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Sandbagging in Club Tournaments


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This is an area where it's easy to think people are cheating, but it's much harder to prove it.

My club is a great example: lots of people complain that certain people win all the time, and there are guys with 9 hcps who somehow seem to end up winning skills contests like closest to pin or longest drive with unusual regularity.

But I'm sure if you really studied these golfers at my club, it would be very hard to really find compelling evidence of cheating.

Now, when it comes to handicap tournaments where there is alot of money or prizes involved, and people bring in guests and so forth to play, I agree there is definitely a problem. I've heard of guys with 12 handicaps hitting 300 yard drives and shooting 75 in member guest tournaments at my club. Our pro told me that while it has been rare, he HAS had to occasionally change a club member's handicap because the committee determined the number and the posted scores did not reflect the player's true ability.

But for common, low $ nassau matches I play every week, I don't think there is significant sandbagging.

While I am sure there are people at every club who post falsely high scores to boost their hcp, I honestly believe it's MUCH more common for people to post incorrectly LOW numbers. This means that most golfers' hcps are too low for their ability, and when they play someone who posts honestly, they get killed.

I have been accused of sandbagging, but in reality I just easily beat alot of guys in my handicap range because most of them have unrealistic, vanity handicap numbers.

There is a guy at my club....won the club championship 20 years ago....has a beautiful swing, and is a gentleman, and a great guy. But for some reason, he just can't play anymore. I've never lost to this guy, not even close.....but when I search his name on ghin, I see he never posts anything above 85, and posts lots of rounds in the 70s. His handicap is 2-3 strokes lower than mine. In reality, if he played by USGA rules and counted every stroke, he has not broken 90 in the last 2 years I am certain.

He's an extreme example, but I see it all the time.....people are in their pocket on a hole during a match, and then they write down a bogey or a double on the card when they should have posted a 7. I played with another former club champ recently....he can still play, but he posted an 82 for a round when in reality he shot about 87, and seemed phobic about posting a double. On one hole I asked him his score and he even said "well, it was really a 6, but for my ego, put down 5."

Most of us know that if someone concedes a twelve footer so we can't show our partner the line, we aren't supposed to take 1 putt....but do we do it all the time when we rake away a difficult 4 footer because the hole is over?


I think your mileage varies depending on how club members behave, how active handicap committee is in reminding people to post accurate numbers, etc..  I think my club operated using honor's system so long that it bred sandbaggers.   There are of course, vanity handicappers in my club, probably in equal number to sandbaggers.   They hurt their teammates in two ball competition, scramble, and other team tournaments.   I think they'd have hard time finding partners to enter team competition over time.    Anyway, someone may have finally complained and the club is at least letting the players know that they need to post all scores.  That's a step in the right direction.

RiCK

(Play it again, Sam)

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"Sandbagging" is much more prevalent now than it used to be, at least where I play. There is not one single day that goes by that a player(s) handicap is not questioned.

The problem is that so much net golf sandbagging eventually leads to a "can't beat 'em join 'em mindset" and it just snowballs out of control.

I hate net golf so much that sometimes I don't even want to play.

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"Sandbagging" is much more prevalent now than it used to be, at least where I play. There is not one single day that goes by that a player(s) handicap is not questioned.

The problem is that so much net golf sandbagging eventually leads to a "can't beat 'em join 'em mindset" and it just snowballs out of control.

I hate net golf so much that sometimes I don't even want to play.

Do you really believe sandbagging is more prevalent or that increased vanity capping has given that appearance?

Given my experience at two different clubs, being able to play in the Saturday and Sunday money games drive golfers more than the few club tournaments.  The big money gamers (who usually get the prime tee times on the weekends) don't like to give up a lot of strokes and it seems that unless you're at or below a 15 handicap you don't get invited to play.  It's a prestige thing, until you get invited to play in the big money games you're not a part of the 'inner circle".

I see all of the same things @Big Lex does and worse with very little indication of members sandbagging.

Joe Paradiso

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Do you really believe sandbagging is more prevalent or that increased vanity capping has given that appearance?

Given my experience at two different clubs, being able to play in the Saturday and Sunday money games drive golfers more than the few club tournaments.  The big money gamers (who usually get the prime tee times on the weekends) don't like to give up a lot of strokes and it seems that unless you're at or below a 15 handicap you don't get invited to play.  It's a prestige thing, until you get invited to play in the big money games you're not a part of the 'inner circle".

