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Posted

I only played once this week so this was my best shot of the week!!!!!..........Par5:  Not a great drive or ideal layup............it's all about the "Money Shot"......the approach, right?

The approach......I was faced with a deep narrow green sitting at a 45 degree angle from my direction of approach:  The green has serious uphill/sidehill slope to a point, and then it slopes steeply back to the back-left corner.   The pin was back-left and I had to carry a 10ft deep bunker to go at the pin.  Flying to the back corner and getting close is tough with the downhill slope in the back!!......87yds to the pin.    The shot....a beautiful 70% trajectory 56% wedge was sent 10ft right of the pin.  It hit the bank in the green and trickled left.......to about 2'................draino.   Shot of the day for sure!!....because the wind was bowling pretty hard!!

What's in Paul's Bag:
- Callaway Big Bertha Alpha Driver
- Big Bertha Alpha 815 3-wood
- Callaway Razr Fit 5-wood
- Callaway Big Bertha 4-5 Rescue Clubs
-- Mizuno Mx-25 six iron-gap wedge
- Mizuno Mp-T4 56degree SW
- Mizuno Mp-T11 60degree SW
- Putter- Ping Cadence Ketsch


  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Saturday - Hole 10 (short par 5 where I sliced my drive off to the adjacent fairway to a perfect lie)

Great Lie - 237 from the pin.  Mounds in front of me and a tree just barely blocking the right half of the green.  Green side bunkers center and right in front (and deeeeeeeeeep).  "go for it" shot is a big high fade.

Guys in the fairway stopping to watch me shoot - great,,,, just great.

2H - fade swing.  Barely pulled it left a little but fading nicely.  NICE contact and sound and feel.  Ball flied right at the left edge and fading.  Carried just short and rolled on and over to the back apron.  Best shot of the round.

Unfortunately, the green is very sloped back to the fairway and I have an eagle putt through the apron and then severe roll down past the cup.  I make the 10 footer back up the hill to save the bird - mostly luck on that putt but I'll take it. 

Bill - 

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

In an otherwise undistinguished round last Friday, I did manage to plop a wedge to 4-5 feet on the par 5 10th and rolled in the birdie putt.  Right now turf conditions are not particularly golf friendly with soggy to saturated fairways and spongy, slow, bumpy greens.  But we don't care, we are playing winter golf!

Brian Kuehn

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Had several really nice pitch and chip shots yesterday but probably the best one was a chip shop that was in a lie about 10 feet off the green and another 25 feet to go to the pin. I chipped it using my 7 iron in attempt to get par on this par 5 hole. I thought the ball was going in but it looped around the rim of the hole to the right and came to rest 1 foot away from the pin to give me a par on this tough par 5 hole.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

We have two holes on the front, 2 and 6, that are basically my undoing. Not uncommon I double one or both and it's usually the difference in whether I break 80 or not. It's got to be a head thing because the miss on these holes comes out of nowhere typically hit a low hook that finds the hazard on 2 and OB on 6.

It's silly as chit because both holes have adequate room to fly it out right and stay away from the left. But my miss is more left than right with anything longer than an iron so I built a driving iron to keep it in play on trouble holes. Saturday I hit a nice high draw 237 that left my a knock down 9i from the green on 2. Sadly my rib issued flared and I couldn't continue after the 5th but if I can hit shots like that often my scoring troubles will be minimized.

Dave :-)

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted
4 hours ago, 9wood said:

Had several really nice pitch and chip shots yesterday but probably the best one was a chip shop that was in a lie about 10 feet off the green and another 25 feet to go to the pin. I chipped it using my 7 iron in attempt to get birdie on this par 5 hole. I thought the ball was going in but it looped around the rim of the hole to the right and came to rest 1 foot away from the pin to give me a par on this tough par 5 hole.

Made a correction

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Got out to a soggy track today and I was replaying a few holes after the initial 18. I hooked my drive on the 16th to the left rough. I was left with 92 yards from the hole with some slight wind from left to right. I took my 55 degree wedge and knocked at 15" for my birdie tap in.

"My ball is on top of a rock in the hazard, do I get some sort of relief?"

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

I played the back 9 at Falls Road GC yesterday.   On #17, a 345 yard par 4, I hit a mediocre drive, leaving me 148 yards to a back pin.  I hit a 7 iron that left me with a tap in birdie putt.  

IMG_7344.JPG

10.5 deg Ping G30, Callaway X2 Hot Pro 3W, Taylor Made Rescue 3H, Ping G30 irons
Cleveland TA 900 SW, Mizuno T-Zoid LW, Odyssey DF Rossie I

http://golfshot.com/members/0622056080

 

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Technically not this week anymore, but...my first swing on an actual golf course in nearly 6 months was a perfect drive, right side of the fairway, 245 yards or so.  That felt damn good.

