Friday, October 19, 2012

Ask Linda #543-Is this a par or a birdie?


Linda, my partner and I are playing another twosome in Match Play. We are having a tough hole. My partner is on the green in 4 and has a stroke. I have a bogey putt left and no stroke so I pick up. One of our opponents makes a birdie putt and misses but she has a 1-foot putt so we concede her putt. Her playing partner has a 25 foot birdie putt left but she picks up because her partner is in with a par to win the hole. The woman who picked up is a 9 handicap. My thinking is she should score the hole as a par because that is what she would usually shoot on the hole. She wouldn't normally make a 25-foot birdie putt, but she would usually make a par from 25 feet. We argued today as she said the hole was conceded to her partner so she gets to count the hole as if she had made the birdie putt. Is this true?
Lulu

Dear Lulu,

When the player posts her score for the round, she must calculate her Most Likely Score for any hole that is not completed. In this case, she may assume two putts from 25 feet and score the hole as a par.

Here is how Most Likely Score is defined in The USGA Handicap System manual:

A "most likely score" is the score a player must post for handicap purposes if a hole is started but not completed or if the player is conceded a stroke. The most likely score consists of the number of strokes already taken plus, in the player's best judgment, the number of strokes the player would take to complete the hole from that position more than half the time. This number may not exceed the player's Equitable Stroke Control limit.

Linda
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