I see all of the same things @Big Lex does and worse with very little indication of members sandbagging.

Yes, I do or I wouldn't have stated so.

I've only encountered 3 people who manipulate their handicap lower in 30 years I've played. Two players did it to qualify for tournaments that had handicap max restrictions of 5. The other guy used to be a 4-5 and can't deal with the 85's he shoots now and posts 80-82 every time he plays.

The tournament I played in this past weekend featured a winning team of 15 handicappers shooting a 2 day net best 18 of 36 ball score of 53(-18). I've never played with these guys but I can tell you that no true 15 handicapper I've ever seen could tee it up and play that well 2 days in a row in a tournament.

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The tournament I played in this past weekend featured a winning team of 15 handicappers shooting a 2 day net best 18 of 36 ball score of 53(-18). I've never played with these guys but I can tell you that no true 15 handicapper I've ever seen could tee it up and play that well 2 days in a row in a tournament.

I'm a little confused about the format of this tournament.  Are you saying that they each play hole number 1 twice, and record the lowest individual net score they make, i.e. the lowest of the four (two players playing the hole twice) scores they shoot?  If that's the case, I can see net 18 under as being very possible.

Dave

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SubPar touched on my situation around page 1. I am a 14 and usually struggle to break 90. I have talent but there's often drama somewhere in my round. I enjoy playing tournaments, partly because I focus more. Since I focus more, I often shoot a better score, maybe 60% of the time. Not dramatically but maybe 5 strokes, which makes a difference. I work on my game and someday hope to get into single digits. The absolute LAST thing I want is to be labeled as a sandbagger. I have far more integrity than to cheat to win a prize. The point is, many of us (I imagine) play better in a tournament than a casual day at the course.

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SubPar touched on my situation around page 1. I am a 14 and usually struggle to break 90. I have talent but there's often drama somewhere in my round. I enjoy playing tournaments, partly because I focus more. Since I focus more, I often shoot a better score, maybe 60% of the time. Not dramatically but maybe 5 strokes, which makes a difference. I work on my game and someday hope to get into single digits. The absolute LAST thing I want is to be labeled as a sandbagger. I have far more integrity than to cheat to win a prize. The point is, many of us (I imagine) play better in a tournament than a casual day at the course.

( Dloy, I am not accusing you of being a sandbagger in my next line.   Just continuing with the discussion.   )

You may be playing better in tournaments but that's often the very reason sandbaggers claim on their doing well in tournaments.  "Yeah, I focus and play better with something on the line."  I also like to believe I focus better when there is something on the line.   In fact, I take more time with pre-warm up routine, check all my game leading to the tournament, etc..  But that prep cannot beat 5 strokes that a sandbaggers are cheating with their handicap.    Somewhere in this forum, there is a chart of "odds" on what a typical amateur will shoot below their handicap.   For examples, (don't quote me on this, I am just making one up for argument's sake), it may be 5000 to 1 for  a 14 HI golfer to shoot 5 strokes better than his HI average at a given round.   To do it 2 days in a row is 5000 x 5000 = 25000000 to 1.  So, when someone happens to average 5 strokes better than his HI in tournaments, the odd of doing that is astronomical.   Hence, the suspicion that they are sandbagging.

(Dloy, just count your blessing that you do better in tournaments.   That's a rare gift. )

RiCK

(Play it again, Sam)

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It just makes sense to me that we all (typically) do better when we concentrate more. So, I don't think the odds of doing so are astronomical at all, even twice in a row. On any given day I might shoot anywhere from mid 80s to upper 90s, depending on a lot of things (fatigue, hangover, course familiarity, etc.). I have even broken 80 two or three times, thankfully (maybe) not in a tournament. Not recently either. Now, the odds of me (at 14) shooting a near par round are pretty remote.

