Can You Play To Your Handicap?
Posted: Wednesday, March 11, 2009
by D. Morgan
YourGolfGPS
Did you know that the USGA has conspired against you, so you cannot play to your handicap? In fact, if you have a well established handicap you should only be able to shoot to your handicap 25% of the time. For example, if you are a 5 handicap and the course rating is 71.5, you should shoot 77 about a quarter of the time. Believe it or not the average 5 handicap will shoot 80 on his average day, on an average course with a rating of 71 to 72.
Now do you know why you cannot shoot your handicap? But the truth is, it is the same for everyone and really works quite well for honest competitors. If you have a player in your foursome who always shoots his handicap, or seems to have the capacity to smash his handicap when it counts, you need a new fourth. If you have an honest handicap, you should average about three strokes higher on a normal day, so a 20 handicapper on a normal par 72 course (assuming the course rating is somewhere around par) should average about 95 strokes. USGA officials have told me that a handicap should reflect one's potential. And that is a good way to look at the handicap system; if you shoot your handicap you have played to your potential, you have played well. That doesn't mean you cannot improve, bringing your handicap down is a lot of fun and very rewarding.
So next time someone complains that he cannot play to his handicap, just give him a smile and let him know that nobody can. But there is a secret here for your $5 Nassau; learn to manage the course and limit your high scores. If you aim to shoot 1 or 2 strokes over your handicap (with conservative play) you can start to win more than you lose.
This Article has been viewed 116 times. (Not updated in real-time.)
Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)Very informative article,Swapna
We want your comments! If you can read this, you don't have javascript enabled, so you can't use this comment system. Please enable javascript.
