Jump to content
IGNORED

Do you enter a score every single time you play?


SoundandFury
Note: This thread is 3222 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!

0  

  1. 1. Do you enter your score for handicap every time you play?

    • Yes
      25
    • No
      17


Recommended Posts

Except practice rounds as declared by the rules.

As long as you don't make a double on the first hole then decide it's going to be a practice round.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Yes.

My "practice" golf on the course tends to be 3-5 holes, hitting multiple balls.


Yes, for posting I think it is a min of 7 holes for a 9 hole score and 13 holes (not sure why not 14) for a 18 hole score.

Vishal S.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Every round with the following exceptions:

1 -  I play multiple balls for a shot, or take additional shots.  I have asked the pro shop about this (and here) about the policy.   Their statement is that it is fine to not post a score where you've hit a number of extra balls.   The only caveat is that if you do that more than occasionally, then it can be a problem for tournament play since you have played additional rounds, not recorded, that give you an advantage.   So it's effectively a "practice round" declared.

2 -  a round where something extremely weird happens that makes it un-postable.   I posted last week about an incident that really shook me up on the course, and it threw me to such an extent I don't think it was a fair round to post.

—Adam

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lihu

Except practice rounds as declared by the rules.

As long as you don't make a double on the first hole then decide it's going to be a practice round.

I try to count as many doubles as possible. tap-tap putts also count too! :-D

My son corrected my score on one hole where I got a 5 after I told him 6. Not good to go either way. . .probably worse to give yourself more strokes, actually.

:ping:  :tmade:  :callaway:   :gamegolf:  :titleist:

TM White Smoke Big Fontana; Pro-V1
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

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

As long as you don't make a double on the first hole then decide it's going to be a practice round.


Lol.  It's funny, seems like most assume that people would be more apt to not report a bad score than a good.  I'm the exact opposite.  Besides the situations I mentioned, I post everything, but it's the good scores that I would prefer not to report than the bad...

I don't and will never understand vanity 'caps.  When I go into a tourney I'd MUCH rather play as a 12 than a 9, etc.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Quote:

Originally Posted by MyrtleBeachGolf

As long as you don't make a double on the first hole then decide it's going to be a practice round.

Lol.  It's funny, seems like most assume that people would be more apt to not report a bad score than a good.  I'm the exact opposite.  Besides the situations I mentioned, I post everything, but it's the good scores that I would prefer not to report than the bad...

I don't and will never understand vanity 'caps.  When I go into a tourney I'd MUCH rather play as a 12 than a 9, etc.

Well, just be careful when playing club tournaments. They have hawks watching every stroke you make and "miss". :-D

:ping:  :tmade:  :callaway:   :gamegolf:  :titleist:

TM White Smoke Big Fontana; Pro-V1
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

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Well, just be careful when playing club tournaments. They have hawks watching every stroke you make and "miss".


Oh I know.  I don't sandbag dude, I hate sandbaggers like the plague.  I've played matches against "16 hdcps" who shoot mid 70's and have the f*ing nerve to say "man, I was really on today."  I'm just saying that when I enter a score and see my trend drop, my reaction is "shit.", not "awesome!".

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Quote:

Originally Posted by Lihu

Well, just be careful when playing club tournaments. They have hawks watching every stroke you make and "miss".

Oh I know.  I don't sandbag dude, I hate sandbaggers like the plague.  I've played matches against "16 hdcps" who shoot mid 70's and have the f*ing nerve to say "man, I was really on today."  I'm just saying that when I enter a score and see my trend drop, my reaction is "shit.", not "awesome!".

Sure, they just didn't miss as many 6" putts. Sure, that's it, right? :-D

:ping:  :tmade:  :callaway:   :gamegolf:  :titleist:

TM White Smoke Big Fontana; Pro-V1
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

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Quote:

IMO, unless one enters every score, it's too tempting to enter "select" scores only, whether it is for vanity handicap or sandbagging purpose.

Amen! I'm sure folks here are honest, but I've known so many decent upstanding types who managed their handicap both ways (vanity and sandbagger) that the overwhelming percentage of folks who play and don't post scores are managing their handicaps (consciously or not).

+1. I decide pre-round if I am going to post or not.

I do not post rounds for which I am specifically practicing a piece and know will skew my HCP. Also, I make sure I post the ESC number.

Everyone is always working to improve something. Why does that qualify to not post a round? If you said this to a handicap committee, they would laugh you out of the room.

