Jump to content
IGNORED

World Handicap System Now Out (2020)


iacas

Recommended Posts

Hi everyone, I’ve been reading through this forum for a while but have just registered as I wanted to get your take on the new WHS.

i'm in Germany, and here regardless of gender everyone starts with handicap -54 and there are basically two ways to improve that handicap. Play in competitions or post an EDS (every day score) round either with a friend or a pro. Either way someone else has to count your strokes and sign your card. Therefore as this new WHS system seems to be closer to the US system than the one I currently know and most of you guys seem to be in the US i thought I’d ask....

if a handicap is based on the average of the last 10 out of 20 rounds, you can't directly improve (or worsen) after a tournament? Or how often is it updated? Are you then obliged to post every round you play? I haven’t been playing for that long, but joined a club last year and started to play at least twice a week, but see that as practice. So if I played and practiced on the DR for say 3 weeks and played in a competition, won it (in the net category) and improved my HC I see that as a reward for the hard work I put in. If someone does the same under this system, ie plays loads but never posts a private round are they seen as a sandbagger?

woulde be really interested to hear your perspective. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Under the current USGA rules we are required to post all rounds except practice rounds and rounds played alone. If you don't you are breaking the rules and your handicap is not legitimate.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • 2 weeks later...
On 4-3-2018 at 10:22 PM, Lissy said:

Hi everyone, I’ve been reading through this forum for a while but have just registered as I wanted to get your take on the new WHS.

i'm in Germany, and here regardless of gender everyone starts with handicap -54 and there are basically two ways to improve that handicap. Play in competitions or post an EDS (every day score) round either with a friend or a pro. Either way someone else has to count your strokes and sign your card. Therefore as this new WHS system seems to be closer to the US system than the one I currently know and most of you guys seem to be in the US i thought I’d ask....

if a handicap is based on the average of the last 10 out of 20 rounds, you can't directly improve (or worsen) after a tournament? Or how often is it updated? Are you then obliged to post every round you play? I haven’t been playing for that long, but joined a club last year and started to play at least twice a week, but see that as practice. So if I played and practiced on the DR for say 3 weeks and played in a competition, won it (in the net category) and improved my HC I see that as a reward for the hard work I put in. If someone does the same under this system, ie plays loads but never posts a private round are they seen as a sandbagger?

woulde be really interested to hear your perspective. 

Your handicap should be how good you are now, not how good you were 3 months ago. If you practice a lot, play a lot of practice rounds and got better but did not turn in your scores, in my book you are a sandbagger. A couple of practice rounds to work out a change, or to play some extra balls to practice on chipping or so is ok. But you are talking about loads of rounds, not turning in scores.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

I was hoping they would allow rounds played alone to be counted, but oh well.

I like the new (to Europe) system with using a rolling average, rather than today's version, which can make your handicap fluctuate wildly, Typically for higher handicappers they get one good round and plummets, only to struggle playing to their handicap for the next months while it slowly creeps back up.

I also like that it's moved to a net stroke focus, rather than Stableford. Of course, with the max double bogey rule, I don't know how big of a difference it actually makes. I've always liked counting strokes when playing golf, not points. The downside was of course that without a max double bogey rule, those 14 shot holes ruined the entire round.

Ogio Grom | Callaway X Hot Pro | Callaway X-Utility 3i | Mizuno MX-700 23º | Titleist Vokey SM 52.08, 58.12 | Mizuno MX-700 15º | Titleist 910 D2 9,5º | Scotty Cameron Newport 2 | Titleist Pro V1x and Taylormade Penta | Leupold GX-1

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Hey MacDutch, i get your point, and yes for many that’s true. As I play at least 1 tournament a month in the summer, sometimes 2/3 depending on the timing I wouldn’t put myself in that category. I was talking about weeks rather than months. Either way the current system we have doesn’t really allow anything different. Posting scores in a private round is seen as not quite legit, plus the fact that it costs extra and has to be registered at least a day in advance makes it impractical too.

As much as anything I could see the interest in tournaments dropping as the incentive for many would disappear. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Anyone know if the "Bonus for Excellence" is expected to remain and if it will stay at .96?

With the planned move to the best 8 of the most recent 20 differentials, we are going to beat our handicap less than 1 in 5 rounds.

Brian Kuehn

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Administrator
5 minutes ago, bkuehn1952 said:

Anyone know if the "Bonus for Excellence" is expected to remain and if it will stay at .96?

With the planned move to the best 8 of the most recent 20 differentials, we are going to beat our handicap less than 1 in 5 rounds.

I'm not sure about the multiplier.

Right now (with the multiplier) we beat our handicap index (via the differential) about 1 in 5 rounds. It should be 1 in 4, but the multiplier makes it a little bit more difficult.

At 8 out of 20, without a multiplier, I expect it may be about the same. (4 out of 20 rounds should beat the index, and that's 1 out of 5.)