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You may be playing better in tournaments but that's often the very reason sandbaggers claim on their doing well in tournaments.  "Yeah, I focus and play better with something on the line."  I also like to believe I focus better when there is something on the line.   In fact, I take more time with pre-warm up routine, check all my game leading to the tournament, etc..  But that prep cannot beat 5 strokes that a sandbaggers are cheating with their handicap.    Somewhere in this forum, there is a chart of "odds" on what a typical amateur will shoot below their handicap.   For examples, (don't quote me on this, I am just making one up for argument's sake), it may be 5000 to 1 for  a 14 HI golfer to shoot 5 strokes better than his HI average at a given round.   To do it 2 days in a row is 5000 x 5000 = 25000000 to 1.  So, when someone happens to average 5 strokes better than his HI in tournaments, the odd of doing that is astronomical.   Hence, the suspicion that they are sandbagging.

rkim, this statistical research was used by the USGA in setting up their system for addressing exceptionally low tournament scores.  As far as I've read, the evaluation used scores from many golfers, but I've never read that they took into account some of the intangibles that Dloy mentions, including heightened concentration, more thorough preparation, etc. on the day of the tournaments.  On the other hand, a player's reaction to tournament pressure might skew the scores higher.  Statistics like this have value, but I'm not sure they should ever be applied to any one individual.  They ARE applied, via the handicap system,  but I'm a little skeptical.  Additionally, if a player's handicap is reduced based on exceptional tournament scores, the local Handicap Committee is required to review the situation, and can modify that player's index in any way they see fit.

Like Dloy, I generally prepare and concentrate better during tournaments.  Some specifics, for the last 12 months I have posted 70 rounds, with an average of 80.5.  This  During that same time period, I've posted 20 tournament rounds, averaging 77.8.  I post all scores, I don't manipulate my casual scores, I believe I'm as honest as I can be, but my scoring history might lead a statistician to think otherwise.  At my club, I see many more vanity handicaps than intentional sandbaggers.

Dave

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rkim, this statistical research was used by the USGA in setting up their system for addressing exceptionally low tournament scores.  As far as I've read, the evaluation used scores from many golfers, but I've never read that they took into account some of the intangibles that Dloy mentions, including heightened concentration, more thorough preparation, etc. on the day of the tournaments.  On the other hand, a player's reaction to tournament pressure might skew the scores higher.  Statistics like this have value, but I'm not sure they should ever be applied to any one individual.  They ARE applied, via the handicap system,  but I'm a little skeptical.  Additionally, if a player's handicap is reduced based on exceptional tournament scores, the local Handicap Committee is required to review the situation, and can modify that player's index in any way they see fit.

Like Dloy, I generally prepare and concentrate better during tournaments.  Some specifics, for the last 12 months I have posted 70 rounds, with an average of 80.5.  This  During that same time period, I've posted 20 tournament rounds, averaging 77.8.  I post all scores, I don't manipulate my casual scores, I believe I'm as honest as I can be, but my scoring history might lead a statistician to think otherwise.  At my club, I see many more vanity handicaps than intentional sandbaggers.

I used the chart to make a point, no more or no less.

Consider that it's not easy to match one's HI score.  The odd is one in 4.  To match it two days in a row, the odd is 1 in 16.   That happens to us mortals.   To beat it by 5 strokes, then do it again in the next round is going to be rare unless you are in a zone, or improving rapidly.   The odd of that happening is going to be a lot worse than 16 to 1.  To do well in most tournaments even accounting for some percentage of vanity handicapper is going to be extremely rare.

But I will make a point that if  tournament is base on 80% or 90%, the advantage goes to lower handicap players. I can  see them taking turns in winning most tournaments interrupted by a golfer being in a zone or by rapidly improving one, all things being equal & fair.   My clubs tournaments are at 100% handicap.

RiCK

(Play it again, Sam)

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This all brings to mind the Dean Knuth Tournament Point System.

http://www.popeofslope.com/pointsystem/

Dean Knuth helped the USGA when it implemented the Slope system, and has remained interested in handicapping issues.   I won't get into details of it here, you can read about at his website, but basically he proposes a system that identifies players who perform disproportionately well in club tournaments.  I think this has merit in that the system doesn't evaluate your scores against a set of statistical norms, but evaluates your performance as measured against your fellow members.  If you place high enough in a a large enough number of net competitions, your handicap for tournaments at your club would be reduced.  Your USGA handicap index wouldn't change, just the strokes you get in home tournaments.  Its an interesting approach to in-club sandbagging.

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Dave

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I'm a little confused about the format of this tournament.  Are you saying that they each play hole number 1 twice, and record the lowest individual net score they make, i.e. the lowest of the four (two players playing the hole twice) scores they shoot?  If that's the case, I can see net 18 under as being very possible.


