Erik,
you were the one who brought up complexity and asking for a system of similar complexity not me. I have always said the UK system was simpler which was always my point. Why use a more complex system that does not do a better job.
As for the unanswered questions what I am interested in really is your take on '
[size=0px]How does the system cope with changes in the presentation of the course such as deep rough being cut and removed or tree clearing?' [/size][/color]
I am not trying to wind you up I am genuinely interested with how the system addresses these problems.
Bryan,
SSS is set on the full length of the course from which ever tee. No one gives you it per-se it is set. As for the system you describe below it works fine in theory but how will it cope with the real world situation we find in the UK? I have put some comments to your post.
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The USGA Course Rating System takes account of the actual measured length of a golf course, factors that can affect the playing length and other challenges that influence the playing difficulty of each hole (obstacle factors).
The factors that can affect the effective playing length of a golf course are:
Roll assessment of how far a ball will roll on fairways with various surface conditions/contouring
How does it adapt from the firm, hard summer conditions we often have here in the UK where the ball can roll out for 50 yards + compared to the soggy, winter conditions where the ball often plugs?
Dogleg where the dogleg design of a hole does not allow a full tee shot to be played
Wind assessment of average wind strength and direction
In the UK we do have prevailing winds but prevailing wind is not the same as average. On top of this the prevailing wind alters across the whole UK depending on the season but can also alter through the day in specific locations (i.e. certain places will often have a different wind direction in the morning to that of the afternoon) There is of course an average wind speed but as with most things it is rare that the wind will be of average speed. Average does not mean usual. How does the system cope with this?
Elevation difference in elevation between the tee and green and for players approach shots to the green
Forced Lay-up where a player is forced to play short of obstacles that crosses the fairway
The ten obstacle factors that are used to determine the playing difficulty of a golf course are:
Topography nature of the stance and lie within each landing zone and approach shot elevation to the green
Again, how doe you judge this? Take TOC as an example. The last time I played it the fairways were so short that the ball never stayed on a slope ending up in the flat areas of the hollows. You always had a flat stance. Were they to raise the HOC back to that played in bygone days the ball would stay on the slopes making the course far more challenging. Do you have to have a rating for both situations?
Fairway the width of fairway landing zones, hole length and nearby obstacles trees, hazards and punitive rough
Again, how does the system cope with a year which is wet and the rough is thick and almost unplayable compared to dry summer where the rough is sparse and of no consequence?
Green Target evaluation of hitting the green with the approach shot visibility and nature of the green surface
Recoverability and Rough difficulty of recovery if the tee shot landing zones and/or the green is missed
Bunkers size and depth of bunkers and their proximity to landing zones and greens
Out of Bounds / Extreme Rough depth and nature of punitive rough and proximity to landing zones and greens
Water Hazards shot length to carry water hazards, proximity of water hazards from centre of fairways and greens
Trees size and density, proximity to centre of landing zones/greens, shot length to target areas, recovery difficulty
Green Surface putting difficulty on a green green speeds, surface contours and tiers
Psychological evaluation of the cumulative effect of the other nine obstacle factors
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I think you get my drift. Again, I am just curious to how the new system copes.
A general question to anyone who knows, how are they doing the rating in the UK if we are bringing this in (next year?)?
Jon