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So if a longer hitter is likely to get a lower handicap on a harder course, as weighting is to length in the ratings, it suggests that handicaps are course dependent.
As LS keeps on saying, length is always an advantage, and longer hitters are more likely to have lower handicaps - regardless of the course.So if a longer hitter is likely to get a lower handicap on a harder course, as weighting is to length in the ratings, it suggests that handicaps are course dependent.
Slope doesn’t measure difficultyAs LS keeps on saying, length is always an advantage, and longer hitters are more likely to have lower handicaps - regardless of the course.
Anyway, what is a harder course? Is difficulty being measured relative to something fixed or is it just a perception? Or is it just the common misunderstanding of what Slope is?
Correct, but for clarity...Slope doesn’t measure difficulty
Is this for real, or deliberately misleading ? (I may be missing the sarcasm)If a course has 6 par 5’s a good player is more likely to have birdies than one without any par 5’s.
Thus, course dependent .
You are right in your analogy, a very good one. When I read the question I saw it as the difference between theory and reality. If you are scratch at your course, you are a scratch golfer. If you go to a tougher course you may be 3-4 shots worse off, on a consistent basis. However, your handicap is based on your home course, so scratch you are.To use a football analogy:
‘You can only play the team (or course in this case) in front of you’
We’re talking at the top end of the game amateur game here. If someone gets to scratch on a course that’s rated lower than a harder course it’s still scratch.
Otherwise it’s like saying, ‘yeah they won the champions league but they didn’t play the best team in Europe in the final so it counts less’
Which means nothing. Anecdotes the enemy of reason.I know 2 guys that played off 1 and 2 who wanted to get down to scratch so they both moved to another 'easier' local course and both are now off +1.
It confirms to me that there is nothing wrong with WHS at all. What authorities here got wrong was communication.
I know 2 guys that played off 1 and 2 who wanted to get down to scratch so they both moved to another 'easier' local course and both are now off +1.
Stagner did not identify what a harder course was, I would imagine it was the CR but this was not statedAs LS keeps on saying, length is always an advantage, and longer hitters are more likely to have lower handicaps - regardless of the course.
Anyway, what is a harder course? Is difficulty being measured relative to something fixed or is it just a perception? Or is it just the common misunderstanding of what Slope is?
You are the gift that keeps givingWhich means nothing. Anecdotes the enemy of reason.
I agree with you both tbh.If a course has 6 par 5’s a good player is more likely to have birdies than one without any par 5’s.
Thus, course dependent!
Should and does are very different beasts. I agree with Backsticks in theory, but in practice the errors in CR mean I agree with JamesRThe course rating should reflect that and it SHOULD have a CR lower than par, I'm with Backsticks on this one.
Same for me regarding back tees and the tee we generally use for our swindle games. Both par 70. Back tees CR is 70 but the forward tees have a CR of 1.7 less. Most of my counting scores are from competitive rounds.The theory of CR and SR is a notionally normal scratch player and a notionally normal 20-handicapper.
And the acceptance of there not being any such thing as a difficult or easy course once the CRs and SRs are set.
Our own personal views of courses will remain based on our own perceptions that may vary from the set CR and SR.
I have to shoot 1.9 shots lower from my yellow tees to score the same SD as from the white tees. Both courses have par 70.
My perception is that, for me, yellow tees give me an advantage of something around 0.5 but nowhere near 1.9.
Thus the yellow tees are "harder" for me.
Other players might take the opposite view which will depend on their particular strengths and weaknesses.
A search for a course for you to base your handicap on will so very likely to be one that you feel suits your game. It would be odd for it to be otherwise.
Two scratch players have played to scratch in their last 20 scores.
Two thousand scratch players have played to scratch in their last 20 scores.
How and where they have done it will be different - but they did it and that's that.