Changes to World Handicap System April 1st 2024

You are currently viewing Changes to World Handicap System April 1st 2024

The World Handicap System as you know it is about to get an overhaul in GB&I next year. Here is a breakdown of the major changes that will affect you in 2024.

Please note that the Course Rating minus Par is the only one where you will see a change and this will be to your Course / Playing handicap. The other changes will be handled by the app software and will be extensively transparent.

We’re moving to Course Rating minus Par

Bringing GB&I into line with most other WHS jurisdictions, England Golf say Course Rating minus Par is an adjustment for the difference between the Course Rating and the Par of the course you are playing.

Simply, if the par is lower than the Course Rating players will receive additional shots on their Course Handicap. If the par is higher, they will lose strokes.

It will mean players now play to par, rather than the Course Rating. It could assist lower handicappers, particularly on more difficult courses, and will see bigger adjustments in the number of shots players receive depending on the tee sets they play.

It should also make mixed tee and mixed gender events much easier to calculate.

 

Example 1

Assume Handicap Index 17.4 off the Yellow summer tees

Current Course Handicap = H/C Index * Slope / 113 = 20

2024 Course Handicap = (H/C Index * Slope / 113) + (Course Rating – Par) = 18

Example 2

Assume Handicap Index 5 off the Yellow summer tees

Current Course Handicap = H/C Index * Slope / 113 = 6

2024 Course Handicap = (H/C Index * Slope / 113) + (Course Rating – Par) = 4

Fourball betterball scores can count for handicap

Note: this will be for club arranges competitions only and not general play

A source of complaint for swathes of golfers, the days of teams sweeping in and cleaning up pairs’ events – while reluctant to participate in other club competitions – may be coming to an end.

Fourball betterball formats in competitions, such as stroke play, Stableford and Par/Bogey, can be used for handicap purposes in GB&I subject to some strict criteria.

These include one player of the pair scoring on a minimum of 9 holes, the total score of the pair being at least 42 points or six under par, and the player’s upscaled score adding up to at least 36 points.

If all requirements are met, WHS software will calculate a score differential and it will be added to that player’s record for handicap purposes.

It’s hoped the measures will make handicaps more reflective of the ability of players.

Haven’t played a hole? Introducing ‘Expected Score’

This is a change in the way 9-hole scores are upscaled into 18-holes and how any holes not played during a round are dealt with.

It aims to make player handicaps more accurate by providing a better prediction of what a player would score on those holes rather than using net par.

Want to put in a score for handicap on a Par 3 golf course?

A course must currently be 3,000 yards over 18-holes, or 1,500 yards over 9-holes, to be eligible for a WHS Course Rating.

But those numbers will now be halved (1,500 yards for 18 holes and 750 yards for 9-holes). That should allow a whole host of short, academy, and Par 3 courses to become rated. Golfers could then submit acceptable scores from those venues.

A 14-hole competition? It could now count towards your handicap

A clause is being added into WHS rules allowing competitions “over a non-standard number of holes to be used for handicap purposes”.

Course handicaps will now be unrounded

If you play in England, Ireland, or Wales, your Course Handicap is currently calculated to decimal places. It is then is rounded into a whole number. That’s the number you see on WHS boards at your club.

But if your club can use software to check the accuracy of the calculations, from April your Course Handicap will be unrounded.

If you’re playing in a competition, or another format which requires a Playing Handicap, it is at this point that the figures would be rounded up into a whole number.

Courses can standardise their pars

You all know the course with a hole that’s a par-4 from the back tees but a par-3 further forward. While some of you might embrace this quirk, it can be confusing for players and look awkward on the scorecard.

The new Rules of Handicapping will allow clubs to retain the same par for each gender and across all tee sets rated for that gender. That will be regardless of the yardage of each hole.

Leave a Reply