I have a question concerning the scorecard. On the scorecard, what is meant by the numbers for each hole in the handicap column.
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GTO Moderator
- Jul 2004
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Re: scorecard
Each hole is indexed so that players of different handicaps can all adjust their scores to see who won.
Lets say you're a 9 HC and I'm a 15 HC.
That's a difference of 6.
So, on holes marked 1 through 6 on the handicapping chart, I get one extra stroke. So at the end of the day, if you shot 77 and I shot 80, I won.
Apparently (I looked for an hour - I couldn't find it), 'hole toughness' is not directly related to hole handicap - in other words, the #1 handicap hole isn't the hardest one. It's the hole where a scratch golfer could make par where a bogey golfer couldn't - possibly due to length, trouble off the tee, or trouble surrounding the green. It has to do with the USGA and R&A definitions of scratch and bogey golfer, and what each can do skill-wise.
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Re: scorecard
Originally posted by LowPost42Each hole is indexed so that players of different handicaps can all adjust their scores to see who won.
Lets say you're a 9 HC and I'm a 15 HC.
That's a difference of 6.
So, on holes marked 1 through 6 on the handicapping chart, I get one extra stroke. So at the end of the day, if you shot 77 and I shot 80, I won.
Apparently (I looked for an hour - I couldn't find it), 'hole toughness' is not directly related to hole handicap - in other words, the #1 handicap hole isn't the hardest one. It's the hole where a scratch golfer could make par where a bogey golfer couldn't - possibly due to length, trouble off the tee, or trouble surrounding the green. It has to do with the USGA and R&A definitions of scratch and bogey golfer, and what each can do skill-wise.
Comment
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Re: scorecard
Originally posted by LowPost42Each hole is indexed so that players of different handicaps can all adjust their scores to see who won.
Lets say you're a 9 HC and I'm a 15 HC.
That's a difference of 6.
So, on holes marked 1 through 6 on the handicapping chart, I get one extra stroke. So at the end of the day, if you shot 77 and I shot 80, I won.
Apparently (I looked for an hour - I couldn't find it), 'hole toughness' is not directly related to hole handicap - in other words, the #1 handicap hole isn't the hardest one. It's the hole where a scratch golfer could make par where a bogey golfer couldn't - possibly due to length, trouble off the tee, or trouble surrounding the green. It has to do with the USGA and R&A definitions of scratch and bogey golfer, and what each can do skill-wise.
You need to know what holes you have your shots on so you allocate them out 1- 18 until you run our of handicap.
If you get to the 18th and you still have handicap left then you start again from 1.
so a 20 handicapper has 2 shots on index 1 & 2 and 1 shot on all the rest.
The indices are devised by the scores that the average golfer usually has on that hole.
Usually a percentage of Class 2 golfers.
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