- John

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

One really good as well as memorable shot for me was a shot where my ball was lying 15 yds off the green to the right and pin high. I took my 56 degree wedge and pitched up onto the green and the ball rested 18 inches from the cup.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Had my first eagle! Last Thursday on a straight par 4 after my drive I'm 130 out just didn't catch a medium sized hill that leads down to the green. Can only see about half the flag stick I hit my 9 iron I can tell its at it and I see it bounce but on the walk up I cant see it on or around the green I was thinking I went long and as I was walking past the hole took a peak down at the hole as I walked by for shits and gigs then proceeded to lose my mind a bit seeing my ball at the bottom of it.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Best shot this week was my first successful attempt at shaping a shot. Fairly short par 4 only 310 but a large pond in front that its about 280 to carry. I play my 5 iron off the tee and push it right into the tree line dividing an adjacent hole. Pin is left center of the green and where I'm at the only gap I have is if I hit a straight shot and I could maybe catch the right edge of the green. I'm 130ish out and decide to try to hit a draw (I'm still learning to hit it straight so this is a stretch) I pull out my 9, turn my club face in a bit try hard to really turn my hands over on the follow through it was beautiful nice high trajectory wasn't until it made it to the water that it started to turn and it turned hard came down center of the green and rolled past the hole to within 8 feet. Of course left the birdie putt short and tapped in for par but nice to know that shot is a possible.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Hit the green in two on the par 5 11th hole on back to back days. A 4 iron to 15ft for an easy two putt birdie and a 3h to 3ft for an eagle on the second day.

:callaway: Big Bertha Alpha 815 DBD  :bridgestone: TD-03 Putter   
:tmade: 300 Tour 3W                 :true_linkswear: Motion Shoes
:titleist: 585H Hybrid                       
:tmade: TP MC irons                 
:ping: Glide 54             
:ping: Glide 58
:cleveland: 588 RTX 62

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Saturday it was pretty nice: 37 degrees (f), 5-10 mph breeze and the occasional glimpse of the sun.  Played the neighboring town's muni.  6th hole is over water to a small green.  Hit 5 iron into the breeze and ended up about 12 feet from the front hole position, one inch off the green and on to the fringe.  "Chipped in" with my putter for birdie, leaving the flag stick in.  Of course, the ball would have dropped with or without the flag stick but I am going to play the odds from this point forward.

Brian Kuehn

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Had an eagle today on a par five today.
An up hill shot with the pin in the middle swale, unfortunately couldn't see it go in. 

Johnny Rocket - Let's Rock and Roll and play some golf !!!

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Rattled the pin from 90 yards yesterday. It jumped back 15ft but I still made the putt for birdie. :-)

:callaway: Big Bertha Alpha 815 DBD  :bridgestone: TD-03 Putter   
:tmade: 300 Tour 3W                 :true_linkswear: Motion Shoes
:titleist: 585H Hybrid                       
:tmade: TP MC irons                 
:ping: Glide 54             
:ping: Glide 58
:cleveland: 588 RTX 62

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Moderator
Posted

I chipped in for a par from about 20 yards last Sunday. I, of course, left the pin in! :-)

Scott

Titleist, Edel, Scotty Cameron Putter, Snell - AimPoint - Evolvr - MirrorVision

My Swing Thread

boogielicious - Adjective describing the perfect surf wave

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

From last week.  Hadn't been playing very through the first 5 holes, I couldn't a 9 on a par 5. Par 3, with the pin tucked on the front of the green.  Uphill, about 160 yards with a good wind at my back.  Hit a 9 iron absolutely perfect.  As soon as I hit, I said, "that's gonna be tight!"  Being uphill, I could see the bottom of the flagstick, but sure enough it was real tight.  Judging by the pitch mark, it had to have rolled just over the edge of the hole.  

image.jpeg

In my bag:

DRIVER: 905T w/ Fujikura E360 Shaft
3 Wood 906 F4 w/ Aldila Proto "By You"
Irons: MP 30 w/ Rifle 5.5 Wedges Oil Can 50*, Vokey SM 54* and 58*Putter: C-06


