Colin L
Tour Winner
Neither the SSS nor the course rating is based on past competitions.
Surely you would need some competitions and some information to rate them, so the club would have to at least run competitions from different tees before anyone could rate them?
I was under the impression that the Stroke Indexes were once upon a time based on actual golf played on the course to determine the hardest and easiest holes. Surely the same for SSS and for slope rating, when this comes to more prominence.
No surprise there. First the cost, time and logistics of rating all tees for men and women is prohibitive. Further they will not rate tees that are never (or very rarely) going to be for used qualifiers for one gender or the other.Clubs do not rate their tees.
We asked the county team to rate all our tees for both men and women, unfortunately they refused.
In my view, if HCs are properly calculated there is no further discussion.
I once played a woman from the UK (I'm a yank) and we both had the same HC based on the same usga system. She agreed we were equal and we played our match (on the Old Course) from the same tee so the strokes came on the same holes. We had a tough match and halved it! I don't think it mattered that her HC was earned from the ladies tees in the UK and mine on the men's in the USA. The HCs matched us exactly...even if i had a 19 HC I think we would have halved the match. (Ahem...I made a four on the road hole.)
I think you have fundamentally miss-understood both course ratings and the purpose of SI. The former are based on theoretical capabilities in order to be consistent. The performance of any set of golfers will be a reflection of their current handicapping.
With SO the position of the holes in the round being played is more important than their difficulty - although stableford confuses this a bit, and there's no doubt that it's more enjoyable to play it where difficulty is reflected in the distribution of strokes. This is why the CONGU changed the distribution of SI wording to it's current one where hole difficulty may be reflected in the allocated SI providing that the basic distribution rules aren't abused. Many courses do abuse them, but that's another thing.
1) But I do wonder exactly how they are calculated and if they should be updated over time. I'm sure stroke indexes must be based on actual data at some point down the line.
2) And likewise course rating from a certain set of tees.
1) The earlier SI allocation was based on difficulty data collected automatically by the handicapping software.
2) Rating is done by a trained group of 3 or 4 who measure and record all aspects of the course for both the scratch and 20 cap player. this include but not limited to. Position and size of obstacles (WH, bunkers, light & extreme rough, OOB ......) at the landing area. Possible slopes on fairway. This all goes into a number cruncher to produce Course Ratings and the slope for each gender for each set of tees.
It takes over 4 hours on course and another 4 or 5 doing the paperwork
Yes, and they still get it wrong. Our course is quite short and on the face of it there aren't that many obstacles. So the SSS is 2 under par. But boy is it tricky. Very few pros break par at our annual pro-am.2) Rating is done by a trained group of 3 or 4 who measure and record all aspects of the course for both the scratch and 20 cap player. this include but not limited to. Position and size of obstacles (WH, bunkers, light & extreme rough, OOB ......) at the landing area. Possible slopes on fairway. This all goes into a number cruncher to produce Course Ratings and the slope for each gender for each set of tees.
It takes over 4 hours on course and another 4 or 5 doing the paperwork
Yes, and they still get it wrong. Our course is quite short and on the face of it there aren't that many obstacles. So the SSS is 2 under par. But boy is it tricky. Very few pros break par at our annual pro-am.
If it takes the raters 4 hours to measure why don't they just play a round and find out how difficult it really is rather than estimating it based on measurements? Don't tell me it's to maintain consistency, as if it's some kind of science.
Interesting on the course rating. I'd imagine the guys who do this will be busy over the next year as this will become a crucial point of the new handicap system.
They have been busy for a couple of years already!
Fwiw, and bearing in mind that SI has been around longer than computers and software, you will also find many courses with SIs based purely on length, or par and length, that have never changed it to accomadate current guidelines.
I actually found this site via a google search last night...
http://www.popeofslope.com/scotland/courseratings.html
Which appears to list USGA ratings for all courses in Scotland. Seems like this is aimed at American's playing over here so they can work out what handicap to play to.
Carnoustie looks to be the highest at 145. Muirfield is only 128!
It may be unofficial or outdated ratings, not sure, but could be that a lot of this work has been done and just needs updating in most cases for clubs that may have new holes, or made significant architectural changes to any holes.
i would be surprised if Muirfield is as low as that esp as its a par 70 sss 73, will dig out an old card and see if it has a slope on it
I actually found this site via a google search last night...
http://www.popeofslope.com/scotland/courseratings.html
Which appears to list USGA ratings for all courses in Scotland. Seems like this is aimed at American's playing over here so they can work out what handicap to play to.
Carnoustie looks to be the highest at 145. Muirfield is only 128!
It may be unofficial or outdated ratings, not sure, but could be that a lot of this work has been done and just needs updating in most cases for clubs that may have new holes, or made significant architectural changes to any holes.
Never played Muirfield, or even attended for an Open.
But could be a big difference in tees the Pro's play compared with the members.
I was surprised as it has a lot of penal bunkering and certainly the 2013 Open was pretty much carnage. Barely anyone under par in fast, firm conditions.
No. The rating assumptions are different, as they were for SSS.
As Rulefan posted above the teams won't even rate the ladies comp tees for men unless they can be convinced that they will be used regularily! We had them SSS rated but have lost them to competition once slope comes in as they wouldn't rate them (they had a point as they were only used twice in the last couple of years, and we have now added new senior tees in similar positions.