Yes, best ball of partners, low 18 of 36...net. They are 15 handicappers. In theory, they are supposed to shoot around 86 (gross)(par71) each. Two 15 handicappers can't shoot a gross best ball

68. The lowest gross score was 62 by a 4 and 5 handicap team.

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Personally, I'm one who tends to lean towards the 'tournament scores SHOULD be better' side of the argument.

As has been mentioned... concentration seems to be increased.  A lot of times, during tournaments, I'll factor in things that I don't even think about when I'm playing a regular/casual round.  For example... which side of the green has more trouble?  In a casual round, I'm WAY more prone to going at the pin regardless of surrounding trouble.  This is because I want to see if I CAN hit it if I NEED to hit it.  In a tournament, depending on the situation, I'm more likely to ignore the pin... focus on the safe side of the green... factor in my current miss (left, right, short, long)... and then play to the safest option for me.

I've played in a bunch of tournaments this year (all flighted, not net scoring) and, when I concentrate and grind... I can make 3, 4 or 5 pars in a row... even missing fairways and greens.  I've also found myself with my concentration waning because I've been playing poorly... and I'll go back to my 'casual round' mentality and get more aggressive, taking on shots I have no business trying in those situations.

I'm fully capable of posting an 85... and I'm fully capable of posting a 105.  My handicap is as high as it is for a reason.  I post EVERY score, even if it's embarrassing to do so.  I've had a few rounds this season that I posted in the 60s for 9 holes.  I didn't WANT to post them, but... I did anyway.  The good thing is that, for the club I play with, only our tournament scores within that club are counted towards our tournament index.

In our first 'major' tournament of the season... I posted an ugly 96 in the first round.  I came back the next day and I posted an 85... finishing tied for 3rd in the flight.

One thing I think a LOT of lower handicap (under 10) players ignore is the fact that, typically, higher handicap players (15+) don't get to play all that often.  When I'm playing more... I clearly play better.  My swing becomes more consistent... I tend to have a better idea of which path my ball is going to take... my distances are more consistent.  This all results in lower scores.  But, I may get to play 3 or 4 times in a 2 week period... and I consider that playing often for me.  More likely... I'll play in a tournament, put my clubs down for 2 weeks, and go back for the next tournament.  My work and home life just doesn't afford me much playing time.  So... those times when I DO get to play more often and 'groove' my swing... I'm going to post better scores.

For the MOST part, lower handicap players tend to be able to play more often.  I know a lot of the guys that I play with in these tournaments are playing 2-3 times per week, as opposed to me playing 2-3 times per month.  I'd LOVE to play more often, and I feel like I've got moments where I could be a 10 handicap.  A lot of times, I'll start out well in a round and someone will ask me my handicap and when I tell them 18 or 19... they tell me I'm full of it.  Then I'll have a stretch of 3 or 4 holes where I'll put a ball OB off the tee, drop some balls into a hazard, take 3 strokes to get out of a bunker.  If I played more frequently... I'd be more prone to avoiding those types of things... and every so often, I'll have a round where I WON'T lose a ball, and those are the rounds where I'll post an 85, with a course handicap of 22, which would equate to a net 63.  The thing is... those rounds are fairly rare for me, unless I'm playing more often... and then my handicap is dropping.

But... anyway... yeah.  If the same 5 or 6 guys are winning net tournaments over and over... something's not right.  To consistently shoot 5 or 6 strokes lower than your handicap in tournaments isn't right.  1 or 2 strokes, I can see.  An occasional -7 net round can happen if everything clicks.  To consistently post those types of scores... you need to be looked at.

CY

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- 18 Holes - 72 (+1) - Par 71 - Pine Island Country Club - 6/25/2022
- 9 Holes - 36 (E) - Par 36 - Pine Island Country Club - 6/25/2022

 

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But... anyway... yeah.  If the same 5 or 6 guys are winning net tournaments over and over... something's not right.  To consistently shoot 5 or 6 strokes lower than your handicap in tournaments isn't right.  1 or 2 strokes, I can see.  An occasional -7 net round can happen if everything clicks.  To consistently post those types of scores... you need to be looked at.

Exactly.

What I found with low handicappers are that they are more consistent, and their score range narrower.   I can go 90 and 110 in back to back rounds and just hope that I am playing tournament when I shoot 90.   But I won't be going 90 every time I play tournament.    A suspected sandbagger in my club with single digit HI (probably plays 3 - 4 strokes better than that) put in 2 scores in 90s just before tournament season began and claimed he had a bad week.  The guy routinely scores in low 80s and high 70s in tournaments.   We know he clowned around in those "90" rounds to "manage" his handicap.  Worse yet, he will submit very few scores afterward until tournament season is over.  I think this prompted the club's decision to post tournament scores instead of  letting members to post them (or not).  This way, at least, his tournament scores will be counted in his handicap calculation.

