Andrew
Thanks. However, in my experience, one can never tell if a 10 at a championship course is any better than a 10 at Joe Bloggs CC. There will certainly be a discrepency in course difficulty, but somehow it doesn't seem to matter once a person has reasonable knowledge of the course. In fact, if we are talking about good players, sight unseen I would bet on the guy coming from a shorter, easier course over a guy coming from a championship course - in matchplay.
You are right though, the further down the food chain, the less accurate handicapping becomes, but I am not convinced slope does the job of leveling this out. Nothing is perfect, but god I hope we don't get slope and the idea of best 10 of 20 over here - how tedious that would be. For several years before I left the US I stopped putting in casual scores except for the odd one where all the guys in the group agreed to play a proper medal. Usually that meant we were only three guys in what we thought would be a slow round anyway .
David - in England at least, when in a Stableford lots of guys pick up if they know they can't score and playing will slow the group down. For the course rating to be absolutely spot on, all should play out. Most will only tap in the last putt to mark a score down when they can't score. I can't imagine watching a guy grind it out chipping and putting when it is clear he can't score. Medals are different. Guys will often finish a high scoring hole. However, unless they have a good score going, many wouldn't walk back to the tee after losing a ball - they just write down a NR. Again, it isn't great for calculating course rating etc, but a happy medium needs to be made to keep play moving. Needless to say, I rarely enter medals and much prefer Stablefords.
Ciao
Sean,
I think there are variables in all scenario's, but I generally think slope is a good concept and probably better than most. Now, I'm certainly not confident that course ratings or slopes are applied correctly between courses, and I'd suspect that is a bigger issue in handicap variance for the 95% of golfers who don't try and "work" the system than picking up from 3 feet. By not posting scores when you didn't play "proper medal" in the US, you were in fact utilizing the system in a manner that benefited you relative other golfers. I have no problem with the fact that a handicap is measured on the rounds that are played in the manner that the handicap is most commonly used in, casual matches.
For all the shortcomings, I think the GHIN system is very good for it's most common use, applying shots on individual holes in matches among groups. While I question whether US golfers would actually play enough medal tournament rounds to have handicaps, even absent that argument, I think our system does a very good job of applying strokes in matches. I'd be concerned high scores in medal rounds (or the limited number of rounds) may adversely impact it's ability to do this.
For example, in the finals of our club's two man, season long, net fourball competition we played a team with two 12 handicap players. Neither of these guys were able to break 90 in any of the rounds of the medal club championship, however they can make a lot of pars. During the middle of the round I made 7 straight pars and went from 2 up to 4 down, and it wasn't that either player was "unconscious" they're just capable of making lots of pars and some birdies. Of course, anecdotal evidence is weak, and I'm naturally inclined to view things from the perspective of a lower handicap player, but I'd fear that the UK system would give a greater benefit to the higher handicap player in these "casual" matches.
That said, our system is awful when trying to determine a "Low Net" for a rather large group of golfers. If there are a group of 50 golfers, there are undoubtedly 2 - 3 people who "cheat" the system and have a huge advantage.