Just had a flick through this thread.
Erik,
I admire your patience and common sense.
Wow David,
I am surprised you get sucked in by Mr. Misinformation.
Here is how he restarted the handicapping thread with his first post of the year on the thread.
Welcome (in the U.S. at least) to the WHS.
On (or about) January 6, golfers should be able to see their new handicap index. The GHIN app was completely re-written (by the GolfGenius people), so you'll want to download the new version of that. And you'll want to be aware of the following:
- Post your rounds daily so the PCC (playing conditions correction) works properly.
- Post a score with a max of net double bogey on your bad holes.
- Learn how the new course handicap is calculated.*
* This mostly makes it easier for people playing from different tees. Let's say you have a pair of 9.0 index players, and one wants to play the blues (par 72, 72.0/144) while the other wishes to play the whites (par 71, because on one hole the tees are on the near side of a large lake, 69.0/133).
Old Way:
Blue: 9.0 * 144/113 = 11 course handicap
White: 9.0 * 133/113 = 11 course handicap
That's how both would be listed on the sheet hanging in the pro shop, so they'd often forget the last step which was to subtract out the course rating, giving Blue an extra three shots or taking three away from white (same thing). They'd end up at either 14 and 11 or 11 and 8.
New Way:
The new way bakes this right in, right from the start, by making your course handicap relative to par.
Blue: 9.0 * 144/113 + 72.0 - 72 = 11
White: 9.0 * 133/113 + 69.0 - 71 = 9
You add the course rating and subtract the par to get the course handicap. This "bakes in" the course rating so that tournament directors and gambling buddies and whomever else don't have to argue about playing from different tees. This is also why par is important in the new handicapping system (though it will be rare for a par to change from one set of tees to another, it can happen).
P.S. I'm rounding 11.469 down to 11 but honestly am a bit too lazy right now, but there's a small chance this becomes 11.5 and thus the 11.5 rounds up to a 12 course handicap. I don't think so, but the point remains the same even if you have to adjust by 1 for my rounding.
He gets the number of strokes to be given (or received) wrong in the new system. Notice that in the old system there is a 3 stroke difference in handicap, but in the new system only a 2 stroke difference. He doesn't seem to know why, and suggests there is a rounding error.
Interestingly, Dean Knuth's article points out the correct way, and points out that people would tend to make the mistake that Erik made.
From the article, "The other argument USGA officials make supporting the par handicap is that the switch eliminates the need in the old USGA system for an additional adjustment when two players are competing from different tees (Old Section 3-5 for handicap nerds), something many tournaments and leagues neglected to apply. Replacing the misunderstood section is a good idea, so long as it can be done reliably. But that’s not the case because in the WHS, when the pars of the two tees are different, the same correction must be applied to account for par difference.
And since players will be told the old correction is already taken care of, there’s a danger that this par difference will not be corrected." Emphasis added.
Erik neglects to apply exactly the correction that Knuth suggests he will neglect to apply. He needs to apply the extra par stroke for blue to bring the stroke difference to 3 as it was in the old system.
You might think that Erik can be forgiven for this oversight. Let's see what Erik says about his expertise on the matter.
...
The truth is I've spent tens of hours discussing the WHS with people responsible for putting it together, people responsible for administrating it, regular golfers looking to understand it, etc. Just today my phone shows two hours of calls doing just that. The truth is that I've done just what you've suggested: I've read Dean's article several times, I've discussed it with the people I've talked to, I've considered it from different angles… and ultimately I arrive at the same conclusions. For whatever reason, Dean doesn't seem to understand the changes, the relevance of "par," etc. The article, IMO, is bad.
...
Again, emphasis added.
His claim of expertise suggests to me that he shouldn't make such mistakes. Especially since he read the warning about the possibility of such mistakes "several times."
One problem that does exist is the difficulty in finding up to date information from the USGA. Google searches that I did came up with pages that were blank except for the message that they pages would be filled out in 2020, which of course they hadn't been. Eventually, Erik gave a link to USGA 2020 manual (draft?). The unfortunate thing is that, although it gave the new handicap calculation formula, my search through that manual did not give the adjustment for different par from different tees.
The USGA did give the information on the adjustment in their FAQs for the upcoming changeover to the new system.
4. I play in a group where we all play from different tees. Do we still have to make a Course Handicap adjustment when we play?
Under the current system, a Course Handicap adjustment is required when players compete from different tees since each set of tees has a different Course Rating. Under the Rules of Handicapping, your Course Handicap factors in both Course Rating and par – meaning an adjustment is only necessary when par is different – which will be far less likely!
https://www.usga.org/content/usga/home-page/handicapping/world-handicap-system/world-handicap-system-usga-golf-faqs.htmlI also found the adjustment in my online searches. It found it in a Golf Genius white paper.
(Scratch, index 0.0) Players on the red tee will now have a course handicap of 0 – (69.8 – 72) = -2.2, which rounds to -2. Players on the white tee will have a course handicap of 0.1, which rounds to zero, and players on the blue tee will have a course handicap of 1.6, which rounds to 2. Players on the blue tee will now be determined to have a four-stroke advantage over players on the red tee, which makes perfect sense since the difference in course ratings is 3.8 strokes. What if par is different for different tees? Let’s take the case in the above example where par is 73 from the blue tee. Repeating the calculation, the players on the blue tees will now have a course handicap of 0 – (73.6 – 73) = 0.6 instead of the 1.6. To deal with this scenario, WHS specifies a further adjustment: players on a tee with a higher par get additional strokes equal to the difference in par for those tees. So, players on blue tees get an additional 1 stroke, thereby raising their course handicaps to 1.6, which rounds to 2.
http://productionggs.s3.amazonaws.com/WHS-whitepaper.pdf