Tell me, IS this the case in the UK regarding handicapping?
Eric
It's pretty close to the case.
The CONGU system uses Standard Scratch Score, instead of par, and it adjusts SSS based on the scores of scratch players on the day of competition. But the simple fact is that UK handicaps are based on what people actually shoot in competition.
Our system REQUIRES us to turn in EVERY casual round, even if we don't finish all the holes, or the round. (If 7-12 holesare played we MUST return a nine-hole score, and if 13 or more are played we MUST return an 18-hole score.)
Here's the manual if you can stand to read it
http://www.usga.org/playing/handicaps/manual/manual.html.
UK players not only have higher handicaps than Americans of similar ability, they are MUCH more likely to play to them in competition. This is expected, given that only competition rounds are counted.
The math alone should account for about a 3-4 stroke difference, and for most players, you'd have to add another stroke or two to account for the effect of tournament pressure.
I finished 2007 at a 12 handicap and figure that I could just barely handle someone from the UK with a 17 or 18 handicap.
RE. the talk about "vanity" handicaps, I have played in the Midwest for about 45 years and I figure that I have played in something like 300 golf tournaments.
In all that time I have seen exactly
one golfer with a genuine vanity handicap. He's currently a 2 (index 1.2) and I have never seen him play better than bogey golf. (I just checked GHIN and he still has rounds listed from 2004--posted only three scores in 2007.)
Conversely, I have known DOZENS of guys who sandbagged to keep their index up. I bet close to half the people in some areas never post their good rounds.
I know a lot of guys who can't play to their index, but they all complain about their handicap being too low. In nearly every case, they are victims of a system that gives the pressure-free rounds on Sunday afternoon the same weight as a tournament round.
Ken