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CannyFifer
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Our course is a par 71 but on the card it also says SSS 69, anyone know what this means? Is it the same as CSS 
Our course is a par 71 but on the card it also says SSS 69, anyone know what this means? Is it the same as CSS![]()
So is SSS the same as the American 'Slope Rating' then, or is that something completely different?
The following terms are trademarks and service marks of the United States Golf Association: "Bogey Rating™,""Course Handicap™," "Course Rating and Slope Database™," "Equitable Stroke Control™," "ESC™," "Handicap Differential™," "Handicap Index®," "The USGA Handicap System Licensing Program for Clubs™," "Hole-by-Hole Stroke Allocation Analysis Program™," "Home Course Handicap™," "Short Course Handicap™," "USGA Short Course Rating™," "SLOPE®," "Slope Rating®," "Slope System®," "Trend Handicap™," "Trend Handicap Index™," "Trend Differential™," "United States Golf Association®," "USGA®," "USGA Course Rating™," "USGA Course Rating Software Program™," "USGA Course Rating System™," and "USGA Handicap System™."
Unfinished Holes and Conceded Strokes
A player who starts, but does not complete a hole or is conceded a stroke must record for handicap purposes the most likely score. The most likely score may not exceed the player's Equitable Stroke Control limit, defined in Section 4-3. This most likely score should be preceded by an "X." (See Decision 4-1/1.)
There is no limit to the number of unfinished holes a player may have in a round, provided that failure to finish is not for the purpose of handicap manipulation.
Example 1: A and B are partners in a four-ball stroke play competition. On a hole on which neither player receives a handicap stroke, A lies two, 18 feet from the hole. B lies two, 25 feet from the hole. B holes a putt for a 3. A picks up on the hole, because A cannot better B's score. A records X-4 on the scorecard because 4 is A's most likely score.
Example 2: A and B are playing a match. On a hole on which neither player receives a handicap stroke, A has holed out in 4; B has a 30-foot putt for a 5. B has lost the hole, and picks up. B records X-6 on the scorecard because 6 is B's most likely score.
Example 3: A and B are playing a match. On a hole on which neither player receives a handicap stroke, A is one foot from the hole, lying 4. B is 10 feet from the hole, lying 3. B putts and misses. They both concede a half. Both players record X-5 because that is their most likely score.