rulefan
Tour Winner
By all means
Just to add, the majority of courses have a slope over 113, and usually a lot more than 113 (say between 125-145 as pretty standard). So, golfers will almost always have an upwards adjustment from Index to Course Handicap, whith obviously the higher the handicap, the higher the upwards adjustment.
. Until someone can explain the reasons, handicap committees will have a hard time and only be able to say “thats‘s the rule“..
The CONGU values were based on data from over 10 years ago. More recent data (and in far greater quantity) is now available from around the world.CONGU/EG cannot explain it, they just spent the last 5 years explaining to handicap committees why full handicap was the fair way to go. They don’t have to face the questions so they really don’t care.
The CONGU values were based on data from over 10 years ago. More recent data (and in far greater quantity) is now available from around the world.
So they still use the same argument based on data. That means then that for the last 5 years everyone playing in individual comps where playing of the wrong handicap.
Trying to explain to a genuine high handicap player that he is going to lose more shots than someone with a better handicap and ability will drive even more players away from competitive golf IMO having been involved in this for a number of years now.
For none of those 5 years were we basing the number of strokes we got on the relative difficulty of the course for a scratch and a bogey golfer.
Don't form a judgement about an orange on the basis of the what an apple is like.
Not really. WHS is a fundamentally different system. The two major systems closest to the new WHS already operated a 'Bonus for Excellence' adjustment and had/have large volumes of data.So they still use the same argument based on data. That means then that for the last 5 years everyone playing in individual comps where playing of the wrong handicap.
What is your source for this?Trying to explain to a genuine high handicap player that he is going to lose more shots than someone with a better handicap and ability will drive even more players away from competitive golf IMO having been involved in this for a number of years now.
No. SSS only addressed CR not BR or Slope.Wasn’t that what the standard scratch was there to address
But you are not using WHS yet. How can you determine what will happen? Particularly as high cappers will get an increase in the difference between them and low cappers due to slope.My source is at our club an increase in members with a reduction in entries
I’m not sure I agree with this yet.But you are not using WHS yet. How can you determine what will happen? Particularly as high cappers will get an increase in the difference between them and low cappers due to slope.
The format being discussed is strokeplay.Since higher-handicap players typically have more variance in their scores and an increased potential to shoot lower net scores, when full Course Handicaps are used in certain formats, players with lower Course Handicaps are generally at a disadvantage.
I’m not sure I agree with this yet.
Let‘s take a couple of hypothetical players, both have a home club with a slope of 125 and play the majority of their golf there, certainly their qualifiers.
Player A‘s 8 best gross differentials all happen to be 18. His HI is 18 / 125 x 113 = 16.3
Player B‘s 8 best gross differentials all happen to be 8. His HI is 8 / 125 x 113 = 7.2
When they play in an individual stroke play event at home, A‘s playing handicap is 17 whereas B‘s is 8.
Still not sure why 95% doesn‘t apply to singles match play if ‘data‘ or logic is correct.
But the average member won‘t see it as ‘fairer‘.
They will argue that their handicap has been obtained by taking account of their scores including course difficulty, and is therefore a reflection of their ability. Why is it being further manipulated ? To tell them it is ‘fairer’ when all handicaps have been derived by the same process won’t make sense.
And why isn’t 95% applied in match play if it makes it ‘fairer’?