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John_Conley

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #75 on: July 13, 2009, 10:41:41 PM »
The guy is no longer a 4 unfortunately.  He went the first part of the year unemployed and managed to reduce his handicap to a 2. 

To add another level of complexity to the conversation, how does one adjust for the seasonality of the handicap.  As a father of three young children, I play very little golf in late Fall and Winter.  As such, my best scores from late Summer stay in the system til early summer of the next year -- deflating my handicap.  Yet in early summer, my handicap typically goes up briefly as my best scores from the previous year fall off and my winter scores hold more weight.  I know there is a trend number that you can use, but my handicap rarely represents how I'm playing at that point in time (mid-late summer being the exception).  Its not that big of a deal since it doesn't fluctuate a whole bunch, but I'd imagine it probably does for some...

So the 4 in question is really a 2.  That certainly changes things, doesn't it.  Yes, you may carry a 4 handicap before shooting low scores that drag it down to 2.  Hence your assertion "a good 4".  By that reasoning anyone trending down is "a good" whatever their handicap is.  I think this only confirms the points expressed by those who responded.  HE'S NOT A FOUR!

If a top college player quit golf for five years and then played once a month for two years - and posted the scores - he could easily carry a 7 handicap.  Then imagine said player practices a lot and plays 9 holes each week for a few months.  Then he goes to play.  Yes, his card says 7, but he's not a "7 handicap" in the eyes of me or probably anyone else on the board.  THat clearly does not describe his skill level.

To reply to your question - yes, their is an ebb and flow to the handicap you carry.  As I once heard, "you make money on the way down and lose money on the way up."

Jay Kirkpatrick

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #76 on: July 13, 2009, 10:51:42 PM »
John -- According to the handicap system we all operate under, he was a 4 for a long time and it was done in accordance of the rules.  If he posts every score legitimately and happens to be playing at a level above a 4, does that make him a sandbagger?  If the seasonal adjustments I described above makes my handicap temporarily inaccurate to my current playing level, does that make me a cheater?  Handicap doesn't always accurately portray skill level... it just doesn't.  That guy could pull off shots that I'd put up against PGA tour pros, but he can also top it off a tee on the next shot.  I get the sense that some of the guys on here play with robots that have very little variabilty to their games.

Jason Walker

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #77 on: July 13, 2009, 10:57:46 PM »
Handicap doesn't always accurately portray skill level... it just doesn't.  That guy could pull off shots that I'd put up against PGA tour pros, but he can also top it off a tee on the next shot.  I get the sense that some of the guys on here play with robots that have very little variabilty to their games.

Yet this is the same guy who shoots par or better on sub-6700 yard courses?  Jay--enough!

I have TONS of variability in my game.  My last 20 scores--high of 94, low of 78, last 20 differentials--high of 16.7, low of 3.4.  Makes for a 6.2 index. 

John_Conley

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #78 on: July 13, 2009, 11:13:49 PM »
John -- According to the handicap system we all operate under, he was a 4 for a long time and it was done in accordance of the rules.  If he posts every score legitimately and happens to be playing at a level above a 4, does that make him a sandbagger? 

Jay, he's not a sandbagger.  He's also not beating an LPGA Tour player if he carries a 4.

You are very argumentative on the thread for some reason, then commented you felt hated.  If your assertion is that your friend can beat Leta Lindley, I guess you went about it wrong.  How about:

My friend played a little in college, but he's not at the level he once was.  Still, he can pull off shots that the LPGA players can't.  His handicap is now 4.  Still, I'd take him over any of these girls on a tough course.

The truth is a 4 handicap would not do well in a match with a lady pro.  That's not an opinion.

The USGA handicap system is designed to allow for fair matches when players are at a different level.

George Pazin

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #79 on: July 14, 2009, 09:35:44 AM »
The handicap shouldn't make a difference... thats the point.  Given the earlier scale, I assume there would be some agreement that a lower-tier LPGAer equates to a +3 handicap.  Using that scale, do you think a long-hitting 7 handicap could hang with a scratch short-hitting player on a long golf course at least some of the time?  How about a 10 vs. 3 or a 15 vs. 8?  I think extreme length in a golf course can offset 4-6 strokes of "skill".  When we have "tough day" at our course, we have short-hitting 2-4 handicaps that can barely finish, much less contend. Meanwhile, long-hitting 10s shoot similar scores...

First off, all bets are off when you start climbing in the numbers - I wouldn't want to guess on comparing a long hitting 15 versus a short hitting 8 on some random long course.

