fbpx
golf scorecard rules

Just when you think you’ve got your head around all the World Handicap System calculations…

Competitions have arrived and so has a new term on the lips of golfers. Getting the hang of WHS is taking a bit of time, writes Steve Carroll
 

“Why have I lost a shot?” Oh to be a fly on the wall at golf clubs as that cry rang loud at the weekend.

Many of us picked up our pencils in anger for the first time under the World Handicap System and, if what I saw is any guide, there’s been a bit of head scratching.

We’d finally begun to come to terms with Course Handicaps – no one’s spending five minutes running their thumb like a ruler down the chart anymore – and then the start of the competitive season brought with it a whole new thing: Playing Handicap.

I’m sure some of us had vague recollections of it from the hastily arranged online Zoom session, or emails flying around in lockdown. Even so, it still struck me in a way I hadn’t previously considered.

Parring the 6th at my home club, a 175-yard par 3 over water, is a challenging enough feat. Aside from a brief smirk of satisfaction as the putt dropped in regulation, an odd thought then occurred.

Forever more, I’ll be carrying two numbers in my head.

I’m a scorecard watcher (I know, I know) because it pleases me to always be aware of where I am at any given point of a round.

That was easy under CONGU. I was however many over or under my mark. But the Playing Handicap has changed that.

So on this particular hole, I received a stroke under the Course Handicap only to lose it on the leaderboard when the Playing Handicap was applied.

Confused?

Even though a Course Handicap determines the number of strokes we get on any golf course, there’s this little thing called equity that gives rise to the Playing Handicap in tournaments.

I’ve read the CONGU explanation about it, and I’ve read what the R&A and USGA have to say too.

The best description I’ve found, though, came on Bracken Ghyll’s website: “When playing in competitions, the R&A has set mandatory handicap allowances dependent on the format of the competition.

“These handicap allowances effectively reduce your Course Handicap to provide equity for players of all levels of ability in each format of play.”

In individual strokeplay it’s 95 per cent – so you’re basically losing a shot once you get past a 10 handicap – and it all sounds eminently fair. Here’s the kicker. The Playing Handicap only applies to the competition. What goes forward for a golfer’s WHS record – what affects their index – is taken from whatever they scored with their Course Handicap.

Golfers don’t need to calculate their Playing Handicap, England Golf say. But I can’t help it!

Maybe I’m neurotic, but for the last 12 holes of my round I found myself computing two scores – one for the competition and another for my handicap.

I’m sure plenty of you will think I’m whining on about nothing. But here’s a cautionary tale. You pick up in a Stableford comp because you thought you couldn’t score. But wait, you still had a putt for a point with your Course Handicap. Argh!

I’ll get used to it in time. We’re all getting to grips with something that’s new and that winter we all thought we had to accustom ourselves to it was wiped away with lockdown.

And despite this little mental blot of mine, I like the new ways and particularly the chance to put in a score that counts at anywhere I might play this year.

Hopefully, much like the revised Rules of Golf back in 2019, it will soon become second nature. How long it takes to get there will be the key.

Until then, I’ll try and avoid juggling numbers like Rachel Riley while I’m lining up a putt for par.

How are you getting to grips with WHS? Are you bewildered, buzzing or betwixt and between? Let me know in the comments, or tweet me.

Subscribe to NCG

Steve Carroll

Steve Carroll

A journalist for 25 years, Steve has been immersed in club golf for almost as long. A former club captain, he has passed the Level 3 Rules of Golf exam with distinction having attended the R&A's prestigious Tournament Administrators and Referees Seminar.

Steve has officiated at a host of high-profile tournaments, including Open Regional Qualifying, PGA Fourball Championship, English Men's Senior Amateur, and the North of England Amateur Championship. In 2023, he made his international debut as part of the team that refereed England vs Switzerland U16 girls.

A part of NCG's Top 100s panel, Steve has a particular love of links golf and is frantically trying to restore his single-figure handicap. He currently floats at around 11.

Steve plays at Close House, in Newcastle, and York GC, where he is a member of the club's matches and competitions committee and referees the annual 36-hole scratch York Rose Bowl.

Having studied history at Newcastle University, he became a journalist having passed his NTCJ exams at Darlington College of Technology.

What's in Steve's bag: TaylorMade Stealth 2 driver, 3-wood, and hybrids; TaylorMade Stealth 2 irons; TaylorMade Hi-Toe, Ping ChipR, Sik Putter.

Latest Posts

stableford

World Handicap System

Scottish handicap chief: We should have used Course Rating minus Par from the start

By

Read full article about Scottish handicap chief: We should have used Course Rating minus Par from the start
WHS 2024 changes World Handicap System

World Handicap System

Stat-tastic! You can track your game on the MyEG app

By

Read full article about Stat-tastic! You can track your game on the MyEG app

World Handicap System

What difference will these handicap changes make to your game?

By

Read full article about What difference will these handicap changes make to your game?

World Handicap System

Why do women and men need separate handicapping systems? Answer: They don’t

By

Read full article about Why do women and men need separate handicapping systems? Answer: They don’t
fourball betterball world handicap system

World Handicap System

The way fourball match play handicaps are worked out is changing

By

Read full article about The way fourball match play handicaps are worked out is changing
Two golfers walking the fairway

World Handicap System

Should clubs get the chance to think again about 95 per cent?

By

Read full article about Should clubs get the chance to think again about 95 per cent?
WHS golf

World Handicap System

I put in every card for handicap for six months – what did I learn?

By

Read full article about I put in every card for handicap for six months – what did I learn?
world handicap system

World Handicap System

Ignore the critics – there is plenty to like about the WHS changes

By

Read full article about Ignore the critics – there is plenty to like about the WHS changes
National Club Golfer and National Club Golfer magazine

World Handicap System

Why your handicap might change in 2024

By

Read full article about Why your handicap might change in 2024