So the general consensus is yes.  I get the idea, but to me that means you take every single round super serious.  I consider myself a serious golfer: I play a lot, I actively work at improving, and I play competitively a handful of times per year . . . but there is no way I take every single time I tee up a ball that seriously.  Sometimes I play with my wife (she would certainly not have as much fun if I treated it as a serious round), at least once a month I play a round with three clubs (even if I'm trying to score, how could that be reflective of the state of my game?); sometimes I play with dudes who play maybe 2x a year and those rounds involve a cooler of beer, music, and general shenanigans, etc.

In my opinion your handicap is meant to reflect your ability as a golfer, and in any of those situations above, I don't see how that would serve any purpose.

Can't you play a round that qualifies for handicap by following the rules, in a light, social, fun way with your wife? Why not? Honestly, I don't understand. If you choose to play with 3 clubs, or 8 or 10 or 13 or 14, what does it matter? Why is that not a handicap round? The general shenanigans guys, same thing. I think what your idea of a handicap is, isn't really what it is meant to be, and you have to post all your scores or it's not a real handicap, right? Cause other folks in those situations are posting their scores---

Thanks for posting...  I couldn't remember if you entered practice rounds our not.  Last week I played 9 for the express purpose of practicing my driver after a lesson. It went poorly and I was not going to enter my round.  But then I thought to myself if it had went well I would have wanted to enter it... so I entered the crappy round.  And will enter every round going forward.

Good for you! You should post it. Everyone is always working on something.

I disagree. I play a bit of "client golf" for work and as a general rule, I do not post those rounds. During these rounds, most of my focus in on personal and business discussions. I still try my hardest to hit good shots, but my focus is not really on my score. If a client wants to swat a 4 footer for bogey back tome and say "that's good," I'm certainly not going to correct him.

I hear you here. If you are not allowed to play a regulation round, nothing you can do about it. Playing 3 holes in the evening, 3 balls at a time, isn't a round so sure you don't post it.

I'm sure folks here have good intentions, but all these comments about high numbers of practice rounds, reasons not to post a round, (and these are full rounds) are all the reasons used by vanity cappers and sandbaggers to massage handicaps. Again, I'm not accusing anyone of anything, I don't even know you guys, and I know you all mean well, but most every handicap committee would have serious issues with what you are doing, and folks with legit handicaps who post their scores are either going to be licking their chops (vs. vanity handicappers) or refusing to play at posted handicaps (vs. sandbaggers). If you just figure your own handicap with an online app, that's cool, but recognize it isn't being done like a USGA approved handicap would be done, and shouldn't really be compared to one.

Okay, I'm ready. Beat me about the head and shoulders with a 9 iron :-) And if I offended someone, I apologize now, because honestly that was not the point. The point is, with minor minor exceptions, you should post all your scores. If you don't, your real handicap probably isn't what you think it is.

  • Upvote 1

Steve

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Amen! I'm sure folks here are honest, but I've known so many decent upstanding types who managed their handicap both ways (vanity and sandbagger) that the overwhelming percentage of folks who play and don't post scores are managing their handicaps (consciously or not).

Everyone is always working to improve something. Why does that qualify to not post a round? If you said this to a handicap committee, they would laugh you out of the room.

Can't you play a round that qualifies for handicap by following the rules, in a light, social, fun way with your wife? Why not? Honestly, I don't understand. If you choose to play with 3 clubs, or 8 or 10 or 13 or 14, what does it matter? Why is that not a handicap round? The general shenanigans guys, same thing. I think what your idea of a handicap is, isn't really what it is meant to be, and you have to post all your scores or it's not a real handicap, right? Cause other folks in those situations are posting their scores---

Good for you! You should post it. Everyone is always working on something.

I hear you here. If you are not allowed to play a regulation round, nothing you can do about it. Playing 3 holes in the evening, 3 balls at a time, isn't a round so sure you don't post it.

I'm sure folks here have good intentions, but all these comments about high numbers of practice rounds, reasons not to post a round, (and these are full rounds) are all the reasons used by vanity cappers and sandbaggers to massage handicaps. Again, I'm not accusing anyone of anything, I don't even know you guys, and I know you all mean well, but most every handicap committee would have serious issues with what you are doing, and folks with legit handicaps who post their scores are either going to be licking their chops (vs. vanity handicappers) or refusing to play at posted handicaps (vs. sandbaggers). If you just figure your own handicap with an online app, that's cool, but recognize it isn't being done like a USGA approved handicap would be done, and shouldn't really be compared to one.

