Rich,
I would imagine that adjustments in your CONGU System were minor. What was the most strokes you had to cut somebody by? I doubt you had to take a 15 down to a 7!
I cut a guy from 15 to 10 who spent the whole winter playing golf (and other pleasures) in Thailand, after he came back home with a net 57 on his first medal round. He moaned but accepted it.
Yea, Rich, but you're one scary dude. I've known you for what, 16+ years, and you still intimidate me.
Contrast your steel demeanor with that of a former friend who flew B-52s in Nam and served as handicap chair for a couple years at my then home club. One time he informed a well-known sandbagging member that his handicap was being lowered by two strokes for a meaningless MGA event and the guy cold-cocked him in the mouth and nose. I didn't see the fight, but Bob, who ran the county prosecutor's office as his paying gig, said to hell with the thankless job and the MGA. Sorry to say, peer review didn't work either and participation in large handicap events declined to nothing.
Though I don't think that the handicap system can ever be improved to be mostly fair, I am with Jim H on this one. Let's give the eventual negotiated changes a try and see what happens.
I personally think that small groups like at the Buda can have fairer matches if the captains are willing to adjust the handicaps on the basis of goodwill and sportsmanship. The only problem has been that reasonable American captains are shamed or out-maneuvered by their European counterparts into making too many concessions, thus putting the weary, unfamiliar travelers at a large disadvantage from the outset. Hopefully a stronger breed of leaders will emerge from this side of the Atlantic while the new world handicap system is being hammered out.
For what it is worth, I think a straight 10 CONGU translates to a 5 or 6 USGA. I doubt that the new system will overcome the problem of cheating, but if it bridges and meets the two major systems halfway, that's progress. I do suppose that if an algorithm can be devised to somewhat accurately adjust the daily course rating, that the same geniuses can come up with something that flags the cheaters. I can tolerate the vain, but not the two or three guys who get strokes, outdrive me by 50 yards, and seem to have several career rounds every tournament season.