Callaway Handicap
Players who do not have a USGA handicap compete with each other using
the Callaway handicap scoring system until they have three
tournament scores.
Click here for a description of Callaway
Handicap Scoring and how it's
applied.
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Determining your
USGA Handicap
Once a member has completed the requisite number of tournaments using the Callaway
Handicap Scoring system, they play in a regular flight using a modified USGA handicap
until they have 5 official tournament scores. At this point they
have an official USGA handicap.
Once the player has 20 tournament scores, the handicap is computed as
follows:
1. Take the best 10 of your last 20 scores
2. Subtract the course rating from each score (68.1 for Pecan Hollow)
3. Add them up and take the average.
3. Multiply by 0.96
4. Multiply the average by (113/110) -- =(Standard slope / Pecan
Hollow slope)
5. Delete all digits after tenths
6. This is your handicap (your posted handicap does not show the tenths)
Need more information? Click
here.
Click here to see the USGA instructions for
calculating handicaps with 20 scores.
To find out what
a slope rating is and why it's used, click here.
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| If you're interested in the details
of how handicaps are calculated for players with less than 20
scores, see the following sections. |
Section 10 USGA
HANDICAP FORMULA
Definitions
Within each section, all defined terms are in italics and are
listed alphabetically in Section 2-Definitions.
Potential ability is defined by the term Handicap
Index and is measured through a calculation using the player's best
scores. These best scores are determined by calculating the Handicap
Differential for each score. The Handicap Index is calculated
by taking 96 percent of the average of the best Handicap
Differential(s), and applying Section 10-3 for players with two or
more eligible tournament scores.
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10-1. Calculation of Handicap
Differentials |
A Handicap Differential is computed from four
elements: adjusted gross score, USGA Course Rating,
Slope Rating, and 113 (the
Slope Rating
of a course of standard difficulty). To determine the Handicap
Differential, subtract the USGA Course Rating from the
adjusted gross score; multiply the difference by 113; then divide
the resulting number by the Slope Rating. Round the final number
to the nearest tenth.
Handicap Differential = (Adjusted Gross
Score - USGA Course Rating) x 113 / Slope Rating
a. Plus Handicap Differential
When the adjusted gross score is higher than
the USGA Course Rating, the Handicap Differential
is a positive number.
The following is an example for determining a
Handicap Differential using an adjusted gross score of 95
made on a course with a USGA Course Rating of 71.5 and a
Slope Rating of 125:
Adjusted Gross Score - USGA
Course Rating: 95 - 71.5 = 23.5
Difference x Standard Slope Rating:
23.5 x 113 = 2655.5
Result / Slope Rating: 2655.5 /
125 = 21.24
Handicap Differential (rounded): 21.2
b. Minus Handicap Differential
When the adjusted gross score is lower than
the USGA Course Rating, the Handicap Differential
is a negative number. The following is an example for determining a
Handicap Differential using an adjusted gross score of 69
made on a course with a USGA Course Rating of 71.5 and a
Slope Rating of 125:
Adjusted Gross Score - USGA Course
Rating: 69 - 71.5 = -2.5
Difference x Standard Slope Rating:
-2.5 x 113 = -282.5
Result / Slope Rating: -282.5 /
125 = -2.26
Handicap Differential (rounded): -2.3
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10-2. Handicap
Index Formula |
The Handicap Index formula is based on
the best Handicap Differential(s) in a player's scoring record.
If a player's scoring record contains 20 or more scores, the best
10 Handicap Differentials of the most recent 20 scores are used
to calculate the Handicap Index.
As the number of scores in the scoring
record decreases the percentage of scores used in a scoring
record decreases from the maximum of the best 50 percent. If the
scoring record contains 9 or 10 scores, only the best three scores
(30 to 33 percent) in the scoring record will be used. Thus, the
accuracy of a player's Handicap Index is directly proportional to
the number of acceptable scores posted.
A Handicap Index must not be
issued to a
player who has returned fewer than five acceptable scores. The following
procedures illustrate how authorized golf associations, golf
clubs, and computation services calculate a player's Handicap
Index.