Okay, I'm ready. Beat me about the head and shoulders with a 9 iron And if I offended someone, I apologize now, because honestly that was not the point. The point is, with minor minor exceptions, you should post all your scores. If you don't, your real handicap probably isn't what you think it is.


Not offended at all (being offended just means you can't control your emotions), just disagree.  If you're posting on this thread, or you follow this site, you're likely more passionate about golf than the majority of people out there.  And you take the game seriously.  I just think there's a time and place for it (which is most of the time, just not all the time). There's not reason in my mind you have to strictly follow USGA rules every single you step foot on a golf course.  Sometimes it's just about being outside and hanging out with your buddies, not lining up 2 footers.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Everyone is always working to improve something. Why does that qualify to not post a round? If you said this to a handicap committee, they would laugh you out of the room.

My only comment on this is that I don't have access to a range that is not on both turf and flat enough to gauge something like how far I hit different types of wedge shots, or deal with sidehill, downhill, uphill shots (of which my course has a lot, even in the fairway).  For hitting drives, shapes of shots or general working on your swing, I would agree.   If you are doing swing changes or trying to correct something, they wouldn't delay a tournament so you have to go out with what you have.   However, there are some things, at least where I play, that I can only go out on the course and get information on.

And the pro shop where I play advises this as well, so I assume that the handicap committee would be fine with it.   With the caveat that you don't have a one per week "practice round".   Of course, you can also go to a specific spot when it's not busy and work on this as well, and only do that.

—Adam

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Amen! I'm sure folks here are honest, but I've known so many decent upstanding types who managed their handicap both ways (vanity and sandbagger) that the overwhelming percentage of folks who play and don't post scores are managing their handicaps (consciously or not).

Everyone is always working to improve something. Why does that qualify to not post a round? If you said this to a handicap committee, they would laugh you out of the room.

Can't you play a round that qualifies for handicap by following the rules, in a light, social, fun way with your wife? Why not? Honestly, I don't understand. If you choose to play with 3 clubs, or 8 or 10 or 13 or 14, what does it matter? Why is that not a handicap round? The general shenanigans guys, same thing. I think what your idea of a handicap is, isn't really what it is meant to be, and you have to post all your scores or it's not a real handicap, right? Cause other folks in those situations are posting their scores---

Good for you! You should post it. Everyone is always working on something.

I hear you here. If you are not allowed to play a regulation round, nothing you can do about it. Playing 3 holes in the evening, 3 balls at a time, isn't a round so sure you don't post it.

I'm sure folks here have good intentions, but all these comments about high numbers of practice rounds, reasons not to post a round, (and these are full rounds) are all the reasons used by vanity cappers and sandbaggers to massage handicaps. Again, I'm not accusing anyone of anything, I don't even know you guys, and I know you all mean well, but most every handicap committee would have serious issues with what you are doing, and folks with legit handicaps who post their scores are either going to be licking their chops (vs. vanity handicappers) or refusing to play at posted handicaps (vs. sandbaggers). If you just figure your own handicap with an online app, that's cool, but recognize it isn't being done like a USGA approved handicap would be done, and shouldn't really be compared to one.

Okay, I'm ready. Beat me about the head and shoulders with a 9 iron And if I offended someone, I apologize now, because honestly that was not the point. The point is, with minor minor exceptions, you should post all your scores. If you don't, your real handicap probably isn't what you think it is.

Good post.

There's not reason in my mind you have to strictly follow USGA rules every single you step foot on a golf course.

Sometimes it's just about being outside and hanging out with your buddies, not lining up 2 footers.

Sometimes?  It's like that almost every time :beer: ... but again, how does this not marry up with being able to post a score?

If you're playing 2 or 3 balls per hole late in the evening, I get it, it's not a real round and there's nothing you can post, but if you play a round with one ball at a time, it's not really that hard to record and post a score.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

So the general consensus is yes.  I get the idea, but to me that means you take every single round super serious.  I consider myself a serious golfer: I play a lot, I actively work at improving, and I play competitively a handful of times per year . . . but there is no way I take every single time I tee up a ball that seriously.  Sometimes I play with my wife (she would certainly not have as much fun if I treated it as a serious round), at least once a month I play a round with three clubs (even if I'm trying to score, how could that be reflective of the state of my game?); sometimes I play with dudes who play maybe 2x a year and those rounds involve a cooler of beer, music, and general shenanigans, etc.

