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Posted

as good as that sounds the reality is the course would have the reputation of a douche bag and people would not come play. Public courses make money by putting players on the course. most run tee times close together and leave little or no margin for a slow group.

It's not even zero tolerance though, they're getting a couple warnings first.

I've spotted at least one course review on golfnow for a course in my area where the reviewer said a ranger was riding their ass all day.  It didn't scare me off at all, the first thing I thought was 1.) this guy is a slow player, and 2.) I want to play at this course!


Posted

It's not even zero tolerance though, they're getting a couple warnings first.

I've spotted at least one course review on golfnow for a course in my area where the reviewer said a ranger was riding their ass all day.  It didn't scare me off at all, the first thing I thought was 1.) this guy is a slow player, and 2.) I want to play at this course!


i hear what you are saying but its still a balancing act for the proshop/rangers


Posted

Where i play,  the 'course' is not 18 holes.  Players 'rent' the space for 4 hrs and 23 minutes. Because of suffocating demands by the population on the course,,every day,  and the need to produce each players local ID, the management can effectively ban any player, usually for a month, if the player misbehaves the entreaties of the marshals.  It's a dreadful monopoly but we have no choice. Obey and play to the clock or get out.  Unless there is no competition in the OP's neighborhood this program may not work for him.

Really, only punishment for the bad boys will work. NO MORE GOLF.(here)


Posted

Good luck. Where I work the course policy (by the owner's choice) is all idiots are asked to leave and not come back.

Biggest problem at the course is a lack of play because all idiots are banned and sometimes their non-idiot friends quit playing there as well in sympathy.


Posted

Good luck. Where I work the course policy (by the owner's choice) is all idiots are asked to leave and not come back.

Biggest problem at the course is a lack of play because all idiots are banned and sometimes their non-idiot friends quit playing there as well in sympathy.

I can see how that happens. bottom line is we (course staff) must tread lightly. We all need golfers to sustain our course empty course = no money. and that creates another set of problems.


  • Moderator
Posted
Where i play,  the 'course' is not 18 holes.  Players 'rent' the space for 4 hrs and 23 minutes. Because of suffocating demands by the population on the course,,every day,  and the need to produce each players local ID, the management can effectively ban any player, usually for a month, if the player misbehaves the entreaties of the marshals.  It's a dreadful monopoly but we have no choice. Obey and play to the clock or get out.  Unless there is no competition in the OP's neighborhood this program may not work for him.

Really, only punishment for the bad boys will work. NO MORE GOLF.(here)

Interesting. What course is this? Interested in seeing what if any Google/Yelp/Other comments on it.

Steve

Kill slow play. Allow walking. Reduce ineffective golf instruction. Use environmentally friendly course maintenance.

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Posted

The original posters was looking for ideas, once a slow group has been identified a more direct, zero tolerance approach needs to take place.

insist the group play:

with a 2.5 foot gimmie rule.

with mark my ball once rule on the green.

allow for preferred lie everywhere.

without "honors". ready golf including the following tee shot.

Sounds has though some course changes have been done, rough has been cut etc. other suggestions  on known busy days, easy tee boxes and easy pins, throughout the course. If you have a restaurant  can signs be put up on the 8th or 9th tee  with a simple light menu and the bar/restaurant telephone number. The menu could also be displayed in the cart.

I  am always amazed clubs do not do this


Posted

The original posters was looking for ideas, once a slow group has been identified a more direct, zero tolerance approach needs to take place.

insist the group play:

with a 2.5 foot gimmie rule.

with mark my ball once rule on the green.

allow for preferred lie everywhere.

without "honors". ready golf including the following tee shot.

Sounds has though some course changes have been done, rough has been cut etc. other suggestions  on known busy days, easy tee boxes and easy pins, throughout the course. If you have a restaurant  can signs be put up on the 8th or 9th tee  with a simple light menu and the bar/restaurant telephone number. The menu could also be displayed in the cart.

I  am always amazed clubs do not do this

So, refuse to allow golfers to play golf on the golf course......

You're right, that will speed up play, but only because there won't be many golfers frequenting that particular course!

