I like to play quickly, so limit my play to slow days and an open course. Yesterday our twosome waited on the very slow twosome in front. The routing loops back to the house after 6 where we saw the head pro practicing his putting. We asked him to join us for the last three holes on the front. A single arrived when we were on the tee, so we told him to go through and warned him about the slow guys ahead. We played three holes on the back and saw three groups on the next tee, a long par 4: a threesome of beginners, the slow twosome, and the single. The beginners let the slow twosome and the single through and we ended up skipping a hole and a half and finishing our match. We were done with lunch before the twosome completed their round about an hour after ours, the poor single still waiting behind them. It made me wonder what kind of golfer accepts the courtesy of playing through a slow group then does not return the favor to the single behind them?
It was a weekday and not busy until after we started. Public course. The front took 2+ hours and the 7.5 holes on the back about an hour, not that it’s important, because that how we play—skipping holes to open parts of the course and playing match play at a good pace. Personally, I think the two hour round is ideal golf, but do not think imposing my favored pace on other players is very good manners. However, the other side of that coin is that slow twosome taking over 4 hours to play an empty course and refusing to let faster players through. To me, they could use some manners and little courtesy for other golfers.
And, yes, everyone was in carts. I enjoy walking when the pace is slower. I also enjoy fast games in a cart, often with folks who can no longer walk the course. I loved the sign at North Berwick West Links that said “a round of golf should take no more than three hours.” No carts there. Unfortunately, we skipped a hole there because of a group of glacial tourists. Fortunately, on our second round of the day, so no big deal