That makes me think that the 8 out 10 replaces the 0.96 multiplier.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

On March 19, 2018 at 12:23 AM, Lissy said:

Hey MacDutch, i get your point, and yes for many that’s true. As I play at least 1 tournament a month in the summer, sometimes 2/3 depending on the timing I wouldn’t put myself in that category. I was talking about weeks rather than months. Either way the current system we have doesn’t really allow anything different. Posting scores in a private round is seen as not quite legit, plus the fact that it costs extra and has to be registered at least a day in advance makes it impractical too.

As much as anything I could see the interest in tournaments dropping as the incentive for many would disappear. 

I'm not sure if competitions will become less attractive under the new system. As Zeph mentions, amateurs in Europe often play a really good round once and then really struggle to play to it subsequently. This can lead to players avoiding competitions in order to hang on to that better handicap. I think competitions will be liked and disliked for the sames reasons as before: cameraderie, the chance to measure yourself with others (often with players you wouldn't normally play with) and the competitive challenge for those who like and enjoy them, the added stress level and pressure for those who don't.

I certainly hope that competitions don't lose appeal, as they are a major element of what makes golf a club or community sport. Getting and maintaining a handicap with private rounds could potentially make golf more individual/insular.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


On 3/18/2018 at 12:58 PM, Zeph said:

I was hoping they would allow rounds played alone to be counted, but oh well.

Me too. I play alone probably 75% of the time. Mostly due to choice as I rather go on a Tuesday when I can get around in 2 hours without seeing another person instead of a foursome that takes 4 hours (and waiting on every shot). 

I have been consistently improving over the last couple years and I make a point to play more rounds that I can post but dread everyone's infatuation with Friday or weekend rounds.... Rather be with my family then.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Moderator
On 3/18/2018 at 12:58 PM, Zeph said:

I was hoping they would allow rounds played alone to be counted, but oh well.

 

47 minutes ago, upndown21 said:

Me too. I play alone probably 75% of the time. Mostly due to choice as I rather go on a Tuesday when I can get around in 2 hours without seeing another person instead of a foursome that takes 4 hours (and waiting on every shot). 

I know that @Zeph is unlikely to have paid a ton of attention, being in Europe, but there was a lot of discussion when the USGA decided not to allow posting of solo rounds.  I believe that decision makes a lot of sense.  Handicaps, under any system, are intended to allow players of differing abilities to compete against one another on a fair basis.  Competing means playing with others.  Posting rounds played alone may skew your handicap.  Other systems around the world, with a lower significance of non-competition rounds, may have it closer to right.  It will be interesting to see the final decisions on which rounds are posted, whether non-comp rounds require prior registration to post, what happens to various team and match play results, etc.

  • Like 1

Dave

:callaway: Rogue SubZero Driver

:titleist: 915F 15 Fairway, 816 H1 19 Hybrid, AP2 4 iron to PW, Vokey 52, 56, and 60 wedges, ProV1 balls 
:ping: G5i putter, B60 version
 :ping:Hoofer Bag, complete with Newport Cup logo
:footjoy::true_linkswear:, and Ashworth shoes

the only thing wrong with this car is the nut behind the wheel.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

2 hours ago, DaveP043 said:

 

I know that @Zeph is unlikely to have paid a ton of attention, being in Europe, but there was a lot of discussion when the USGA decided not to allow posting of solo rounds.  I believe that decision makes a lot of sense.  Handicaps, under any system, are intended to allow players of differing abilities to compete against one another on a fair basis.  Competing means playing with others.  Posting rounds played alone may skew your handicap.  Other systems around the world, with a lower significance of non-competition rounds, may have it closer to right.  It will be interesting to see the final decisions on which rounds are posted, whether non-comp rounds require prior registration to post, what happens to various team and match play results, etc.

It just puts me in an awkward spot as I trend down. Unless it is a close friend I tend to stay out of the big money games for this reason. Showing a 10 and shooting a 5 differential gets bad looks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Moderator
29 minutes ago, upndown21 said:

It just puts me in an awkward spot as I trend down. Unless it is a close friend I tend to stay out of the big money games for this reason. Showing a 10 and shooting a 5 differential gets bad looks.

I'm a little confused.  You're saying you play better when you play with other people?  That your handicap is high because you post your (higher) solo rounds?  

Dave

:callaway: Rogue SubZero Driver

:titleist: 915F 15 Fairway, 816 H1 19 Hybrid, AP2 4 iron to PW, Vokey 52, 56, and 60 wedges, ProV1 balls 
:ping: G5i putter, B60 version
 :ping:Hoofer Bag, complete with Newport Cup logo
:footjoy::true_linkswear:, and Ashworth shoes

the only thing wrong with this car is the nut behind the wheel.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

8 hours ago, DaveP043 said:

I'm a little confused.  You're saying you play better when you play with other people?  That your handicap is high because you post your (higher) solo rounds?  

Not posting solo rounds (75% of rounds) while actively working with an instructor and getting better leaves my handicap skewed higher. My ghin is a 10.1 but tracking all my scores I am a  8.7.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Moderator
9 hours ago, upndown21 said:

Not posting solo rounds (75% of rounds) while actively working with an instructor and getting better leaves my handicap skewed higher. My ghin is a 10.1 but tracking all my scores I am a  8.7.