The procedure for calculating a Handicap Index
is as follows:
Step 1:
Use the table below to determine the number of Handicap
Differential(s) to use:
Click Here for Handicap Differentials Table
Step 2: Determine
Handicap Differential(s);
Step 3:
Average the Handicap Differential(s) being used;
Step 4: Multiply the
average by.96*;
Step 5: Delete all
numbers after the tenths' digit (truncate). Do not round to the
nearest tenth.
Example 1: Fewer than 20
scores (11 scores available).
Total of lowest 4 Handicap
Differentials: 104.1
Average (104.1 / 4): 26.025
Multiply average by.96: 24.984
Delete digits after tenths: 24.9
Handicap Index: 24.9
* Bonus for Excellence is the incentive for players
to improve their golf games that is built into the USGA Handicap
System. It is the term used to describe the small percentage below
perfect equity that is used to calculate a Handicap Index (96
percent).
As a Handicap Index improves (gets lower), the
player has a slightly better chance of placing high or winning a
handicap event.
Example 2: Twenty scores
available. The following is an example of a Handicap Index
calculation for a player with 20 scores.
Total of 10 lowest Handicap
Differentials: 154.8
Average (154.8 / 10): 15.48
Average multiplied by.96: 14.861
Delete all digits after tenths: 14.8
Handicap Index: 14.8
Step 6: Apply
Section 10-3 for players with two or more eligible tournament
scores.
Click Here for Two or More Eligible Tournament Scores Table
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10-3. Reduction of Handicap Index
Based on Exceptional Tournament Scores |
Using the definition of a tournament score
(see tournament score and Decisions 10-3/1 through 10-3/6), the
committee (preferably the Handicap Committee in consultation with
the committee in charge of the competition) must determine in advance
whether a score is to be designated as a tournament score that is
to be identified by the letter "T" when posted (e.g. 82T). These
scores are often referred to as "T-Scores" as in Section 10-3c.
a. Purpose
The following procedure must be used as an alternate
calculation of a Handicap Index for players with two or more
eligible tournament scores. A player's Handicap Index may be
reduced under this procedure when a player has a minimum of two
eligible tournament score differentials that are at least 3.0 better
than the player's Handicap Index calculated under Section 10-2.
b. Determination of Handicap Index Based on
Tournament Scores
The Handicap Committee or handicap computation
service must apply the following steps to determine if there is a
reduction in Handicap Index calculated under Section 10-2.
Example: A player with a
Handicap Index of 17.3 has three eligible tournament scores,
an 82T, 83T and 85T. Two of these eligible tournament scores, an
82T and 83T, produce the lowest tournament score differentials.
They were made on a course with a USGA Course Rating of 70.6 and
a Slope Rating of 130.
Step 1:
Calculate tournament score differentials
by subtracting the USGA Course Rating from each eligible
tournament score; multiply the result by 113, and divide by the
Slope Rating for each course played. Select the two lowest
eligible tournament score differentials.
82T - (82-70.6) x 113 / 130 = 9.9
83T - (83-70.6) x 113 / 130 = 10.8
85T - (85-70.6) x 113 / 130 = 12.5
Step 2:
Subtract the second lowest differential from the
Handicap Index under Section 10-2. Continue with the next step if
the result is 3.0 or greater.

Handicap 2nd lowest t-score 3.0 or greater Index
differential eligible for 10-3 review
Step 3:
Average the two lowest tournament score
differentials.

2 best t-score Differential average of differentials
2 lowest t-scores
Step 4:
Subtract that average from the player's Handicap
Index.

Handicap Use this value and the number of Index
eligible tournament scores to enter the Handicap Reduction Table
Step 5:
Using the number (rounded to the nearest tenths place
(7.0)) from step 4 and the total number of tournament scores in
the player's record (3), use the Handicap Reduction Table to determine
the amount the player's Handicap Index is to be reduced.
