OK, I've been giving this some thought. Too much thought. But hey, as a course rater, the handicap process occupies too much of my time as it is, so what's a few more minutes?
The more I see abuses like Halmi's, and the more I read the ramblings of participants here, and the more I think about how all of this works in practice, the more my faith is shaken in the USGA/GHIN system. Oh, I believe that if the rules are followed, the system is great... and I also believe there's very little chance any wholesale changes to it will come in any of our lifetimes... and I also continue to believe that it works for us quite well in the vast majority of instances... BUT, the words of Darren K. about the effect on playing by the rules, and the dominoes that follow from that, are weighing powerfully on me. Our system is too damn weak about this, or at least too easy to abuse. I am sick and tired of having to be the one to tell groups that it's not really right to hit 'till your happy on the first tee and that "inside the leather" is not really in the rules of golf...
So let's say the CONGU system is better, and by some miracle we do move to it here.
All shit, jibes, cracks aside, I still can't get over this issue with it, and perhaps it's due to misunderstanding I have of the system:
how do you get over the obvious problems of the small sample size?
By that I mean, as much as in a perfect world the CONGU works well - a world where everyone plays multiple medal events, and handicaps are based on these - what do you do about what would seem to me to be the majority of players who play the monthly medal, and that's there ONLY "posted" score that month? Those who play 3-4 medal events per year, and those 3-4 determine their handicaps seemingly forever? It just seriously does seem to me that basing one's handicap on such a small sample MIGHT give you a true indicator of their ability, but has much more chance that it won't! And then given it takes so long to change, well... I can't get past this weakness.
I trust you understand what I mean by this. What do you do about a player who just has bad luck in the medal, or plays an uncharatectistically poor round for him? Darren says this evens out over time... but if he plays relatively few medals, that's a LONG time we're talking for it to even out... and he'd have to have a correspondingly GREAT round to even out the bad one....
It's easy to say just don't take strokes, or you know the handicap of your friends, or whatever. But if that's the case, then why bother to get a handicap at all, even one so "pure" as based on medal scores?
I just can't get over the guy with 6 handicap ability who fires an 88, then for next month's medal gets an 18 handicap. Perhaps this is myopic, but darn it every player has to start somewhere, and given it's gonna take SO LONG for this guy's handicap to change, I just see this as a weakness so great as to be prohibitive for me...
So perhaps the answer is it takes 3 medal scores to be given a handicap. Sounds better - over three scores, take the average, that does get it closer to real... But then what does a player do during the 3 months AT LEAST that it takes to achieve this? Just play scratch? That's great for low 'cappers, but not a good alternative for the vast majority who need the strokes...
Then I think about a guy who just plain doesn't play up to his ability in medal events... there are SO MANY like this, well... I can't discount him as important. He's gonna bounce along for years with a handicap higher than his true ability... and again, it's all well and good to say his friends will play him scratch, or give him what he REALLY deserves, but if that's the case, why bother to have the handicap at all?
An obvious answer is a strong handicap chairman with the ability to make changes outside of normal scores, upon petition or evidence. But heck, we allow for that here already... no change.
Then I also think about the many, many people who belong to various organizations - what we call associate clubs over here - just to get a handicap... and I'm thinking the sample size for them might be 1 and that's it forever.... and yes, they do want handicaps... This is a huge cultural difference between the US and UK....
So can anyone answer for me how to get over this weakness? Do so cogently and logically, and you shall have me on your side. And while all the rest I say in here tends to be mental masturbation, on this issue I have at least a snowball's chance in hell to effect some change (although if Scott Seward ever reads this, please do understand my effect would just be lobbying gentlemen such as you!)....
I can't get over it. Conguists, please explain.
Oh, and one other thing: I really don't see moving to CONGU having a positive effect on architecture... whereas staying with GHIN and making the move to hole-by-hole posting, as advocated years ago by TEP in here and now advocated again in Geoff Shack's new book, could have VERY positive effect there, by allowing more easily for match-play to dominate... taking away the incentive/necessity to post 18-hole scores... Given CONGU is based just on medal scores, well... someone needs to explain this to me also.
A possible answer is that I am just too ingrained in the USGA handicap measuring concept, that is, of POTENTIAL. Perhaps it's simple enough to say that the 6 who shots 88 in the medal really IS an 18, and thus should play with it. But I just see so many instance of that happening... and I still can't get over the small sample size determing everything...
As I say, this is a long-winded plea for help. Please do leave the jibes and attacks out of any replies...
Thanks!
TH