In David's bag....

Driver: Titleist 910 D-3;  9.5* Diamana Kai'li
3-Wood: Titleist 910F;  15* Diamana Kai'li
Hybrids: Titleist 910H 19* and 21* Diamana Kai'li
Irons: Titleist 695cb 5-Pw

Wedges: Scratch 51-11 TNC grind, Vokey SM-5's;  56-14 F grind and 60-11 K grind
Putter: Scotty Cameron Kombi S
Ball: ProV1

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Posted

we try to hurry them along and have made people skip a hole. But really they are paying like everyone else so you are limited to what you can do.


Posted
The original posters was looking for ideas, once a slow group has been identified a more direct, zero tolerance approach needs to take place.

insist the group play:

with a 2.5 foot gimmie rule.

with mark my ball once rule on the green.

allow for preferred lie everywhere.

without "honors". ready golf including the following tee shot.

Sounds has though some course changes have been done, rough has been cut etc. other suggestions  on known busy days, easy tee boxes and easy pins, throughout the course. If you have a restaurant  can signs be put up on the 8th or 9th tee  with a simple light menu and the bar/restaurant telephone number. The menu could also be displayed in the cart.

I  am always amazed clubs do not do this

Those things do no more than make an insignificant difference in pace of play.  And they are nonsensical suggestions because you are assuming the the only cause of slow play is poor golfers, which is an uninformed and prejudicial opinion.  There are plenty of single digit players who suck at keeping pace.  Your suggestions will be useless for them.  You need a policy which is all encompassing, and what that means is that players need to be ready to play when it's time to play, and to then play promptly as soon as they do have the opportunity.

Pace rules for casual stroke play:

1) No waiting to determine who is away or who has the honor.  Play if you are ready.

2) No 5 minute searches for errant balls unless already waiting on the group in front.  Play a provisional ball when you see your shot heading astray.

3) No standing around picking your nose and scratching your butt when the way is clear in front of you.  Hit the ball!!

4) Get directly to your ball, get ready to play, then play, as long as that action doesn't interfere with another player in playing his stroke.

5) Know where you should be on the course at any given time.  If you are averaging more than 14 minutes per hole, then you are usually going to be off pace.  More than 15 minutes and you are definitely off pace.  15 minutes is easy to keep track of - that is 4 holes per hour.  If you can't track that then you need remedial help with math.  14 minute pace is 4 holes in 56 minutes - still pretty easy.  Be aware of it and keep track.

6) If something does cause you to fall behind, be the driving force in your group and push your companions to make a real effort to catch up.

All this means is get out on the course and just play golf.  It's not a coffee klatch or a beer bust.  It's not the time to put a wax job on your driver.  If you like to clean clubs after a shot, do so while traveling, or when waiting on your playing companions to play, not while the next group back is waiting on you.  Same thing is true if you have to put a ID mark on your ball.  In the heat of battle it doesn't need to be an artistic masterwork.

Mostly just be aware .  See what is happening around you and know when it's time to play.

Rick

"He who has the fastest cart will never have a bad lie."

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Posted

If you have a restaurant  can signs be put up on the 8th or 9th tee  with a simple light menu and the bar/restaurant telephone number. The menu could also be displayed in the cart.

I  am always amazed clubs do not do this

This is actually one of my pet peeves. I don't understand why people need to stop after 9 holes to eat something. It's only been 2 hours or so, and another 2 or so to finish. Eat before you start and when you finish. Grab and drink, take a piss, no big deal. Order food and stop to eat it, lose your place.

Clogging up at the turn really irritates me. I think courses should have signs that say "If you are out of line for X minutes, you lose your place". To me, that would mean wait until a starter places you in a gap large enough to accomodate you, not just slide in as soon as you are ready and hold up others.