Step 6:
Subtract the table value from the player's
Handicap Index. The result of that subtraction will be the player's
reduced Handicap Index, provided that it is at least one less
than the Handicap Index based on the Formula in Section 10-2. The
reduced Handicap Index is to be identified with the letter R when
displayed in handicap reports or on the computer screen, e.g.
12.3R.

Handicap Amount the Handicap New Reduced Index
Reduction table states to Handicap Index reduce the handicap by
Click Here for the Number of Eligible Tournament Scores Table
Example:
Value from Handicap Reduction Table
5.0
Handicap Index -- Table Value: 17.3 -
5.0 = 12.3
Reduced Handicap Index: 12.3R
c. Counting Tournament Scores
- T-Score Counter -- The number of
eligible tournament scores will be counted on a revolving
twelve-month basis. In order to keep track of the counter, but not
save every T-Score, a counter for each month is needed. The T-Score
counter will be the sum of the latest twelve monthly counters plus
any T-Scores older than one year that are a part of the twenty score
history. The monthly counter will increase based on the date a score
is processed, not the date of the score.
- Best T-Score File -- Up to the best six
eligible tournament scores are saved in a "Best T-Score File,"
separate from the player's handicap record of the latest 20 scores.
- Adding T-Scores -- When a new
tournament score is posted, it becomes part of the player's
normal handicap record as a score and Handicap Differential.
If the "Best T-Score File" has fewer than six eligible tournament
scores, the new T-Score is added to that file. If the file
already has six T-Scores, the new T-Score, if better than any
T-Score in the file, is added to the file and the worst T-Score in
the file is deleted from the file, regardless of the date of the
T-Score.
- Discarding Old T-Scores -- At each
handicap revision, each T-Score in the "Best T-Score File" is
checked to see if the score is older than one year and no longer
part of the player's current twenty score history. If so, the score
is deleted from the file. Deleted T-Scores are replaced by the best
eligible tournament scores (if any) in the player's handicap
record that are not already in the "Best T-Score File."
d. Duration and Variation of Reduction
Handicap Index reduction for exceptional
tournament scores is calculated at each handicap revision and may
vary from revision to revision based on a number of factors. These
factors may include the following:
- Additional tournament scores;
- Expiration of eligible tournament scores;
- Variation in 10-2 calculation;
- Fluctuation of 10-2 calculation in relation to the two lowest
T-Scores.
e. Handicap Committee Review of Reduction
The Handicap Committee must review all
reductions. As a result of review, the Handicap Committee
may:
- Continue to allow the reduction to run its normal course, as
described in Section 10-3d, or
- Further reduce the Handicap Index. For example, the
committee may conclude that the player's performance continues to be
better than the potential ability indicated by the 10-3 reduction.
In that case, the committee replaces the reduced Handicap Index
with an even lower reduced Handicap Index, continuing to
review the eduction after each revision period (see Section 8-4c),
or
- Override the reduction. For example, the committee may
cancel the reduction to a Handicap Index for a player who has
been injured, and whose reduction was based on early tournament
scores prior to the injury. In that case, the reduction was
inconsistent with the player's scoring record. The committee
replaces the reduced Handicap Index with the Handicap
Index calculated under 10-2 and ceases designating it with an R.
The committee will have the option to continue to override
after each revision period, for as long as at least two exceptional
tournament scores continue to trigger a 10-3 reduction. Once
the player's scoring record comes to contain fewer than two
exceptional tournament scores, the committee must cease
overriding and rely on the normal calculation under 10-2.
f. Reporting Requirement
Authorized golf associations and handicap
computation services must report any Handicap Index reductions
under this procedure (Section 10-3b) to the golf club and, if
computational reports are provided to the authorized golf association,
the handicap computation service must also report any Handicap Index
reductions to the authorized golf association. When a Handicap
Index is reduced under this section, it must be identified with the
letter R (e.g., 12.3R).
A player's Course Handicap is determined by
multiplying a Handicap Index by the Slope Rating of the
course played and then dividing by 113. (See Section 3-3.) The resulting
figure is rounded off to the nearest whole number (.5 or more is rounded
upward).
