You have a card with some numbers on it and a signature...what's there to check.?
The "check" then is not really any different to now.
But what is the check?GP scores go straight on your record unchecked.
If your subtle enough it dosnt raise any flags.
If you get someone who’s not even played with you to attest it who’s checking that?
No different than before WHS.GP scores go straight on your record unchecked.
If your subtle enough it dosnt raise any flags.
If you get someone who’s not even played with you to attest it who’s checking that?
Yes but anything out of the ordinary might have been noticed when done manually.No different than before WHS.
There was limited actual checking before, and there is limited actual checking now - all of which is either random or targeted.
The only functional change is an administrative one, in that the process no longer requires someone at the club to manually enter scores and click a button in the software to upload them.