A.G., GHIN does not take your last eight rounds. It takes the low eight differentials.
And re. my statement that people who don't play in competition not needing a GHIN handicap, golfers made games for hundreds of years without the help of a system.
Ken,
Agreed on this point... once you play a 5-10 rounds with some buddies, you can usually just say 3 per side or something like that and get on with it.
For practical purposes, having a GHIN only matters when playing with people you don't know. I kept one for awhile a number of years back, but the 'unknown' sand-baggers in local events really turned me off to it.
You guys don’t get out enough.
Apparently neither of you have ever been a member at a club with regular points games of multiple foursomes; I’ve never been a member of a club that didn’t have at least one! I’m part of 4 different ones at my current club, and there a couple of other groups that I’m not part of.
All of them work pretty much the same way; weekly signups via email, and a “commissioner” makes the tee times and the pairings. Typically there are three or four foursomes, and while the exact format of the games vary, ALL of them depend on handicaps. Tomorrow morning, for instance, the game I’m in will have three foursomes, with guys playing three different sets of tees. This week, each group counts one gross and two net scores: other times it’s straight points, sometimes it’s individual low net; the commish decides that in advance.
The Sunday group I play in is straight group points; that commish puts together teams with close to equal total points quotas.
The coolest game, which I don’t happen to be playing today, is the Friday afternoon “dogfight”. That game will typically have about 20 guys; you play points with a $20 buy-in, and then there is a blind draw for teams AFTER the round in the grill over adult beverages.
In each of these games, you play the tees you wish to play, with that course handicap, so we get young bucks who are scratch or close to it playing from the tips, all the way up to old guys (like me!) in their 60’s and 70’s and even 80’s. It is an absolute blast; a ton of camaraderie, and great fun. Different guys every week, and the club pros play a lot of times.
The best of all was my previous club in GA; a golf-only club that had a club-run $20 points and skins (gross and net) game 5 days a week. The club itself made the pairings and handled the payouts; on a nice Saturday, they’ll have over 50 guys in the game.
What I’ve just described takes place at clubs all over the country all the time; it’s not only by far the most common use of the handicap system, but would pretty much be impossible without it.