That's life within our system, go out and compete if you want to.  And if you manage to post something around a 5 differential, you deserve to win a few bucks.  Of course, taking you at your word, you'll only shoot a differential of 9 about one time in five.  To go 4 strokes lower is getting into the 10% or less probability range.

Dave

:callaway: Rogue SubZero Driver

:titleist: 915F 15 Fairway, 816 H1 19 Hybrid, AP2 4 iron to PW, Vokey 52, 56, and 60 wedges, ProV1 balls 
:ping: G5i putter, B60 version
 :ping:Hoofer Bag, complete with Newport Cup logo
:footjoy::true_linkswear:, and Ashworth shoes

the only thing wrong with this car is the nut behind the wheel.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • 2 weeks later...

LOL a bit late ....

I liked the old EGA system, but there were many abusing it and keep their index around 18 or so, to win tournaments and enter 10-20 bad scores of casual rounds to stay in that 18 comfort zone, being able to shoot a 12-14 cap on a good day. Sandbaggers or in Dutch "Duikboot" (= submarine)

Cal Razr Hawk 10.5 | TM Superfast 3W | Adams Idea Pro Black 20 | MP-68 3-PW | TW9 50/06 + 58/12 | Ram Zebra Putter

Link to comment
Share on other sites


We have competitions every day of the week at my club with prizes eg 5 balls for a win, 1 ball for top 10%. This means everyone plays honest golf and the handicaps are quite accurate. We also bet with each other which also produces some degree of true effort . Our system takes best 8 from 20 (based on the slope) and also has a .93 multiplier (i think that's right).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

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

    • Day 119: 4/24/24 Chipping and pitching followed by putting through 50 mm gates.
    • @boogielicious and I are definitely in for the Stay & Play and will need the extra night's stay on Friday. I don't know what the plans are for our group on Friday but even if we don't make it for dinner with the rest of the Friday arrivals, I'll be more than happy to meet up somewhere for a beer or something.
    • Taking your dispersion and distance in consideration I analyzed the 4 posible ways to play the hole, or at least the ones that were listed here. I took the brown grass on the left as fescue were you need to punch out sideways to the fairway and rigth of the car path to be fescue too.  Driver "going for the green"  You have to aim more rigth, to the bunker in order to center your shotzone in between the fescue.  Wood of 240 over the bunkers I already like this one more for you. More room to land between the fescue. Balls in the fescue 11% down from 30% with driver. Improve of score from 4.55 to 4.40. 4 iron 210 yards besides the bunkers.    Also a wide area and your shot zone is better than previous ones. This makes almost the fescue dissapear. You really need to hit a bad one (sometimes shit happens). Because of that and only having 120 yards in this is the best choice so far. Down to 4.32 from 4.40. Finally the 6 Iron 180 yards to avoid all trouble.    Wide area an narrow dispersion for almost been in the fairway all the time. Similar than the previous one but 25 yards farther for the hole to avoid been in the bunkers. Average remains the same, 4.33 to 4.32.  Conclusion is easy. Either your 4iron or 6 iron of the tee are equaly good for you. Glad that you made par!
    • Wish I could have spent 5 minutes in the middle of the morning round to hit some balls at the range. Just did much more of right side through with keeping the shoulders feeling level (not dipping), and I was flushing them. Lol. Maybe too much focus on hands stuff while playing.
    • Last year I made an excel that can easily measure with my own SG data the average score for each club of the tee. Even the difference in score if you aim more left or right with the same club. I like it because it can be tweaked to account for different kind of rough, trees, hazards, greens etc.     As an example, On Par 5's that you have fescue on both sides were you can count them as a water hazard (penalty or punch out sideways), unless 3 wood or hybrid lands in a wider area between the fescue you should always hit driver. With a shorter club you are going to hit a couple less balls in the fescue than driver but you are not going to offset the fact that 100% of the shots are going to be played 30 or more yards longer. Here is a 560 par 5. Driver distance 280 yards total, 3 wood 250, hybrid 220. Distance between fescue is 30 yards (pretty tight). Dispersion for Driver is 62 yards. 56 for 3 wood and 49 for hybrid. Aiming of course at the middle of the fairway (20 yards wide) with driver you are going to hit 34% of balls on the fescue (17% left/17% right). 48% to the fairway and the rest to the rough.  The average score is going to be around 5.14. Looking at the result with 3 wood and hybrid you are going to hit less balls in the fescue but because of having longer 2nd shots you are going to score slightly worst. 5.17 and 5.25 respectively.    Things changes when the fescue is taller and you are probably going to loose the ball so changing the penalty of hitting there playing a 3 wood or hybrid gives a better score in the hole.  Off course 30 yards between penalty hazards is way to small. You normally have 60 or more, in that cases the score is going to be more close to 5 and been the Driver the weapon of choice.  The point is to see that no matter how tight the hole is, depending on the hole sometimes Driver is the play and sometimes 6 irons is the play. Is easy to see that on easy holes, but holes like this:  you need to crunch the numbers to find the best strategy.     
×
×
  • 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...