USGA Course Rating System
Inquiring players want to know: What is it, and what
does it mean?
By Amanda Krane
When conducting a
course rating, the Greater Cincinnati Golf Association (GCGA) rating
teams often encounter inquisitive players wondering more about the
USGA Course Rating System™. It’s difficult to define the system in
the few seconds the golfers have before they move on to their next
shot. The thought of a hitting a Tiger-esque approach shot is much
more interesting to them than a detailed explanation of the rating
procedure. As a result, it was decided that it’s probably more
effective to write an article about the USGA Course Rating System than
attempt to supply the information randomly to less-than- captivated
foursomes we meet during a rating.
While the USGA
Course Rating System is a complex set of rules and computations, it
boils down to three numbers given for each set of tees: the course,
bogey, and slope ratings. Most people know that the course rating is a
gauge of difficulty for a scratch golfer. Similarly the bogey rating
is a gauge of difficulty for a bogey golfer. But how does a rating
team determine those numbers?
First, yardage is
an essential component. For all golfers, regardless of ability,
yardage is the most significant factor to overcome. Rating teams begin
by measuring the precise length of each hole. Then the GCGA raters
take into account several effective playing length factors: How far
does the ball roll? Are there any changes in elevation? Are there any
forced lay-ups or doglegs? Each of these would affect a course’s
playing length and require an adjustment to the measured length.
Rating teams also
pay close attention to course characteristics, called obstacle factors
that can make each hole more or less difficult. There are 10 factors
that are considered crucial to course evaluation: topography, fairway,
green target, rough and recoverability, bunkers, out of bounds and
extreme rough, water hazards, trees, green surface and psychology.
Each of these obstacle factors is rated on a scale of 0 to 10
depending on their relation to how a scratch and bogey golfer would
play the hole.
When the
evaluation is complete, the numbers for each factor are totaled,
applied to several formulas and converted to strokes. Those stokes are
added to or subtracted from the yardage rating to produce course and
bogey ratings. Using the software provided by the USGA, this process
is much simpler than it sounds.
Now to determine
the slope rating. Slope indicates the measurement of the relative
difficulty for the bogey golfer compared to the course rating. The
slope rating is computed from the difference between the bogey rating
and the course rating. Put simply, the greater the difference between
the course and bogey ratings, the higher the slope. The lowest slope
rating is 55 and the highest is 155. The slope rating is what allows
players to take their USGA Handicap Index® to any course and find
their appropriate course handicap.
Editor’s Note:
Information, articles and resources supplied by
www.usga.org