RiCK

(Play it again, Sam)

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Yes, best ball of partners, low 18 of 36...net. They are 15 handicappers. In theory, they are supposed to shoot around 86 (gross)(par71) each. Two 15 handicappers can't shoot a gross best ball

68. The lowest gross score was 62 by a 4 and 5 handicap team.

Its just one example, but in a inter-club match a few years back my partner and I, handicaps 5 and 7, shot a gross better-ball score of 65.  Out net would have been 59 or 60.  That's for one round.  If we did it again, its quite reasonable that we would have improved on at least a few of the holes, putting us close to the -18 number.  For a higher-handicap team, getting more strokes, and with an inherently wider deviation from the norm, I can believe that with some lucky ham-and-egging, they could be in the same ballpark.

Dave

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The handicap system requires every player to make their best effort on every shot.  Where the system falls a bit short is when many of us fail to concentrate on each shot and play like we are in a tournament every time out.  Think about these scenarios.  Player Z plays a practice round prior to an event, practices his short game diligently for a week, warms up prior to the event for 30 minutes and employs course management during the event.  Next week Player Z joins his buddies for 18.  He arrives 5 minutes before tee off, putts a few balls, hasn't touched his clubs for a week, tries to reach every par 5 in 2 and fails each time with bad consequences and eventually stops trying hard to score with 3 holes left because he realizes he can't break 90 that day.

Play Z has not done anything specific to try to inflate his handicap index. He would say his secret to success was he concentrates more and plays"smart" in tournaments.  Taken to the extreme, a player with 10 casual rounds and 10 tournament rounds could have all his tournament rounds count as part of his 10 best differentials out of 20.  That would assure him of beating his handicap close to 50% of the time in tournament play.  Statistically one would expect that to happen 20%-25% of the time.  His success rate in handicap events is twice as frequent as the average participant.

My opinion is Player Z is unintentionally violating the spirit of the USGA handicap system.  I would not label him a sandbagger, as I believe that requires intent.  Nonetheless, the handicap committee has to address the issue with Player Z and assign him a lower tournament handicap to bring his results more in line with the 25% target.  Is this the equivalent of golf socialism?  Maybe. Ultimately the handicap system is an enforced leveling of the playing field.  If one wants unfettered competition, play in "scratch" events.

Brian Kuehn

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The handicap system requires every player to make their best effort on every shot.  Where the system falls a bit short is when many of us fail to concentrate on each shot and play like we are in a tournament every time out.  Think about these scenarios.  Player Z plays a practice round prior to an event, practices his short game diligently for a week, warms up prior to the event for 30 minutes and employs course management during the event.  Next week Player Z joins his buddies for 18.  He arrives 5 minutes before tee off, putts a few balls, hasn't touched his clubs for a week, tries to reach every par 5 in 2 and fails each time with bad consequences and eventually stops trying hard to score with 3 holes left because he realizes he can't break 90 that day. Play Z has not done anything specific to try to inflate his handicap index. He would say his secret to success was he concentrates more and plays"smart" in tournaments.  Taken to the extreme, a player with 10 casual rounds and 10 tournament rounds could have all his tournament rounds count as part of his 10 best differentials out of 20.  That would assure him of beating his handicap close to 50% of the time in tournament play.  Statistically one would expect that to happen 20%-25% of the time.  His success rate in handicap events is twice as frequent as the average participant.  My opinion is Player Z is unintentionally violating the spirit of the USGA handicap system.  I would not label him a sandbagger, as I believe that requires intent.  Nonetheless, the handicap committee has to address the issue with Player Z and assign him a lower tournament handicap to bring his results more in line with the 25% target.  Is this the equivalent of golf socialism?  Maybe. Ultimately the handicap system is an enforced leveling of the playing field.  If one wants unfettered competition, play in "scratch" events.