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10-5. Nine-Hole Handicaps-Handicap
Index (N) |
a. Nine-Hole Handicap Use and Identification
A nine-hole handicap is a Handicap Index if
the club follows the USGA Handicap System. A nine-hole handicap,
or Handicap Index (N), may be used in inter-club play against
other players with nine-hole handicaps. If a competition requires a
Handicap Index, a Handicap Index (N) may be doubled for
18-hole play.
A player with both a Handicap Index and a
Handicap Index (N) should use the Handicap Index (N) in
inter-club nine-hole competition and the Handicap Index in
18-hole competition.
A player with only a Handicap Index playing in
a nine-hole competition halves the Handicap Index and rounds the
decimal upward to the nearest tenth, then converts it to a Course
Handicap, using the nine-hole Slope Rating from the Course
Handicap Table for the tees being played.
b. Method of Computation
Golf clubs compute a Handicap Index (N)
by applying nine-hole adjusted gross scores to the USGA
Course Rating and Slope Rating of the nine holes played to
determine Handicap Differentials.
Note: Players
with a Handicap Index (N) who play an 18-hole round, must post
two nine-hole scores to their scoring record (N).
Example: For a nine-hole adjusted gross
score of 45 with a nine-hole USGA Course Rating of
36.2 and a Slope Rating of 121, the nine-hole Handicap
Differential is (45 - 36.2) x 113 / 121 = 8.2. If the average of the
best ten nine-hole Handicap Differentials is 8.9, then the
Handicap Index (N) is 8.9 x.96 = 8.5. It is posted as "8.5N."
c. Nine-hole Equitable Stroke Control
See definition of Equitable Stroke Control.
Click Here for the Equitable Stroke Control Table
Example: A player with a nine-hole Course
Handicap of 12 must adjust to a maximum score of 8 for any hole,
regardless of par.
d. Maximum Nine-Hole Handicap
The maximum Handicap Index (N) is 18.2 for men
and 20.2 for women.
Note: A maximum
Handicap Index will convert to a Course Handicap that
exceeds these numbers on golf courses with a Slope Rating greater
than 113.
A player may have a local handicap above these
limits, but it must be identified as a local handicap by the
letter "J" following the number on a handicap card or report (e.g.
24.5J). (See handicap type.) When such a local handicap is
used for inter-club play, the USGA recommends that it be reduced to the
maximum Handicap Index (N) specified above.
Golf FAQ: Why is
Slope Rating Called "Slope"?
FAQ:
Slope? Why did the USGA choose the term "slope" to
represent the relative difficulty of courses for bogey golfers?
(Note the nuance in this rhetorical question, i.e., "the relative
difficulty of courses for BOGEY golfers." )
ANSWER:
When the USGA added slope
rating to the pre-existing course rating, in the early 1980s, it
did so because of something that had always been obvious; i.e.,
The more difficult a course
is, the greater the discrepancy is between the scores of
stronger and weaker players.
The course rating system
does not account for that discrepancy; slope does.
Example:
Imagine two players, Player
A and Player B.
Player A is a six
handicapper,
Player B is a 16
handicapper.
On a course of average
difficulty (slope of 113), both players are likely to play close
to their handicaps.
But as course difficulty
increases, Player B's scores will rise faster than Player A's.
On a course with a slope of 130,
Player B might need an additional 2.3 strokes, while Player A
might only need an additional 1.3.
Now, imagine that
discrepancy plotted on a graph. The graph lines of both players
A and B would rise as the course difficulty increased - but the
line of Player B would rise at a steeper angle than that of
Player A.
The
slope of a
weaker player's scoring graph is steeper than that of a stronger
player's. SO ... there you are!
The term "slope" -
referring to relative steepness of the graph line of a weaker
player's scores - was chosen to represent the USGA's new method
of rating course difficulty for bogey golfers.
Well ... at least we know
why it's called a "slope" rating.
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