The USGA re-rated both courses at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club (North Plains, OR) this year. There is a dramatic change in slope for the blue tees (about 6500 yards) at Witch Hollow. The most recent rating/slope had been 72.7/142, which I thought was a touch high. Here are the new men's ratings for both courses:
Witch Ghost
WHITE TEES 69.8/134 69.2/131
BLUE TEES 72.4/131 72.1/138
BLACK TEES 74.7/139 74.0/145
A. How does an unmodified course's slope drop 11 points? The assistant pro talked to a USGA (or was it OGA) representative, who explained that the slope is calculated on a variety of factors, which include the average green speeds and rough length, plus the distance and severity of hazards from the tee.
B. Why is the slope lower from the blue tees? I've never seen this before.
C. Ghost Creek is considerably easier than Witch Hollow from the blue tees. It's much more wide open, and the back nine is easy.
To offer some statistical evidence, I took a copy of the results from this year's club championship. We play Witch Hollow from the blues on Friday. On Saturday we play Ghost Creek from the blues (there were actually 4-5 black tee boxes used, including #8, a 70 yard difference). On Sunday we play Witch Hollow from all the way back, a very difficult test.
I would estimate the average handicap index of the contestants at 3.0-4.0. 34 players finished on Friday and Saturday; only 28 played on Sunday.
Friday Saturday Sunday
AVERAGE SCORE 80.44 77.85 83.93
STD DEVIATION 6.10 4.56 6.15
This is fairly typical of each year's results. Ghost Creek is always 2-3 strokes easier. I included the standard deviation because, without proving it here, I think it correlates positively to course slope.
Once again, without taking the time to reacquaint myself with statistical analysis, I think there is a large enough sample size to say with high confidence that the difference (Witch 72.4, Ghost 72.1) in course rating is too small, and that Witch Hollow's slope should be higher.
How can the raters make such a large error?