Carl
One thing I wouldn't mind seeing trialed is a reverse of holes where shots are given. I think there may be something to the idea that the tougher holes are bogey holes even for better players. I think perhaps it is the easier holes where better guys have the advantage because they expect to par these holes, where as Mr 18 is still looking for a bogey...and a loss of hole even if he meets expectations.
Ciao
Sean, You may already know this, but others may not, so . . .
The club's decision where shots are to be given is based on a number of factors, and difficulty
per se is not one of them. The difficulty factor is the relative difficulty for the scratch player compared with the bogey player. I don't have the exact numbers here, but this is an example from our course. Our most difficult hole (if you look at it from the scratch player's standpoint) is No. 3, a par three. The average score for the scratch player is 3.52 (0.52 over par), while the average score for the bogey player is 4.12, a difference of 0.60. That's our number 15 handicap hole. No. 4 is a par four. It averages 4.03 for the scratch player (0.03 over par) and 5.45 for the bogey player. That's a difference of 1.42 strokes, and it is our number 1 handicap hole. The difficulty factor is based on the relative difficulty for the scratch and bogey player. (These figures are derived from the same tees, toward the back. The idea is that you give strokes where the lesser-skilled player needs them the most. When you have two seniors playing from forward tees on our No. 4, with just one stroke between them, the stroke is given on this hole even though from the forward tees the relative difficulty of the hole is dramatically reduced. So be it.)
The second factor is where the holes fall on the course. Jeff mentions this factor just above. If the hole with the greatest differential is No. 18, you don't want to make that the number 1 handicap hole. In a perfect world, the number one handicap hole would be hole No. 5, the middle of the front 9, the number two hole would be No. 14, the middle of the back. The number three handicap hole would be No. 4 or No. 6, and so on, working out from the middle to the beginning and end of each nine.
The third factor is the decision maker's (
e.g., Golf Committee) gut sense of it.
The Golf Committee, or whoever, puts these factors into the pot, stirs and comes up with stroke assignments.
Caveat. This is not my field and I am going by memory. These factors are merely
suggestions of the USGA. You can look them up. I have absolutely no idea what the approach is in the UK, of course. That would be interesting for me to learn.