  • Upvote 1

Posted

I think the type of facility we are talking about has a lot to do with what can and cannot be said by the starter to each group before their round starts.  If you are a course that gets a tremendous amount of tourist play (for example most of the courses in Myrtle Beach area), I always like when the starter tells us about the course, where the bathrooms are, where we can find water, and he emphasizes the pace of play.  Now, if you are a course that relies mostly on local play, all that rhetoric about the course may not be necessary.  The starter can always ask, "Have you played here before?".  If the answer is yes, then just remind the group what the pace of play is and please keep up with the group ahead of you.

Also, if the course has marshalls/player's assistants/ambassadors or whatever you want to call them, they need to do their job but they need to do it in a pleasant manner and not be advesarial immediately from the start.

On a recent trip out of town, my group was playing a course for the first time.  We were waiting to tee off and there was a group of 8 ahead of us.  They had 2 tee times and when it was their time to hit, there was a bunch of confusion.  Apparently a guy from each 4some has disappeared (probably in the crapper).  The group of 3 ahead of them was already on the green and putting.  The starter told us to tee off if we were all there.  By the time we were off the tee box, the group on the green was long gone.  Admittedly, we were not the fastest in playing the first hole.  Couple of guys hit in the marsh next to the green and it took a couple more minutes than should have.  2nd and 3rd holes we were still 2 shots behind the group ahead.  Here comes the marshall and makes a beeline for me.  Before he says a word, I told him politely what had happened on the first tee.  He ignore the hell out of me, cut me off in mid-sentence and said you MUST catch up with the group ahead of you.  I said we will try but when we teed off they were leaving the first green.  3 holes later, here he comes again and told me we were going to have to catch up of skip a hole.  It got ugly from that point.  I called the pro shop told them to go talk to the starter and then contact their damn marshall via radio.  When we were done, I went in and said I needed to speak to someone in management.  We had a very long discussion.  He actually called the starter in.  He was very apologetic.  I told him, "Look, I appreciate your apology but your marshall, Mr xxxxxx, is an absolute ass and is going to hurt your business."  I appreciate the job they are supposed to do but he was rude immediately."  We got 4 free rounds that could be used for a year.  They will probably never be used..

Oh, and the round that day...we played in under 4 hours.  We never did catch the 3some.  We could keep them in sight but honestly, I am not going to play golf running to hit my shots without thinking.

Bag: Titleist
Driver: TM RBZ 9.5
Fairway metals: TM RBZ 3 wood
Hybrids: TM RBZ 3, 4 and 5
Irons: TM Burner 1.0 6 thru LW stiff steel shafts
Putter: Ping B60
Ball: TM Tour Preferred X or ProV1x
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Posted

I disagree. How many players will actually admit to being slow? Not many, because most people think the slow players are someone else and not themselves because not many people will tell them to their face. Chances are that a course that is known to actively enforce slow play rules will be applauded by most and get a better reputation. There are plenty of courses I won't play because I know it'll be a 5hr round.

Posted

Quote:

Originally Posted by wils5150

as good as that sounds the reality is the course would have the reputation of a douche bag and people would not come play. Public courses make money by putting players on the course. most run tee times close together and leave little or no margin for a slow group.

I disagree. How many players will actually admit to being slow? Not many, because most people think the slow players are someone else and not themselves because not many people will tell them to their face. Chances are that a course that is known to actively enforce slow play rules will be applauded by most and get a better reputation. There are plenty of courses I won't play because I know it'll be a 5hr round.

No disrespect to high handicappers but they are a big % of the slow players along . Yes I have seen my fair share of low handicap people play slow too. Robster I wouldn't expect a 3.7 index like yourself to play slow or like to play slow. Most public course have players that are new to the game and /or have high handicaps. I am a superintendent at a difficult public course and when we have 250 players on a Saturday or Sunday its going to be a bit slow. It sucks to say this but that's the way it is on a lot of public courses.


Posted
No disrespect to high handicappers but they are a big % of the slow players along . Yes I have seen my fair share of low handicap people play slow too. Robster I wouldn't expect a 3.7 index like yourself to play slow or like to play slow. Most public course have players that are new to the game and /or have high handicaps. I am a superintendent at a difficult public course and when we have 250 players on a Saturday or Sunday its going to be a bit slow. It sucks to say this but that's the way it is on a lot of public courses.

