3. Shorten tee times to around 6min. intervals
Please, for the love of all things, tell me that the 6 minute tee time intervals comment is a typo? If its not a typo, tell me how putting MORE people on the course with closer spacing will speed up play?
John
The simple old adage...keep up to the group in front.
Could you tell me the opposite - how longer tee intervals will speed up play ?
With 6 minute intervals, you will keep up with the group in front, thats for sure. You'll be a$$hole to bellybutton with them and the group behind you all day. 6 minute intervals would put more groups on the course, making for more opportunities for slow play.
First a 6 minute interval could not work because it would take more than 6 minutes for a group to clear the fairway in such a way that the next group could tee off. Second, the spacing will get worse on the first par 3 of the day where a group will typically take 12ish minutes to play the hole. So, just after the first group moves off the tee, another comes up and before the group can clear the green, another will be on the tee.
With the 6 minute spacings, you'll have waits on just about every tee. It would be like a shotgun start where they do 2 groups on each tee.
Not to mention, 6 minute intervals would not be efficient because the course would have to have more carts on hand to accommodate the additional tee times. You'd need 80 carts instead of 72 (or less, you need at least 70 to manage a course with 7/8 minute tee times, figuring on a 4 hour round, plus time to clean the cart and get the next group to the tee on time). So, 8-10 more carts at a cost of roughly $3000 each, that's a significant expense, not likely to be made up for with close tee time intervals.
But with the 6 minute intervals, you'd have to have a standard pace of 3 hours (meaning you average 10 minutes per hole, so the group in the fairway would be gone by the time the next group got on the tee, though it may still back up a little bit on the par 3's.) in order to get players around. If everyone on the course could maintain 3 hours pace, you'd be fine with those short intervals, but let one group play in anything more than 3:15, the whole day will be destroyed to no end. The first group of the day could play in 3:15 and the last group that teed off 6 hours later on a fully booked day would not finish in 5:30.
Oh, my one minute lost per group figure works for 9 minute tee time intervals, with 10 minute intervals, you might only lose 30 seconds (if any time at all) per group. But with 8 or 7 minute intervals, the time loss will be greater because due to spacing there will simply be more waiting.