In my opinion your handicap is meant to reflect your ability as a golfer, and in any of those situations above, I don't see how that would serve any purpose.

I don't see the prohibition that says I can't play a qualifying round when I  play with my wife.  These days I play at least once a week with her, and those scores are just as legitimate as any others.  I play by the rules, but that doesn't make me a pill to play with.  I have fun, kid around, but I still count everything.  Fun golf and rules golf are not incompatible - in fact, for me they are inseparable.

  • Upvote 1

Rick

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

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

I post every round I play. Doesn't matter if it's a competitive round for money, a casual round with my wife, a tournament round, or a round with my "non-golfing" buddies that include beers and music in our cart. There have been years where I posted 100 rounds of golf to my handicap.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Apparently you guys have never been 4 beers deep and made a bet with your leftie buddy on who could shoot lower playing wrong handed with the other guy's clubs for the back 9.

Don't worry, it was the middle of the week and we were the only ones out . . . just want to make sure that's clear before I get roasted for holding other groups up.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Good post.

Sometimes?  It's like that almost every time  ... but again, how does this not marry up with being able to post a score?

If you're playing 2 or 3 balls per hole late in the evening, I get it, it's not a real round and there's nothing you can post, but if you play a round with one ball at a time, it's not really that hard to record and post a score.

I agree.   Mr. Flipper captures a lot of this correctly.   You handicap also captures how you play, so if you play a lot of "casual" or "not serious" golf, then it's going to reflect that.   And if you are working on your driver when you don't normally hit it, then that's what you do, but you post a round that reflects that you did something different than you normally do.

It becomes a problem when it's more than 1-2 times per year, IMO.   I have a charter to work on my wedge game, for example, I need to know the ranges for 4 wedges x 4 different swings with each, so it helps to find a flat hole on the course and then get some stats.   If the range was ever just me, I could pace it off and leave something that marks distances, but I've yet to find that.   But the important point is that I go out and do that once, then take that information to the range and work on it.   And if I find it not working out as I thought when I play, then write it down and analyze it later.   I think in 5 years of being at my club I've probably done this 3 times where a round is un-postable because I take at least a couple of holes and hit a bunch of balls to find something out.

—Adam

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

I don't see the prohibition that says I can't play a qualifying round when I  play with my wife.  These days I play at least once a week with her, and those scores are just as legitimate as any others.  I play by the rules, but that doesn't make me a pill to play with.  I have fun, kid around, but I still count everything.  Fun golf and rules golf are not incompatible - in fact, for me they are inseparable.

I play with my wife and record & submit my score and hers, too .   She is a vanity handicapper and will go easy (?) on her score.   Actually, she doesn't care about her handicap index but I do for entering a team team tournament together.    So ... I secretly count all her strokes and record it as close as she scored.   Still, she will take some gimmies putts which I know she can miss.   Then again, I don't argue with her ways to keep our marriage in wonderful shape. :-)

RiCK

(Play it again, Sam)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

I don't see the prohibition that says I can't play a qualifying round when I  play with my wife.  These days I play at least once a week with her, and those scores are just as legitimate as any others.  I play by the rules, but that doesn't make me a pill to play with.  I have fun, kid around, but I still count everything.  Fun golf and rules golf are not incompatible - in fact, for me they are inseparable.

I post every round I play. Doesn't matter if it's a competitive round for money, a casual round with my wife, a tournament round, or a round with my "non-golfing" buddies that include beers and music in our cart. There have been years where I posted 100 rounds of golf to my handicap.

And an important point, captured with these quotes as well, is that you have to learn to play your game under different conditions.  So any type of round, you need to have a routine, the right mindset and the right way to approach the game so that you are playing your own game and scoring as you want to.

—Adam

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Note: This thread is 3222 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.
  • Posts

    • Did LIV pros cross ‘etiquette’ line at Masters? 3-time major winner has thought Did LIV Golf pros cross an “etiquette” line last month at the Masters? Three-time major winner Padraig Harrington has a thought. I do not mind cursing. I rather see some emotion on the course and honest reactions to bad shots or what not. I didn't catch it being a TON of cursing in this Masters. It was not noticeable. 
    • 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.
×
×
  • 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...