To
Post or Not To Post
Some
of the following information is provided from The USGA’s Handicap Survival
Kit for the Handicap Chairman and The USGA Handicap System to help
you understanding when to post. Instructions for posting both 18 hole scores and
9 hole scores will be located at each course, and is also posted on the web
page.
The USGA Handicap System is
based upon the potential ability of a player rather than the average of
all of his scores. The USGA’s Handicap Research Team tells us that the average
player is expected to play to his Course Handicap or better only about 25
percent of the time, average three strokes higher than his handicap, and have
his best score in 20 be only two strokes better than his handicap.
Here are the basic guidelines. Generally, you should post
all scores no matter where you play. But there are a few specific rules to
follow in particular cases:
- “Post your score when you play at least 13 holes on 18
hole course and 7 holes when playing a 9 hole round. On the holes you didn’t
play, record a par plus any handicap strokes you would have received for that
hole.“
- Post
a nine hole score using the new option on the FGA computer at the course where
you played. The scores will be transferred to your home course if the course
that you are playing at is not your home course. Thus, all of your league
scores that you play each week can now be posted as soon as you
finish.
- “If
a player starts but does not complete a hole or is conceded a stroke, he shall
record for handicap purposes the score he or she most likely would have
made. The most likely score consists of the number of strokes already
taken plus, in his or her best judgment, the number of strokes that the player
would need to complete the hole from the position more than half the time. The
most likely score should be preceded by an “X”. If this score is higher than
your maximum number that you are allowed by ESC system, then you need to adjust
your score to the maximum. “There is no limit to the number of unfinished holes
a player may have in a round provided that failure to finish is not for the
purposes of handicap manipulation.” Examples are available in the handicap
book.
- Example 1. A and B are partners in a four-ball
stroke-play competition. On a hole on which neither player receives a handicap
stroke, a lies two, 18 feet from the hole. B lies two, 25 feet from the hole. B
holes his putt for a three. A picks up his ball because he cannot better B’s
score.
- Example 2: A and B are playing a match. On a
hole on which neither receives a handicap stroke, A has holed out in 4; B has a
30-foot putt for 5. B has lost the hole, and picks up. He records X-6 on the
scorecard because 6 are his mostly score.
-
Example 3: A and B are playing a
match. One a hole on which Player A receives a handicap stroke, A is one foot
from the hole, lying 5. B is 10 feet from the hole, lying 3. B putts and misses.
They both concede a half. Player A records X-6 and Player B records X-5 because
those are the scores they most likely would have made.
- “If
you play a mulligan, you aren’t playing a hole under the Rules of Golf,
so treat it as a hole not played and record par plus any handicap strokes you
would have received.”
- “Sunbelt & Hawaii scores shall always be posted even
if your home club is out of season, since there’s never an off season in those
warm sunny areas.”
- Don’t
record scores played in a scramble or on an 18-hole course that is less than
3000 yards or when on temporary greens where you didn’t play 13 for 18 hole
course for 7 for 9 hole round .
- If
you play in one of the postable tournaments in Fairbanks area. Remember to post
your score with the type being a “T”. Make sure that the tournament coordinator
isn’t posting the scores. Some of the postable tournaments are Flowline
Invitational, FGA’s Senior Tournament, Golden Days Tournament, Interior Pro-Am
Tournament, and all Club Championships. If you forgot to post a score for any of
these last year, you can still enter your score this year but make sure that you
show last year’s date.