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#121
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Quote:
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And yes, it is in the rule book as +4 over par. This is why accurate par for a course is important. |
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#122
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While Eric's interpretation is correct, it still seems sloppy to me, that feeling has nothing to do with the rules as they are laid out.
The notion that a player is going to time his/her start in a tournament to take advantage of this is wacked IMO. Think about all the things that could go wrong. You're also working on the assumption that a player has simply conceded the 8 strokes, most of the players I know would never concede this. You're also talking rec players, simply based on either 7 or 8 for the most part. While technically, the point has merit, the incidence would be very low (non-existent IMO). As for the argument that every player plays every hole, well, clearly in this situation they don't and that results in an unfair situation, relatively speaking. I posted this on the PDGA site and I like VeganRay's reply. "Showing up late should be a DQ." That solves the problem nicely. Nonetheless, as a point of discussion, the rule as it stands is unfair, but then we've moved away from the original point. The two courses, while reasonably hard for the local fair, do not compare well to the top courses in Texas or the country. Ask someone what they think is good and tough and you get Waco, Austin courses, Dallas, but never, Tom Bass. Since the original discussion was how do we make the situation out at Tom Bass better, I still argue that long and difficult is not enough, courses that challenge all aspects of your game, with multiple tees are going to be played more and get more attention. BTW - at this point, I think good arguments can be made that Spring Valley is in many ways better than these courses. What I hear about Winwood without seeing it suggests it is as good if not better. These courses aren't better because they are longer, but because they are more technical. |
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#123
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BTW - in order for the take advantage of the par in missing holes strategy, the player has to show up, see his hole placement, disappear till after tee off, get back to time the next hole, all without looking incredibly guilty. "No really, I couldn't get the portajohn door open..."
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#124
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HEY!!!!
That was going to be MY excuse! LMAO
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#125
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Sure I'm all for making Bass a more technical course if you have the means to do so. TS vs. Everyday configs: Obviously I've got a short history here, but Wilmont plays virtually the same both ways. And Powell only changes to add new holes because the temp "Tourney" course steals some of them. SSA: Based on four rounds played in last year's Southwest Handicap Mini the standard config of Powell is SSA ~= 52.3. Is this the tool you're looking for to check out SSAs? http://www.pdga.com/course-ratings-by-course It can either get you in the ballpark of what you're looking for or confuse you greatly as there's no significant detail about the layout actually used in play. E.g. see Tom Bass. Are you suggesting that the PDGA provide/assign SSA values to courses above and beyond sanctioned events? |
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#126
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__________________
"The law of the mind is no respecter of persons. the law indicates that what you think, you create; what you feel, you attract; and what you imagine, you become" Dr. Joseph Murphy |
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#127
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I guess you could try to debate whether alphabetical is random, based on different players showing up, but that doesn't hold much water. A true random assignment would (most probably) have the exact same set of players starting on different holes each time. |
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#128
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Lyle, 7 Strokes per hole is easily justified as unfair.
Assume Avery is intended to start on hole #3: easy par 3, 255' hole on which the MPO scoring average is 2.3. Assume Nikko is intended to start on hole #14: a tough par 5, 800' hole on which the MPO scoring average is 4.6. Both players manage to lock themselves in portajohns and can't free themselves until 30+ seconds after their respective tee times. In your scenario of "everyone gets a 7", Nikko is punished 2.4 stokes vs. the field, but Avery is punished 4.7 strokes vs. the field. In the PDGA scenario of "everyone gets par + 4", Nikko is punished 4.4. strokes vs. the field, and Avery is punished 4.7 strokes vs. the field. A much more even penalty for the same offense. |
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#129
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what is the par during tournaments? Thought you guys put at 3?
I shot a heck a lot better out there on Sunday after all! Never shot even until now. Quote:
__________________
"The law of the mind is no respecter of persons. the law indicates that what you think, you create; what you feel, you attract; and what you imagine, you become" Dr. Joseph Murphy |
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#130
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Which tournament?
Birdshot likes to use par 3 for everything. TxSDGC has used real par values for the three years that I've been involved. |
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