Well,at least sometimes. Case in point, the Kings Course at Gleneagles.
We recently played there not so freshly off red-eye flights from North America and late because of a missed connection at Heathrow. So rushing to the tee to try to finish before dark we rapidly chose the tees to play.
My companion chooses to play the second from the back tees at par 70 and 6452 yards. He's a good player and likes to be challenged.
I usually try to choose tees that are around 6200 yards for a par 72 course and 100 to 150 yards shorter for each stroke par is under 72. So for a par 70 course I'd look for a yardage 5900 to 6000 yards. So the next tee up is 6057 - sounds good in my jet-lagged haze.
I also usually try to look at the rating or SSS to see how difficult it is going to be. This time there was no time for such study. So, off we go.
Now, the Kings course is a fine and challenging course with lots of elevation change and difficult elevated greens.
After running up a few bad scores and finding the 10 yard differences between our tees off-putting, it's time to look more closely at the card.
First thing to note, my companions tees are par 70, but have a SSS of 73. Oooops, a very difficult course at 3 over par for the scratch golfer. Second oooops, my tees have a SSS of 71 to a par of 68, also 3 over par and very difficult even for the scratch golfer (which I am not). I missed the different par for my tees on the very complicated scorecard.
To add insult to injury, my playing companion gets two par 5's while I get none - including one egregious one where I got a 455 par 4 to his 476 yard par 5. My tees included 7 par 4's that were over 423 yards up to two beauties of 453 and 455 yards, 4 par 3's and NO par 5's.
Now I know par is meaningless in some ways, but this was ridiculous. I know that the SSS should sort out the disparity between the two tees, but in this case par was inane.