English Bay Golf Club Help Files

 

Completing a Score card

How to complete a RCGA registered score card

Posting a scorecard

How to post your score online (at home or at the club house)

Handicap

What is a golf handicap

Players Handicap responsibilities

Link to RCGA website – Players responsibilities

Determining a player's handicap

How to determine what your handicap should be

Course rating

What is a Course Rating

RCGA Handicap Formula

A link to the RCGA website – Handicap formula

 

 

 

Completing a score card for a RCGA registered handicap

Print a copy

 

1) Each player must complete a score card of their own

2) Date the card and Sign your name as scorer

3) Compare your carded handicap with the course handicap sheet (write down your course handicap)

4) Enter gross scores for each hole

 

5) After round - Adjust all holes with Equitable Stroke Control “ESC”
ESC is the downward adjustment of individual hole scores for handicap purposes in order to make Handicap Factors more representative of a player's potential scoring ability. ESC sets a maximum number that a player can post on any hole depending on the player's Course Handicap. ESC is used only when a player's actual or most likely score exceeds their maximum number based on the table below but is applied to all scores for handicap purposes, including tournament scores. There is no limit to the number of holes on which a player may adjust their score.

Course Handicap

Maximum Number On Any Hole

0 or plus

1 over par

 

1 through 18

2 over par

 

19 through 32

3 over par

 

33 and over

4 over par

 

 

6) After ESC adjustments, total scores

7) Deduct course handicap from your score

8) Total your final NET score

9) Have the score card attested (signed) by a player that played in your group that day

10) Hand the score card into the Starter

 

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Posting your score online

Print a copy

 

  1. Go to http://www.bcga.org
  2. Move cursor to HANDICAPS and select THE RCGA NETWORK
  3. Log in with your USERNAME and PASSWORD
  4. From MY HOME PAGE, choose POST TOTAL SCORE or (INDIVIDULE HOLE BY HOLE)
  5. Enter Date of round
  6. Select
    1.  The Course played
    2.  Number of holes played
    3. Type of play
    4. Tee box
  7. Enter total score (after adjustments, see Completing a score card if you have questions)
  8. Click “Post Score(s)” button

 

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What is a Golf Handicap

 

A golf handicap is a numerical measure of an amateur golfer's playing ability. It can be used to calculate a so-called "net" score from the number of strokes actually played, thus allowing players of different proficiency to play against each other on equal terms. Handicaps are administrated by golf clubs or national golf associations. Exact rules relating to handicaps can vary from country to country. Handicap systems are not used in professional golf.

 

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Determining a Players Handicap

While there are many variations in detail, handicap systems are based on calculating an individual player's golfing ability from his or her recent history of rounds. Therefore, a handicap is not fixed but is regularly adjusted to increases or decreases in a player's scoring.

A player's handicap is roughly equal to the average number of strokes that he or she plays above the par of a course. Thus, an expert golfer who plays a course in even par (scratch golfer) will have a handicap of 0. A player who constantly plays a 100 on a par-72 course will have an approximate handicap of 100 - 72 = 28. (See below for the precise calculation required.)

 

The par of each golf course can be said to be the number of strokes it would take a scratch golfer to complete a round in which two putts were taken on each green.

 

In the U.K., a "Scratch Score" system was previously in place in order to rate courses and be fair to golfers of varying ability, and to make allowances that courses may play "easier" or "harder" than par, overall, to the amateur field. For this reason, a Standard Scratch Score (SSS) is used as a baseline for how the course plays in practice (e.g. an SSS lower than par indicates a course which golfers find slightly easier, and vice versa).

Akin to the SSS is the Competition Scratch Score (CSS). The principle is the same, only this describes how easy or difficult the course played during a given competition. It is against this CSS score that a player's handicap is adjusted by the club. Golfers with a handicap of 5 or lower are said to be Division 1 players. Higher handicap players are categorized as Division 2, 3, or 4. For every stroke the Division 1 golfer's net score is below the CSS, their handicap is reduced by 0.1. For Division 2 golfers, this figure is 0.2, for Division 3 golfers it is a 0.3 reduction, and 0.4 for Division 4 category golfers.

Similarly, amateur golfers are allowed a buffer zone to protect their handicap on "off-days". For Div 1 this is 1 stroke, for Div 2 this is 2 strokes, etc. This means that if a Division 1 golfer's net score is one stroke higher than the CSS, their handicap will not increase. If a golfer's net score is higher than the CSS plus buffer zone combined, their handicap will increase by 0.1. This 0.1 increase covers all golfers and does not vary by division.

Note that it is possible to have a handicap below 0 (scratch). Handicaps below 0 are referred to as 'plus' handicaps, and at the end of the round, a 'plus' handicap golfer must add his handicap to his score. Example, a golfer playing with a handicap of 'plus' 2 who shoots a score of 70 would have a net score of 72.

A professional golfer plays off scratch, but has no actual handicap.

 

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Course rating

In the United States (and elsewhere) each officially rated golf course is described by two numbers, the course rating and the slope rating. For each posted round, the handicap differential is calculated according to the following formula:

Handicap differential = (gross score - course rating) × 113 / (course slope).

The differential is rounded to the nearest tenth.

 

The handicap index is calculated using the average of the best 10 differentials (using the formula above) of the past 20, times 0.96. Rather than rounding, any digits after the tenths are dropped. If a golfer has at least 5 but fewer than 20 rounds posted, the index is calculated using from one to nine differentials according to a schedule. Updates to a golfer's index are calculated periodically according to schedules provided by state and regional golf associations.

 

The handicap index is used with the course's slope rating to determine the golfer's course handicap according to the following formula:

Course Handicap = Handicap index * Slope Rating / 113. The result is rounded to the nearest whole number.

The course handicap is the number of strokes to be deducted from the golfer's gross score to determine the net score.

For example, the following table shows the impact of the same score at two different tee positions at the same course, and the resulting handicap differential:

White tees:

Gross score: 85 Course rating: 69.3 Course slope: 117

Yields a handicap differential of 15.2. If this golfer's handicap index is 10.5, the course handicap would be 10.5 * 117 / 113 = 11, and the net score would be 85 - 11 = 74.

 

Blue tees:

Gross score: 85 Course rating: 71.9 Course slope: 124

Yields a handicap differential of 11.9. If this golfer's handicap index is 10.5, the course handicap would be 10.5 * 124 / 113 = 12, and the net score would be 85 - 12 = 73.

 

How to edit a handicap the correct way:

Let's say you shoot 77 and the course rating is 71.2 and the slope is 121.

First you take your score and subtract that by the course rating. Which in this case is 5.8. you then take the differential in this case 5.8 and multiply that by the slope which in this case is 121. Then you take that number 700.8 in this case and divide it by 113. 113 is the standard slope rating for most courses. This means that his actual handicap is 6.2

Example:

85-Course Rating=Z

Z x Slope=A

A/113 = Handicap Differential

 

Before making the above calculation, the gross score must be adjusted using the equitable stroke control table, which removes the effect of abnormally high individual hole scores by establishing a maximum score per hole depending on the player's handicap index. For example, a golfer with a course handicap of 20 through 29 can record a maximum of 8 strokes on any one hole for handicap calculation purposes only.

A player's handicap is not meant to reflect what they shoot in a typical round, but rather what their best score would most likely be per approximately every four rounds.

 

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