No disrespect taken :-) One of the people I was playing with took way too long to make shots. He would set up just like a pro walk around every hole before making a putt. He did make two of them, but took 4 minutes. Doing so made the rest of us need to rush our shots to keep pace of play. He justified it by saying we needed to wait anyway :-D. My point is really, pace of play comes first. When you shoot 1-2 strokes over on every hole it does not justify screwing everyone else in your groups game, just to "look" like a pro. What a terrible playing partner.

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TM Rac 60 TT WS, MD2 56
Ping i20 irons U-4, CFS300
Callaway XR16 9 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S
Callaway XR16 3W 15 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S, X2Hot Pro 20 degrees S

"I'm hitting the woods just great, but I'm having a terrible time getting out of them." ~Harry Toscano

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Posted

sadly as Robster pointed out most people wont admit to being slow. I don't know maybe I am bias because I am on a golf course everyday but people need to check there ego at the door too. I can't tell you how many times I have seen and read here about people resisting moving up to the next set tees because they hit it along way. Truth be told some do hit it a long way but have a high handicap  and end up shooting a million.


Posted

I would seek out and pay a premium for a good course that could guarantee me a 3.5 hr round. Kind of like a 3.5hr round or your round is half price or something. Now that I have a family, 4-5 hrs rounds don't work. I think a strict pace of play policy could accomplish that rather easily.

Maybe we could do a poll to see how many people would pay a premium for something like this. I pay about $30-40 per round and I'd be willing to pay $40-50 if I were guaranteed 3.5hrs or less. That's about a 30% premium, so a course could turn every 4-some in to a 3-some and spend a little less on maintenance as well. I suppose they'd lose on food/drink though.


Posted
No disrespect to high handicappers but they are a big % of the slow players along . Yes I have seen my fair share of low handicap people play slow too. Robster I wouldn't expect a 3.7 index like yourself to play slow or like to play slow. Most public course have players that are new to the game and /or have high handicaps. I am a superintendent at a difficult public course and when we have 250 players on a Saturday or Sunday its going to be a bit slow. It sucks to say this but that's the way it is on a lot of public courses.

Oh believe me Wils, some of the slowest players I know are good players. The difference is that their slow play is usually down to the slow routine that they have to complete start to finish even on two foot putts rather than the higher handicap that just takes a lot of shots. My personal favourite is the bloke who hits it 210 off the tee all day and then waits for the Par 5 green to clear just in case he hits his one in a lifetime shot from 250 with a 3 wood! What it boils down to is that you won't know you're slow unless you are told. If someone I respected told me I was slow, I'd be mortified and would do something about it. I'm not though( for the record):-D