I understand what you are saying but there is a problem with that argument. There are many kinds of golf rounds. Rounds with a $5 Nassau are going to be different than if you play with people you don't know and both of those will be different from tournament rounds. If I'm playing in a tournament I won't be as aggressive as a casual round where if I have a couple of blow up holes on a risky shot or 2. A handicap has to be a balance of a your rounds and I like the idea of tournament rounds hanging around longer since people can game their handicaps. Handicaps are imperfect. It doesn't capture some of the situations that you describe but it does a good job. The example you cite of someone who knows they won't break a certain number so kind of gives up is true in any round. If they gave up, then their score reflects it. But that should be part of their handicap because most likely they are in a tourney where they are out of it , then they will do the same thing. I think what handicap committees should be looking at is anomalies that don't add up. One third of my scores come from playing by myself and I've spoken with my pro shop about thar issue. They maintain that if I'm honest there is no problem. But should I post scores that give me an advantage there is a paper trail and if it looks like I am gaming the system, then it'll become an issue. Anyone can take advantage of the system. But people tend to find out in the end and you'll get called out for it.

—Adam

 

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Anyone can take advantage of the system. But people tend to find out in the end and you'll get called out for it.

I am the thread starter and the above is the issue I wanted to point out.   My club made things too easy for members to cheat and is starting to address it albeit gently for now.  I don't have confidence that it is going to work.  A few people who are so blinded by their desire to win at all cost will continue to "take advantage of the system."   That's human nature.   IMO, my handicap committee must continue to educate and let the sandbaggers know that they are closely being watched.   If it works, it will help the others to enjoy their tournament experience.

As for submitting scores which count, I play every round hard, trying to score the lowest I can.  I don't give up in the middle of a round whether it is casual or tournament round.  If I am experimenting, then I won't count the round's score for my handicap.  To be honest, I don't have too many practice rounds.   That's what ranges are for.   I wish others do the same but I understand if they don't.

RiCK

(Play it again, Sam)

