Jump to content
IGNORED

Anyone else tired of hearing the PGA and USGA talk about pace of play?


Aguirre
Note: This thread is 3664 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Recommended Posts

is it actually a country club?  some public courses around here call themselves country clubs but they are fully public.

Colin P.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Country clubs have limited memberships and thus less play, even on weekends, without as much competition for tee times.  I've never played a a club that ran on 7 or 8 minute tee intervals like many public courses.  Public courses need to stay competitive to stay in business in a different way than private clubs do.  Players at the local muni rarely accept a $50 green fee as reasonable, so in order to load the course more, the intervals have to shrink.  While I don't really think that they are doing a service to the player this way, it's how such courses function.  They have to adjust tee intervals to be consistent with green fees and regional norms to maintain a balance between pace of play and revenue.  My home course has an 8 and 9 minute staggered system to add a few more tee times during the prime morning hours, then straight 9 minute times after 10:30.  Those few added groups add significantly to the bottom line.  The widest spacing I've ever experienced on a public course is 10 minutes.

Country clubs don't have to use such strategies to stay competitive.  Instead they have to offer what their clientele expect as the perks for the premium cost of playing a private course - and one of those perks is well spaced tee times which prevent the log jams that would otherwise occur during the natural ebb and flow of a round of golf.


Not at the Ranch CC. My parents are members and I lived on it for 13 yrs. They once functioned that way but not now. I could join that club for less than the annual gold membership at my public home course. If it wasn't a 40 minute drive I would join, just can't make it work. They still expect people to get around it in 3:52. My home course was once private and their posted POP is 4:12 and it potentially can play 600 yds longer than the Ranch.

Dave :-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fourputt

Country clubs have limited memberships and thus less play, even on weekends, without as much competition for tee times.  I've never played a a club that ran on 7 or 8 minute tee intervals like many public courses.  Public courses need to stay competitive to stay in business in a different way than private clubs do.  Players at the local muni rarely accept a $50 green fee as reasonable, so in order to load the course more, the intervals have to shrink.  While I don't really think that they are doing a service to the player this way, it's how such courses function.  They have to adjust tee intervals to be consistent with green fees and regional norms to maintain a balance between pace of play and revenue.  My home course has an 8 and 9 minute staggered system to add a few more tee times during the prime morning hours, then straight 9 minute times after 10:30.  Those few added groups add significantly to the bottom line.  The widest spacing I've ever experienced on a public course is 10 minutes.

Country clubs don't have to use such strategies to stay competitive.  Instead they have to offer what their clientele expect as the perks for the premium cost of playing a private course - and one of those perks is well spaced tee times which prevent the log jams that would otherwise occur during the natural ebb and flow of a round of golf.

Not at the Ranch CC. My parents are members and I lived on it for 13 yrs. They once functioned that way but not now. I could join that club for less than the annual gold membership at my public home course. If it wasn't a 40 minute drive I would join, just can't make it work. They still expect people to get around it in 3:52. My home course was once private and their posted POP is 4:12 and it potentially can play 600 yds longer than the Ranch.

But if you can't make the recommended pace from those back tees, you would be expected to move up to the tees from which you can make pace.  If you can't make the pace, then you probably don't belong on the course.  Maybe I'm just lucky, but most of the men I see playing at Foothills seem to be able to park their egos with their cars.  Most don't seem compelled to play the back tees unless they actually have the game for it (there are exceptions of course, and that's what our rangers are there for).

What tee interval do both courses send players out at?

Rick

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

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

FWIW I am not a speed demon. I like to be out there and around 4 hrs is fine with me as long as the course is moving. I mentioned this already, if I made time to golf it is my free time, I am done with work or any other responsibilities for the day. I don't want to race through just to head home or to a restaurant to kill more time and wish I was still golfing. For me the slow play problem is how it makes me feel on the course. The waiting then rushing in an attempt to stay out of the way of the groups stacking up behind is a buzz kill. I get out of routine and typically play badly. We could very well finish before the posted POP and still feel like we are slogging along if the groups ahead are hacking the course to bits. I may even play slower alone if the course is empty because I am trying to take advantage of the peace and quiet to play well. Hard to do when I am waiting on young guys taking 3 shots to get to the 100 yd marker and then 4 more to get it in the hole. Even if they complete the hole in 12 minutes or whatever it seems like all I do is wait for them to bat it around. Which is why I usually book the first or last time of the day.

