Can somebody explain to me how these (sh)amateurs can possibly be shooting these scores?
Here are the top 3 finishers:
Pro/sham total pro sham
Points/ Murray -35 (-15) -20 -5/day
Taylor/ Mycoskie -33 (-4) -29 -7.25/day
Bowditch/ Miller -33 (-8) -25 -6.25/day
So somehow these jokers are shooting 5,6,7 shots better than thier handicaps for 4 consecutive days on PGA Tour greens.
According to the USGA this is FAR BEYOND THE REALM OF REASONABLENESS…
What am I missing??
http://www.usga.org/Content.aspx?id=25502Now, once in a while you will hear about someone shooting an incredible tournament score, such as a net score of 59. What are the odds of shooting a score like that? These tables from the USGA's Handicap Research Team have figured the odds of one exceptional tournament score up to ten strokes better than the Course Handicap.
For example, the odds of our example player with a Course Handicap of 14 beating it by eight strokes (-8 net) once is 1,138 to one. Put another way, the average player posts 21 scores a year. That means that to score this well, assuming the Handicap Index is correct, would take 54 years of golf to do it once. The odds of a player beating his Course Handicap by eight strokes twice is only 14,912 to one. That's 710 years of golf for the average player -- odds far beyond the realm of reasonableness.