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  • Posts

    • In the 1970s and 1980s, Dean Knuth, who became known as the "Pope of Slope," created the handicap system as well as the course rating system. He consulted with the USGA through 2002, but hasn't really had a hand in the handicapping since then, and was not involved in the WHS. Suffice to say, he does not like the WHS, and he wrote an article expressing why:  https://www.popeofslope.com/world-handicap-system.html. The problem? His article… well, it's bad. Here is a brief (for me!) exploration of that article. Part 1 includes the bulk of his point, right up until the section labeled "The Par Pitfall," here: The handicapping system has seen almost no changes in the U.S. It's the rest of the world where they've seen the biggest changes. In the U.S., ESC was replaced by NDB, we have soft and hard caps, and we use 8/20 instead of 10/20 at 96%. Those are the only real changes. Dean will spend most of the rest of the time talking about par, but — and this cannot be stressed enough — the par is irrelevant. Its role in determining your playing or course handicap does three things only: It makes the score you have to shoot to "play to your handicap" make a lot more sense. It "bakes in" the changes players should have made but rarely did when playing from different tees. Through NDB, it defines the holes on which you can take a triple (or which you can take a gross bogey if you're on the + side of scratch). The calculation of your differential at the end is completely unaffected and does not involve par. Dean will spend a good amount of the time in this article talking about how par is "less precise" than the rating and slope, but he seems to miss the two points here: Par is an integer. If it helps him to think of it as 72.000000 or something, by all means, Dean… Par is used only to adjust another whole number: the strokes a player gets on the course. We don't give 10.4 strokes — a 10.4 index player might get 13, 10, 8, or whatever number of whole-number strokes.   The problem with this type of statement is that the "par handicap" could be "7" or "13" or "88" and except for affecting NDB, players competing against each other would have the same difference (except they'd still need to adjust for playing from different tees). Let's say a 10.4 and a 14.7 are playing a 71.5/127 course. Par is 72. (10.4 * 127/113) + 71.5 - 72 = 11.2 -> 11 strokes (14.7 * 127/113) + 71.5 - 72 = 16.0 -> 16 strokes -> this player gets 5 strokes Instead of 72, plug in 23 because it's your favorite number: (10.4 * 127/113) + 71.5 - 23 = 60.2 -> 60 strokes (14.7 * 127/113) + 71.5 - 23 = 65.0 -> 65 strokes -> this player gets 5 strokes They still get the strokes they deserve (5), but we've lost the meaning as players now get 60 strokes off a 10 handicap. Remove the course rating and… you're back at the same problem as we've had where players weren't doing the calculation properly, and we lose the first benefit of "playing to your handicap". An example of that, with a 12.3 index player playing on a 68.7/123 rated par 72 course. Properly: (12.3 * 123/113) + 68.7 - 72 = 10.1 -> 10 strokes Improperly: 12.3 * 123/113 = 13.4 -> 13 strokes If the player plays a "net even par" round of golf, he'll shoot 82 and 85. Here's why this makes sense: WHS: (82 - 68.7) * 113 / 123 = 12.2 differential Prior: (85 - 68.7) * 113 / 123 = 14.97 -> 15.0 differential The player "played to his handicap" with a net even par round in shooting the 82, which aligns with getting ten strokes, not 13. This makes way more sense and is in fact an improvement over the prior system for two of the three reasons listed above: It more closely aligns the index and the score you have to shoot to "shoot your handicap" It bakes in players playing from different tees.   Par is not a factor in determining the differential in the WHS system, only the playing handicap. The only way it affects the differential is that it can award a triple bogey on a few more holes (or a gross bogey max to a few + handicappers playing shorter tees) in determining NDB. You can completely ignore the WHS system of calculating your playing handicap and your differentials — the calculation of which does not use par - is going to be almost exactly the same (again, differing only when you tripled a hole on which you wouldn't have gotten NDB but now do because you didn't do the subtraction part of the WHS course/playing handicap calculation). Or maybe it was because of the other three reasons listed above. Which were the reasons given to me back in 2017 and 2018 when I talked with some of the people responsible for helping to create the WHS. If the ease of adoption by other countries and regions, then that's a fourth reason. But, I didn't really hear much about it prior to the WHS being instituted. A similar step was also required when players played from different tees, yet this was frequently forgotten. Players used to playing the blue tees would move up to the whites and expect to keep their 13 strokes, and be dismayed and sometimes even angered and argumentative that they would only get 10. This literally makes no sense. There's no more or less rounding than in previous versions. The output of "HI * Slope/113" typically produced a decimal number, the output of "HI * Slope/113 + CR - Par" also produces a decimal number, and the output of "Score * 113/Slope" (which is unchanged) also produces a decimal number. Each are rounded just as they were before. No, Dean is way off base here. Even if you accept that "par is an approximation" (of course difficulty), it's not used as he suggests. A player playing a par-72 that's rated 75 will get more COURSE handicap strokes than a player playing a par-72 that's rated 67, but that makes sense. At the end of the round, their