We start at 7a m with two balls 7 minutes apart for an hour, then we go to 10 minutes for an hour(4 balls mostly consisting of fast players)
Then we go to 11 minutes for hour 3, then 12 minutes the rest of the day.
Works like a charm, and we're doing 180 players in prime season.
Jeff has this always been the case or just since Covid? Also the 2 balls at 7 am, I assume in the summer the ground crew has enough time to do their maintenance, but in the spring or fall does it give them enough time for the 2 rabbits batting lead off? I know many supers want a foursome off first to ensure their crews have enough time for needed maintenance each morning.
A great question.
yes, we have always had the 7 am speed slots(we had them at Atlantic where I worked 1996-2001)
We are on the east end of the time zone, so it gets light way earlier in The Hamptons than it does in Georgia(being further nother helps), and the days are obviously long in the summer.We don't open till April 15th and the weather sucks in the spring so by the time demand is high, there is a ton of daylight-twilight starts at 4:40am in June.
We move the starts back 30 minutes in the fall as we start to lose daylight-post Labor Day, and demand is lighter by then.
We also ask the first group to play the front in exactly 1.5 hours-it's a big course so this is reasonable(but seems slow to some rabits who don't putt out), but sometimes it means they stop for a brief break at the halfway house(to slow down) as we ask them not turn before 8:30. If they speed up and play the back faster, maintenance is usually well gone by then, so they could play in 2;45, but it's usually close to 3.
So the first two-three groups play in three hours then it drifts back to 3:30 or so for the 9th group, which gives plenty of clearance for the first lalrger group, often a three ball, then 4 balls.
Truthfully, there is more congestion early in the two balls with 9,10 or 11 groups squeezed out in an hour before 3 and 4 balls, but it's "fast paced" congestion(still a fast paced round 2:45-3:15 on a big course), and it resolves itself once the 4 balls start.
Almost universally, the faster 2 balls want early times and the slower 2 balls want later times(or we assign them later times as we have 20 years of data on historical pace of all members play) , so it all works.
The most requested time is the first, or LAST 2 ball(usually a parent and child, or a newer player, who knows he won't have another 2 ball pushing them, but rather a 3 or 4 ball)
Occasionally, we get a slower player wanting an earlier time,and if they insist, they have the pleasure of me escorting them around and politely pointing out the gap they are creating by not playing at a more appropriate time(30 minutes later), and the problem goes away for the future.
The Bridge is not a course designed for fast play-big scale, lost ball opportunity on every swing, and lightning greens, but the pace is fast on a busy weekend as that's the culture-which doesn't happen by accident-but we have the luxury of ample and low turnover staff.
The slowest play we get is outside groups on a quiet day with no pressure from behind. The next you know the only group on the course has taken 5 hours to play due to a lack of pressure from behind or awareness of the time-big place.
GPS for each group is the next step, the caddy software we employed this season was supposed to have it, but it was fraught with bugs.Having a map of every group from my office would help but also it wouldn't hurt for groups(especially smaller groups) to be able to see themselves on their GPS app that the "problem" is not directly in front of them, but perhaps 3-4 holes ahead, or perhaps just a full course.(assuming reasonable pace of play of course)