But I think you're kidding yourself if you think a legit long hitting 7 beats a short hitting scratch player on any course from any tees more than once in a blue moon. Sure, there's a chance of someone playing the round of his life while another plays his worst, but at some point you have to chalk that up to just being a fluke, not that it was the distance that made it happen.

Anything that makes a course "harder" - length, hazards, firmness, sped of greens, etc - makes it proportionately harder for the lesser golfer, regardless of the length of the respective players, unless you are talking about 2 relatively similar levels of golfers with very specific strengths and weaknesses (i.e. something silly like comparing a straight hitting 15 to a wild but good scrambling 12).
Big drivers and hot balls are the product of golf course design that rewards the hit one far then hit one high strategy.  Shinny showed everyone how to take care of this whole technology dilemma. - Pat Brockwell, 6/24/04

JMEvensky

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #80 on: July 14, 2009, 09:48:04 AM »
It wouldn't surprise me either, but those guys in the US Am are plus 2,3,4+, not 4 handicappers.

Agreed.I'd never refer to 4's as "high level" amateurs.

Brent Hutto

Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #81 on: July 14, 2009, 10:15:38 AM »
Many times over the years I've heard my teaching-pro buddy advise players who want to improve to find or make or take advantage of every opportunity to play with "good players". A couple times people have asked if "good player" means like a 2 or 3 handicapper and his answer is always the same. A "good player" is someone who can shoot around par or better two days in a row from the back tees playing for serious stakes. And he will point out that "good player" can not be measured by a handicap index computed off friendly Nassaus with your usual foursome. It's a variation on the old "golf vs. tournament golf" dichotomy.

There's a reason that virtually all top-level competition is stroke player over 36-72 holes. That's really the only way of measuring ability such that the "good players" are separated from the guys who can break par on a good day and the guys who can post a 73 or 74 with two off the first tee and a few gimmes.

Ross Tuddenham

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #82 on: July 14, 2009, 10:24:40 AM »
A four handicap player will have a relatively very bad short game and will only shade the pro in greens in regulation despite hitting longer clubs.  Not sure about the exact number but about 70% of shots are played within 100 yards.  This is the range that the LPGA player would really beat the 4 handicapper.

I think the LPGA player even on a long course would win relatively easily.

Tom Huckaby

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #83 on: July 14, 2009, 10:31:42 AM »
This is kinda funny to me....

I am a four handicapper.  Current index is 4.4.  Ok that makes me a 5 on most courses right now, but hey, it gets lower than that quite often.

I have seen LPGA players play this game.

Unless they have a HORRIBLE day, they would kick my ass sideways.  It's not even close.  And it doesn't matter what course we played, what length, whatever.  They are better than me at every aspect of the game.

Now guys like Jamie Slonis, Jim Sullivan, Andrew Biggadike, Matt Cohn, etc... truly top-level plus handicap male amateurs, I believe they could hang with the LPGA gals.  They'd need to be on their best games, and they do not play the game for a living and these women do, but I think they could win often enough.

But us four handicappers?  Fuggeddaboudit.

JESII

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #84 on: July 14, 2009, 10:43:21 AM »
I'll take Jamie over Sarah Lee (currently #75)...

Tom Huckaby

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #85 on: July 14, 2009, 10:50:31 AM »
I'll take Jamie over Sarah Lee (currently #75)...

I'll take her in a bake-off.
 ;D

But yeah, I think you truly big boys could keep right up with the ladies, particularly those farther from the top of the rankings. 

But man the question was us hack 4 handicappers... and well... no way.

TH

JESII

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #86 on: July 14, 2009, 10:59:43 AM »
My home course has a ranking of about 73.5 so we have plenty of 4's that rarely break 80 if they play the back tees...I think Sarah Lee could handle that...

Tom Huckaby

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #87 on: July 14, 2009, 11:14:32 AM »
My home course has a ranking of about 73.5 so we have plenty of 4's that rarely break 80 if they play the back tees...I think Sarah Lee could handle that...

Exactly.  She'd kick my ass sideways for sure.
But I still want to have the bake-off.

Scott Szabo

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #88 on: July 14, 2009, 11:17:10 AM »
This is kinda funny to me....

I am a four handicapper.  Current index is 4.4.  Ok that makes me a 5 on most courses right now, but hey, it gets lower than that quite often.

I have seen LPGA players play this game.

Unless they have a HORRIBLE day, they would kick my ass sideways.  It's not even close.  And it doesn't matter what course we played, what length, whatever.  They are better than me at every aspect of the game.

Now guys like Jamie Slonis, Jim Sullivan, Andrew Biggadike, Matt Cohn, etc... truly top-level plus handicap male amateurs, I believe they could hang with the LPGA gals.  They'd need to be on their best games, and they do not play the game for a living and these women do, but I think they could win often enough.

