Good for you then. I don't consider being able to play golf and still be there for a noon softball game all that hectic, but maybe it is for some. But it is nice to still be able to have played golf vs not.
Course layout, weather, and tee selection all matter a lot too. If the course has long distances between holes, then ride instead of walking. (Unless it's cart path only and you're not very accurate, and then you'd damn well better be walking a cart to speed the round up.) Just as bad are the golfers who should play shorter tee boxes but don't. That's a pace of play killer. Learn your true distances. Move up a tee. If you can't reach the group in front, don't wait until they get off the green to hit.agsalaska said:Makes a huge difference.DannyDuberstein said:
And course familiarity plays a really big role. We've all been playing this course 20+ years, we know every shot out there, we know the greens, etc
And really not so much for your group but for the groups in front of you.
There are very few courses anywhere, public at least, that can average 3:30 in any kind of busy time. My course is private and we dont.
What is your handicap?cb1919 said:
I've played 27 in a two some in 3.5 hours.
Honestly, I don't know how it takes longer than 3.5 hours to play a foursome, especially if you have a cart.
Golf trip a month ago, we played our first round in a little over 3.5 walking 18. Our other group behind us we couldn't see them. We switched up the groups the next day and I teed off on the second hole and one guy said "I see how yall played so fast yesterday." Man I took one practice swing stepped up and hit it. What else do you want me to do?
So you don't suck. You're not spending extra time looking for your ball in the rough or taking 3 or 4 shots to get on the green.cb1919 said:
7.9
cb1919 said:
You can do all that easily under 4 hours
This sums up like 70% of golfers (at least on public courses) in general in my opinion. I know way too many egos that have to play from the tips.DannyDuberstein said:
Yeah, that's a lot of stipulations to try to get it to take 4.5. At my home course, if you take 4.5 in that first 10-12 tee of tee times, you might get your ass kicked. Lots of highly competitive players playing for $$$ in that section but still doing it sub 4. There's a standing 16-20 player money game right behind us that I'll join if my regular 4 is going to have 2+ missing, and they don't take 4:30. Everything is putted out (obviously).
The #1 killer of pace of play is playing the wrong tees. But there are a lot of bad golfers that have too much pride to move forward of the One-Ups. It's a shame because they'd probably have more fun
I have a shorter, easier list to take 4.5 hours:
1. Do suck
2. Play the wrong tees
Wangus I am just looking for a little clarification here.wangus12 said:This sums up like 70% of golfers (at least on public courses) in general in my opinion. I know way too many egos that have to play from the tips.DannyDuberstein said:
Yeah, that's a lot of stipulations to try to get it to take 4.5. At my home course, if you take 4.5 in that first 10-12 tee of tee times, you might get your ass kicked. Lots of highly competitive players playing for $$$ in that section but still doing it sub 4. There's a standing 16-20 player money game right behind us that I'll join if my regular 4 is going to have 2+ missing, and they don't take 4:30. Everything is putted out (obviously).
The #1 killer of pace of play is playing the wrong tees. But there are a lot of bad golfers that have too much pride to move forward of the One-Ups. It's a shame because they'd probably have more fun
I have a shorter, easier list to take 4.5 hours:
1. Do suck
2. Play the wrong tees
My brother and I don't break 100. We just aren't good nor do we have the time to practice enough to get to that point with work and other things we do. We just enjoy going outside and playing. That said, we typically play from the Gold/White tee boxes because we know we're already gonna take several shots to get to the green (or have to look for our ball). Playing from their allows us to at least some times get to Par on a hole lol. Also allows us to usually play in 3.5 hours.
My comment was more about most people sucking at golf and therefore playing the wrong tees. Not about pace of play.agsalaska said:Wangus I am just looking for a little clarification here.wangus12 said:This sums up like 70% of golfers (at least on public courses) in general in my opinion. I know way too many egos that have to play from the tips.DannyDuberstein said:
Yeah, that's a lot of stipulations to try to get it to take 4.5. At my home course, if you take 4.5 in that first 10-12 tee of tee times, you might get your ass kicked. Lots of highly competitive players playing for $$$ in that section but still doing it sub 4. There's a standing 16-20 player money game right behind us that I'll join if my regular 4 is going to have 2+ missing, and they don't take 4:30. Everything is putted out (obviously).
The #1 killer of pace of play is playing the wrong tees. But there are a lot of bad golfers that have too much pride to move forward of the One-Ups. It's a shame because they'd probably have more fun
I have a shorter, easier list to take 4.5 hours:
1. Do suck
2. Play the wrong tees
My brother and I don't break 100. We just aren't good nor do we have the time to practice enough to get to that point with work and other things we do. We just enjoy going outside and playing. That said, we typically play from the Gold/White tee boxes because we know we're already gonna take several shots to get to the green (or have to look for our ball). Playing from their allows us to at least some times get to Par on a hole lol. Also allows us to usually play in 3.5 hours.
Should a foursome that is going to average 75, or even say 77, from the tips and finish in 4:15 scoot up and play from closer tees in order to finish faster?
My kind of golfers. I do the same because my average drive is about 210, with an occasional 235. I play from the tees that equate to around 6,000 yards max. If I'm playing as a single and get paired up with another group, I always let them know which tees I'll be playing before anyone hits. More often than not, the rest of the group moves up too. Sometimes all it takes is being the first person to do it. (One guy who moved up from the tips admitted to me that it was the first round he actually enjoyed in years.)wangus12 said:This sums up like 70% of golfers (at least on public courses) in general in my opinion. I know way too many egos that have to play from the tips.DannyDuberstein said:
Yeah, that's a lot of stipulations to try to get it to take 4.5. At my home course, if you take 4.5 in that first 10-12 tee of tee times, you might get your ass kicked. Lots of highly competitive players playing for $$$ in that section but still doing it sub 4. There's a standing 16-20 player money game right behind us that I'll join if my regular 4 is going to have 2+ missing, and they don't take 4:30. Everything is putted out (obviously).
The #1 killer of pace of play is playing the wrong tees. But there are a lot of bad golfers that have too much pride to move forward of the One-Ups. It's a shame because they'd probably have more fun
I have a shorter, easier list to take 4.5 hours:
1. Do suck
2. Play the wrong tees
My brother and I don't break 100. We just aren't good nor do we have the time to practice enough to get to that point with work and other things we do. We just enjoy going outside and playing. That said, we typically play from the Gold/White tee boxes because we know we're already gonna take several shots to get to the green (or have to look for our ball). Playing from their allows us to at least some times get to Par on a hole lol. Also allows us to usually play in 3.5 hours.
I know they're not as good as the previous iterations but Costco has their Kirkland balls on sale right now for $20. I play just as poorly with better balls so no need to spend more money when I'm just going to donate them to the golf course eventually.DannyDuberstein said:
Hacks playing $55/dzn ProV1s doesn't help with that.