Dave :-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

But if you can't make the recommended pace from those back tees, you would be expected to move up to the tees from which you can make pace.  If you can't make the pace, then you probably don't belong on the course.  Maybe I'm just lucky, but most of the men I see playing at Foothills seem to be able to park their egos with their cars.  Most don't seem compelled to play the back tees unless they actually have the game for it (there are exceptions of course, and that's what our rangers are there for).

What tee interval do both courses send players out at?

You know it's a funny thing and really varies course to course. My home drives me nuts because they put the gold tees out, it's some 7500 yards. They have tee recommendations based on index range. I play in the 8-11 range, they say I should play the black tees at 6900 yards but I usually play the blues at 6600. Without fail if it is busy I catch young guys that can't break 90 back on the gold tees. It's crazy to watch them struggle on the 480-490 yard par 4's. My former home course is a rinky-dink rural course in Ft. Lupton and most men play the 6000 yd white tees and typically even with as many as 200 golfers out on a Sat it moves along pretty quick. I played with an ex-pro football player last weekend that could kill the ball and after he caught me on the 4th hole he still chose to play whites when he saw me head for blues.

I don't play the Ranch as often as I'd like just because my folks are always busy. I have no idea what the actual intervals are because people just kind of do whatever, they don't have starter. If our time is 2:15 there is usually a group on the box and a couple of carts stacked behind us watching us tee off. When the group ahead is out of range they hit. At my home course time are 8-9 minutes on GolfNow. But like I said I book either first or last time or when there is a gap. It's slow enough there I can roll out as a single and be several times between groups.

Dave :-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Note: This thread is 3664 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Want to join this community?

    We'd love to have you!

    Sign Up
  • TST Partners

    TourStriker PlaneMate
    Golfer's Journal
    ShotScope
    The Stack System
    FlightScope Mevo
    Direct: Mevo, Mevo+, and Pro Package.

    Coupon Codes (save 10-15%): "IACAS" for Mevo/Stack, "IACASPLUS" for Mevo+/Pro Package, and "THESANDTRAP" for ShotScope.
  • Popular Now

  • Posts

    • Thats the second hardest hole so bogey is ok. How do you do on the number 1 hardest hole?
    • Ah, target golf off the tee and all the way to the hole always grinds my gears, This is not a terribly long hole so here's my two cents: Job #1 is to put yourself in play. Job #2 is to keep yourself in play. If hitting a driver is such a crap shoot then you are already betting on lower than 50-50 odds. Hit a hybrid and take your chances with a long iron, punch or whatever. Stick to your plan and accept your result knowing you did. 
    • Ah, got it.  Yeah I'd just play it for bogey. Even as a low handicap I wouldn't be all that upset with a bogey on that hole. 
    • Haha I made a I typo. I was thinking two things at once, ‘I don’t think bogey is a bad score’ and ‘I think bogey is a great score’. But I mixed them up and said the opposite 
    • How isn't bogey a great score? As a 20 handicap every single time you make a bogey you are playing better than expected. Because if you bogeyed every hole you'd most likely be lower than a 20. You're a high handicap playing a hole that is lined with hazards the entire length of it on both sides.  Bogey is a very solid score for you on that hole.  From 300yds off the tee PGA tour players average 3.71 strokes to hole out. As a high handicap you are going to be more than 1 full stroke higher than that, probably closer to 2 full strokes higher.  If you had 100 different 20 handicaps play that hole I would bet a lot of money that the scoring average is greater than 5.0 Sometimes courses have really hard holes. Play for your bogey, be ecstatic about a par, and do everything possible to minimize double bogey.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to TST! Signing up is free, and you'll see fewer ads and can talk with fellow golf enthusiasts! By using TST, you agree to our Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy, and our Guidelines.

The popup will be closed in 10 seconds...