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    • Please see this topic for updated information:
    • When you've been teaching golf as long as I have, you're going to find that you can teach some things better than you previously had, and you're probably going to find some things that you taught incorrectly. I don't see that as a bad thing — what would be worse is refusing to adapt and grow given new information. I've always said that my goal with my instruction isn't to be right, but it's to get things right. To that end, I'm about five years late in issuing a public proclamation on something… When I first got my GEARS system, I immediately looked at the golf swings of the dozens and dozens of Tour players for which I suddenly had full 3D data. I created a huge spreadsheet showing how their bodies moved, how the club moved, at various points in the swing. I mapped knee and elbow angles, hand speeds, shoulder turns and pelvis turns… etc. I re-considered what I thought I knew about the golf swing as performed by the best players. One of those things dated back to the earliest days: that you extend (I never taught "straighten" and would avoid using that word unless in the context of saying "don't fully straighten") the trail knee/leg in the backswing. I was mislead by 2D photos from less-than-ideal camera angles — the trail leg rotates a bit during the backswing, and so when observing trail knee flex should also use a camera that moves to stay perpendicular to the plane of the ankle/knee/hip joint. We have at least two topics here on this (here and here; both of which I'll be updating after publishing this) where @mvmac and I advise golfers to extend the trail knee. Learning that this was not right is one of the reasons I'm glad to have a 3D system, as most golfers generally preserve the trail knee flex throughout the backswing. Data Here's a video showing an iron and a driver of someone who has won the career slam: Here's what the graph of his right knee flex looks like. The solid lines I've positioned at the top of the backswing (GEARS aligns both swings at impact, the dashed line). Address is to the right, of course, and the graph shows knee flex from the two swings above. The data (17.56° and 23.20°) shows where this player is in both swings (orange being the yellow iron swing, pink the blue driver swing). You can see that this golfer extends his trail knee 2-3°… before bending it even more than that through the late backswing and early downswing. Months ago I created a quick Instagram video showing the trail knee flex in the backswing of several players (see the top for the larger number): Erik J. Barzeski (@iacas) • Instagram reel GEARS shares expert advice on golf swing technique, focusing on the critical backswing phase. Tour winners and major champions reveal the key to a precise and powerful swing, highlighting the importance of... Here are a few more graphs. Two LIV players and major champions: Two PGA Tour winners: Two women's #1 ranked players: Two more PGA Tour winners (one a major champ): Two former #1s, the left one being a woman, the right a man, with a driver: Two more PGA Tour players: You'll notice a trend: they almost all maintain roughly the same flex throughout their backswing and downswing. The Issues with Extending the Trail Knee You can play good golf extending (again, not "straightening") the trail knee. Some Tour players do. But, as with many things, if 95 out of 100 Tour players do it, you're most likely better off doing similarly to what they do. So, what are the issues with extending the trail knee in the backswing? To list a few: Pelvic Depth and Rotation Quality Suffers When the trail knee extends, the trail leg often acts like an axle on the backswing, with the pelvis rotating around the leg and the trail hip joint. This prevents the trail side from gaining depth, as is needed to keep the pelvis center from thrusting toward the ball. Most of the "early extension" (thrust) that I see occurs during the backswing. Encourages Early Extension (Thrust) Patterns When you've thrust and turned around the trail hip joint in the backswing, you often thrust a bit more in the downswing as the direction your pelvis is oriented is forward and "out" (to the right for a righty). Your trail leg can abduct to push you forward, but "forward" when your pelvis is turned like that is in the "thrust" direction. Additionally, the trail knee "breaking" again at the start of the downswing often jumps the trail hip out toward the ball a bit too much or too quickly. While the trail hip does move in that direction, if it's too fast or too much, it can prevent the lead side hip from getting "back" at the right rate, or at a rate commensurate with the trail hip to keep the pelvis center from thrusting. Disrupts the Pressure Shift/Transition When the trail leg extends too much, it often can't "push" forward normally. The forward push begins much earlier than forward motion begins — pushing forward begins as early as about P1.5 to P2 in the swings of most good golfers. It can push forward by abducting, again, but that's a weaker movement that shoves the pelvis forward (toward the target) and turns it more than it generally should (see the next point). Limits Internal Rotation of the Trail Hip Internal rotation of the trail hip is a sort of "limiter" on the backswing. I have seen many golfers on GEARS whose trail knee extends, whose pelvis shifts forward (toward the target), and who turn over 50°, 60°, and rarely but not never, over 70° in the backswing. If you turn 60° in the backswing, it's going to be almost impossible to get "open enough" in the downswing to arrive at a good impact position. Swaying/Lateral Motion Occasionally a golfer who extends the trail knee too much will shift back too far, but more often the issue is that the golfer will shift forward too early in the backswing (sometimes even immediately to begin the backswing), leaving them "stuck forward" to begin the downswing. They'll push forward, stop, and have to restart around P4, disrupting the smooth sequence often seen in the game's best players. Other Bits… Reduces ground reaction force potential, compromises spine inclination and posture, makes transition sequencing harder, increases stress on the trail knee and lower back… In short… It's not athletic. We don't do many athletic things with "straight" or very extended legs (unless it's the end of the action, like a jump or a big push off like a step in a running motion).
    • Day 135 12-25 Wide backswing to wide downswing drill. Recorder and used mirror. 
    • Day 6 - 2025-12-25 10 minutes of swing work on the mat and net. Focus on turn and weight shift.
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