SammmeBee
Journeyman Pro
The Rules of Golf (whilst they appreciate it may not be possible) suggest a playoff is the best way to decide a tie.....
Obviously I'm not explaining it clearly enough.Isn't that true of any round? The decimal is rounded conventionally, so some 'lose' and some 'gain'.
The reason (as I understand it) for the decimal exact handicap is that it smooths the transition, when going up or down, for both time and number.
Out of interest, where do you play?My club has a three tee start (1, 8 & 13). This means that the last nine holes are different for the various players. Until a few years ago, we used exact handicap to resolve ties, which seems fairer to me. But then it got changed to the CONGU recommend method. I don't understand why, and still feel that exact handicap is a better approach.
Obviously I'm not explaining it clearly enough.
It's nothing to do with "normal scoring", where playing handicaps are used in the taditional manner.
It's ONLY a mechanism to resolve ties, and as far as I can fathom, it makes more sense than countback, especially when you have a multi-tee start.
Grims Dyke (North London, between Harrow and Watford)Out of interest, where do you play?
Interesting. We have exactly the same at Dulwich & Sydenham Hill. Three start points at 1, 8 & 13. Spooky?Grims Dyke (North London, between Harrow and Watford)
Not sure it counts as it's 3 nine hole loops.Sandford Springs
There are exact handicaps in WHS.I can see the validity of the argument to use the exact handicap but CONGU are the only handicapping system to use the handicap related to the exact handicap in competition....and the WHS doesn't go that route so it won't be appropriate for much longer.
There is an exact handicap index, but it will translate to a playing handicap based on a different basis for each handicap and slope index for any given tee. The link between 13 = 12.5 ->13.4 (and the same for each handicap) is completely broken, even to the extent that the proportions of handicap index aren't the same across the range of playing handicaps. Basically what makes the argument for it valid no longer applies. As an example 21.0 could be playing off 26 from our white tees and 25 from our yellows, and the exact cut off will be based on a matrix not a rounding. So (roughly) each 0.1 could be considered to equate to 0.15. For an 11.0 that might be 0.115 (or not) as well. You could run a nominal formulae, but would get the situation where 2 tied players would have a different result from the same calculation applied across 2 different tees on the same course...at which point any claims that it would be easy to explain fail dramatically!There are exact handicaps in WHS.
how does it handle countback?
Where does CONGU use the exact handicap in competition?CONGU are the only handicapping system to use the handicap related to the exact handicap in competition..
I didn't say that - please read what I did say.Where does CONGU use the exact handicap in competition?
My club has a three tee start (1, 8 & 13). This means that the last nine holes are different for the various players. Until a few years ago, we used exact handicap to resolve ties, which seems fairer to me. But then it got changed to the CONGU recommend method. I don't understand why, and still feel that exact handicap is a better approach.
post #27 doesn't say thatI didn't say that - please read what I did say.
The playing handicap under CONGU is related to the exact handicap in the same way for every player regardless of the course played, tees used and handicap level.
This is not the case for others.
Using exact handicap the computer doesn't need to know which tee you started on, so that can't be the reason.That is simple. It probably coincided with the switch to computer recorded scores and a computer does not know which tee you started on.
Most probablyI will need to ask for confirmation, but I think the change was made simply to align us with CONGU recommendations.
#27 says the same thing in less words - related to the exact being the relevant point.post #27 doesn't say that
CONGU are the only handicapping system to use the handicap related to the exact handicap in competition