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    • I had to think about this topic for a while. I don't tend to remember specific details about my putts, but a few do stand out in my mind so I guess they're worth noting. I don't know that I'd call them my favorite but it's close enough. #18 at Spooky Brook Might be the hardest 4' putt I've ever had. Pin was back right and I hit my third shot just to the right of it. The green slopes fairly severely back to front. I read the green but I knew the putt anyway as I've seen it before. I told the guys I was playing with that the putt was it was going to break almost 3' and if it doesn't go in I'd have a longer coming back up for par than I was looking at. It went in. #12 at Quail Brook I'm not even sure how to describe this green properly. It's not quite a two-tiered green, but the back and front are separated by a ridge that goes across the middle of it, with the green sloping harder off the front than the back. You can generally putt from the front to a back hole location but good luck keeping the ball on the green if you putt from back to front. On this particular day, I was looking at the latter. I had to putt up into the apron due to how the ball was going to break and that helped slow the ball down enough to hit the hole at the perfect speed. One of the rare birdies I've seen on that hole. #2 at Hyatt Hills Short par 5. This makes the list because it's the first eagle putt I've ever made, which funny enough happened the day after the first eagle I've ever made. I've made two eagles in all my life and they came on back to back days. I wasn't even planning on playing golf - it was a Monday - but I was doing some work at the place I used to work at when I was younger and catching up with some of the guys I've known for years. They were going out to play in the afternoon and had a spot available. I used to see these guys every day for years but we've never played together, so I said I'm in. I hit a really good approach shot into slope that separated the two tiers on the green and spun the ball closer to the hole. Had roughly 8' left to the hole, a downhill right to left breaker. One of the guys said, "You've got to make this, I've never seen an eagle before," and I said, "I've never made an eagle putt before." And then I made it. #17 at Stoneleigh @GolfLug's post reminded me of my own heroics on #17 a couple of years ago. The hole was back left, in the bottom tier. I hit my approach short of the green and flubbed my chip so it stayed on the top tier. I read how the putt was going to break after the ramp (is that what you call it?), then read my putt up to that point. It needed to basically die at that point because if it hit the slope with any kind of speed, it would long past the hole and possibly off the green. I hit the putt perfectly and holed the 40-footer center cup. #6 at Meadow at Neshanic Valley, #15 in the Round This was during the stroke play qualifier of my tournament. It might be a little bit of recency bias and I hit some really good long putts in the four rounds I played, but this 7-footer was my favorite putt of the entire tournament. The hole was cut on the top of a ridge. I hit my tee shot short right but hit a pretty good chip just long and below the hole. Play had backed up at this point, with the ladies waiting on the tee while we were finishing up. I hit the putt just a hair on the high side and it curled around the hole, fell back a couple of inches and stopped on lip. We all looked at it incredulously, "How does that not fall in?" Before I took my first step towards the hole, the ball must have thought the same thing and decided to drop.
    • I don't remember a ton of putts, but I've thought about this a bit and came up with 2 good ones. #5 at Mid-South: 2017 Newport Cup I remember the putt pretty well, but the surrounding details are a little hazy. I believe this was in my singles match against @cipher, and it was a hole he was stroking on. I had hit a mediocre approach to the front of the green and had what must have been a 50 foot putt to a back pin. If I remember correctly, @cipher was pretty close for an easy par at worst. I had @mvmac help me out with a read, which ended up being a great read by him. Hit the putt and jarred it for birdie. It was perfect speed, too, would have been an easy 2 putt if it hadn't gone in. I think we ended up tying for the hole. But I rarely make putts that long, and doing it to steal half a hole was really nice. #3 Fox Hollow (Links): 2023 Match Play This was on the third extra hole of a scratch match against a legitimate 0 handicapper. We had tied after 18 holes and traded pars on the first two extra holes. On the third extra hole, he had about 30 feet for birdie; I had about 25. We were on pretty much the exact same line. He missed his putt just on the low side, and I conceded the par. I felt good over this putt - I knew the break well and just needed good speed. I hit a great (not perfect) putt, and BAM, back of the cup for the victory on the 21st hole. I will say that the speed wasn't great, as it would have been a few feet past if it didn't hit the cup. But I wanted to give the ball a chance and take a bit of break out of it. I went on to win the match play tournament, which is my only tournament victory in a scratch event.
    • there will be lots of changes.  i mean, look at newey past, each team fell off a cliff when he moved on i think max is the magic bullet   if red bull loses him then whee are they going for drivers?   lots of young talent but he is a proven winner and i’m sure top engineers love to work with him  
    • I too, like @GolfLug, remember great wedge, iron shots, or my missed putts, more than my made putts. My most memorable recently, would be: #17 Old Course St. Andrews (last year) I had been putting awful all day (I started 3 putt, 4 putt, 3 putt, 3 putt), but found a putting stroke on the back 9 and was 1 under on the back going into 16 and of course I 3-putted it for a bogey. Got to 17 and my playing partner just hit it into the hotel, so I went a little more left and decided to not try and hit it over the hotel.  And as soon as my ball was in the air, I heard one of the other caddies do the chicken noise.  LOL My shot was a little more left than I wanted, about 185 yards, I hit a 6-iron and it was drawing right at the flag.  The pin was just to the right of he bunker and towards the front of the green. My ball hit short (and just missed going into said bunker) and stopped about 15 feet left of the hole. Had a little left to right break and as soon as I hit it, I knew it was in.  Birdie on the road hole, looked at the caddie and said not bad for a Chicken.  Parred 18 (missed 10 foot birdie putt) for a 35 on the back 9 at the Old Course. #18 Springfield G&CC Last year while playing in our season long match play event, my partner and I get the 18th hole needing to win the match to move on into the knockout round.  We are tied going into 18.  A tie and we lose on overall points by .5.  Our teaching pro is on the other team (very good golfer), so we were pretty sure we needed a birdie to have a chance to win the match, I hit on of the best drives I hit all day and had about 135 yards to the pin, but it was in a place where you didn't really want to be long.  So I hit a PW and it landed just short of the flag but released about 12 feet past the hole, so have a devilish putt coming back down the hill.  Our competitors were away and the pro missed his birdie putt by inches, I thought it was in when he hit it.  So after reading the putt, which probably had a 2 cup left to right break, I made the putt to win the match.   #15 Springfield G&CC A few years back, was playing in the first round of the Club Championship (against the previous years runner-up) and my putter was balky all day.  Got to the 15 hole, 2nd Par 5 on back, and was 3-down with 4 to play.  We both hit good drives, both hit good second shots and we both hit decent 3rd shots.  I was about 15 feet and he was just a hair longer.  He missed his putt, I had another slider putt down the hill, with about a foot of right to left break and made the putt.  I birded the next hole, to go 1 down, but not a memorable putt as I only needed a bogey to beat him on that hole, he had all kinds of issues going on.  Lost on 17, as he birdied it, right after I missed mine to lose 2&1.
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