But us four handicappers?  Fuggeddaboudit.

I too am a 4 handicap, and wouldn't stand a chance against these ladies.  My misses could get me in a lot of trouble...

For the record, I played Sand Hills a week or so ago and had one round stop short due to weather at one-under through 16, played another nine at 2-under, and also had rounds of 77 and 82.  Consistent I am not, and that's one of the things the ladies definitely are.  And that is the difference between a 4 handicap and a true scratch golfer, consistency.

Scott
"So your man hit it into a fairway bunker, hit the wrong side of the green, and couldn't hit a hybrid off a sidehill lie to take advantage of his length? We apologize for testing him so thoroughly." - Tom Doak, 6/29/10

JESII

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #89 on: July 14, 2009, 11:22:59 AM »
My home course has a ranking of about 73.5 so we have plenty of 4's that rarely break 80 if they play the back tees...I think Sarah Lee could handle that...

Exactly.  She'd kick my ass sideways for sure.
But I still want to have the bake-off.

I'll be the taste tester...

Peter Pallotta

Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #90 on: July 14, 2009, 11:26:17 AM »
Technique.

The wonderful fighter Alexis Arguello (RIP) won his first title as a featherweight - that is, at about 125 pounds. I weigh about 210. I would've lasted half a round, and then only if I had ingratiated myself to him before the fight...

Peter

Doug Siebert

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Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length?
« Reply #91 on: July 17, 2009, 01:04:28 AM »
I'm a 5 right now and I regularly drive it 300 yards.  My home course is about 7050 yards 74.1/134, with bluegrass rough 'mow to 3" grow to 5"' when there's regular rain.  Give me one shot to get me to 4 handicap and let's say I take on an LPGA player on my home course - I know it like the back of my hand, she's never seen it before.  Only way I win is if I push her down a hillside and she twists her ankle.  And I better do that in the early holes, if I wait until the back nine it might be too late :)

Those who are thinking the 4 has a chance are in a fantasy world.  Michelle Wie and Annika may not be average LPGA players, and they may not have made the cut on tour but they came pretty damn close.  Let's say you add TEN strokes to what they did on the PGA tour events they played in to more than correct for the fact they are better and longer than the average LPGA player.  A scratch golfer on a really good day might shoot 10 strokes above what they did on those layouts (in practice rounds, I'm not talking about subjecting them to the pressure of TV and gallery) so what the hell chance to do you think a 4 handicap would have?
My hovercraft is full of eels.

TEPaul

Re: What are the effects of distance on players of different length? New
« Reply #92 on: July 04, 2010, 12:01:39 PM »
I saw someone looking at this thread of almost a year ago so I thought I would pull it up and put something on it that is most appropriate to its subject.

This apparently happened very recently and my source of info was one of the ladies playing with her so it's definitely accurate-----Christina Kim was taken over to Merion East by three other top tournament lady amateurs from around here. The three amateurs played from the ladies tees but Christina Kim teed it up from the Walker Cup tees and played them all (other than the interestingly jury-rigged 3rd hole that the Walker Cuppers played one day from the 6th tee (about 235 yards vs the app. 190 3rd hole tee)).

Anyway, apparently those three ladies could not believe the extent to which Christina Kim could bust it, and she made seven birdies, three putted twice and shot a smooth 67 anyway. Take THAT Merion East.

All I could think to tell my source is a lot of it may've had to do with the fact that she played the course on a regular day and not on a real "tournament set-up" day.   :-[

But still, does that leave any doubt how some of those LPGA players play now?  ;)


Hell, a couple of years ago, Wayno, who really can hit it pretty danged far took three LPGA mini-tour players over to Merion East and he had trouble keeping up off the same tees with all of them including one little one who weighed about one quarter of what he does!   :o

In that vein, Bob Crosby and I walked around Cypress the other day with a group that included Kristel (can't spell her last name right now) a probably mid thirties French lady who is not only incredibly tall and beautiful but she had perhaps the most beautiful golf swing I have ever seen and believe me I have seen a lot of them over the years. She won the NCAAs out of Arizona State back in 1995. Her ball striking was incredibly impressive and if she made a mistake with it she was generally long which I have always thought was the sign of a very accomplished players. Her father was playing with her and apparently he won the French Amateur something like ten times. He also mentioned that the real golfer in the family was Kristel's mother who pretty much beat everyone except the one lady who always had her ticket----none other than the all time energizer bunny and arguably the best American lady amateur of the last half of the last century----Pittsburgh's Carole Semple Thompson!
« Last Edit: July 04, 2010, 12:17:56 PM by TEPaul »

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