score is processed using the same old formula to get their differential as always. This is about where I start to wonder and worry about Dean's mental faculties at his nearly 80 years of age. It hasn't "gone away" - it's been built-in as he says, and I think it's fairly obvious that this is true. No it is not. It is what I've said above, which is what the USGA and R&A have said it is. I agree that the course rating is the "most accurate measure of the relative difficulty for the scratch golfer" (I mean, it's almost exactly the defeinition), and slope determines the relative difficulty between two levels of player. So, which of these formulas incorporates BOTH the CR and the Slope in determining a player's course handicap: a. (HI * Slope/113) + CR - Par b. (HI * Slope/113) Clearly A incorporates "the most accurate measure of the relative difficulty" (as well as the measure of the relative difficulty). Dean's favored formula did NOT include "the most accurate measure of the relative difficulty for the scratch golfer". A scratch golfer under Dean's preferred method could shoot an even par round of 72 and see a differential that ranged from +2.7 (75.4/140) to 5.5 (66.3/118) or something. Under the WHS, if they shoot net par, they're going to end up with about a 0.0 differential. No. Again, you could subtract any integer from the Course Rating (which again the WHS ADDS to the calculation in course/playing handicap that the older system did not) and get the same relative course handicaps for all players. Using par just helps it make the most sense to actual golfers. It's an integer… as are the scores we shoot and the pars of the holes we play. The addition of the "CR - Par" has almost no effect on a player's differential. Again, the only affect it would have is when NDB is applied, because there may be a few holes where they'd get a stroke that they do not. And even then, it requires the player to card a triple on that specific hole, and be among their 8 out of 20 counting scores, AND even then if it happens once a round in ALL of the eight rounds, it's about 1 stroke on their index (probably a bit less given that most slopes are > 113). This has nothing to do with "jumping in" and everything to do with the foundational reasons for adding (CR - Par). Dean sees it as "adding par" when he would more accurately see it as adding the Course Rating! Small point of order: this was not shown to be accurate. The 96% applied to all 10 scores almost perfectly offset the dropping of two middle scores. Some players indexes went up a little. Some went down a little. The net change was almost exactly 0. Yes, that's how math works. The change makes MORE sense, again, as a player shooting net par under the WHS has basically "shot their handicap". Shoot below net par and your handicap will likely go down. Shoot above it and it may go up a little (less chance of this than shooting under lowering it, though, of course). So? Half of the players who play a 72.5/72-par course will see their Course Handicap one higher than they had before the system and half will not! Also and again, players who play a course rated 68.7 par-72 will all see their course handicaps drop several strokes. That's just math, and the boundaries of rounding. Dean chose a 0.5 marker, but the same math is true at any level, because the HI already has a decimal, and the Slope/113 multiplier also tends to produce decimals. So, someone who previously had a 10.5 to 10.9 index will still be an 11, while the 10.0s to 10.4s will go up to 11s. But on another course where the decimals work out to 0.3 and 0.2… the same math applies. And on a course where the decimals work out to 0.8… players half of the players will get an "extra" stroke and half will not. This is just rounding. It's always been a part of the WHS. The point at which rounding occurs might move slightly (depending on the course and index in question) for half of the situations, but if you have a 10.0 and an 11.5… or a 10.5 and an 12.0… half of the time the higher handicapper will get the "extra" stroke, and half the time the lower handicapper will get the "extra" stroke. This is just how rounding works. Handicaps in match play are almost entirely unaffected. A 13 playing a 10 might now be a 10 playing a 7, but the difference is still the same size. You're subtracting out a constant (CR - Par) from both players. The (HI * Slope/113) remains the same. This makes no sense and Dean has absolutely failed to provide any basis for this "less accurate" while ignoring that the WHS ADDS the CR to the course handicap calculation. It is easier. Shoot net par and you've "played to your handicap." Yes, and what they say is both accurate and makes sense. The WHS method bakes in the "playing from different tees" and makes it easier to know what it takes to "play to your handicap." Those are my notes right up until "The Par Pitfall." Dean has yet to make a valid point in any of this blog post thus far. When I have the time, and feel like procrastinating a bit more like today, I'll continue with my response to this blog post. I respect what Dean did in creating the original handicap system and the course ratinga system. The course rating system is one of the most elegant solutions to a very complex problem that I have ever seen. Nothing done by the WHS changes that. The course rating system is relatively unchanged, and its application in the WHS is, again, MORE accurate by the inclusion of the Course Rating than the previous system, in addition to the other benefits. Dean deserves (and has been given) much credit for that. But, if this is how he thinks these days, Dean can remain Pope Emeritus but the Cardinals need to elect a new Pope.
    • Wordle 1,810 4/6* ⬛⬛⬛⬛🟦 ⬛🟦⬛⬛⬛ ⬛🟧⬛🟦🟧 🟧🟧🟧🟧🟧
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