wjemather
Well-known member
Yes, they have. I've probably seen half a dozen referred queries through our county; some where there was found to be an issue, and some where there was not.Genuine question.......has anyone actually reported someone in this way?
How did they go about it, what evidence did they submit, what was the reaction from others? Were they labelled as a grass or a moaner?
Other than a (modest?) adjustment to someone's handicap, what can the club do, as they can't force players to put in GP cards.
How to raise an issue is largely case dependent but an informal discussion with the handicap committee would be a good start. The best evidence is always scores from rounds that are not being submitted if they are consistently significantly better than those that are (or than handicap); this includes scores from formats that are not acceptable for handicapping. Any report should be treated as confidential, so no-one is labeled as anything.
The handicap committee has many actions available to them, including adjustments (larger adjustments need county approval), freezing a handicap, and withdrawing a handicap. Any of these measures can applied indefinitely, with the latter two often tied to a requirement to submit scores until the committee is satisfied that the handicap record is an accurate reflection of ability and/or the player understands and complies with their responsibilities under the Rules of Handicapping. Clubs are also able to set terms of competition to require a number of scores, suspend players from their own competitions, or suspend/terminate membership in extreme cases.