This may have been dealt with before, if so, kindly point me in that direction. ![Smile :) :)](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
Is there anyway, either on this forum, or elsewhere, to get some idea of how my just completed round at course X might be rated, were there a tournament there? Now I know each tourney is different--weather, tee position changes, propagators present, etc.
I also know about SSE, but that is almost the opposite of what I would like. That shows what a 1000-rated player (scratch) would likely score on that layout, on average. I am just a wee bit from being a 1000 rated player, so not much help there.
Example:
Course X is a par 58, 6500'. SSE is 49, meaning the average 1000-rated pro would be most likely to score -9 on average, playing it multiple times.
I play it, and get, say, even par. What round rating would that equate to?
I also know one can go to PDGA and look at prior tournaments, see scores with the rated rounds for a particular layout, and usually get a close guess at what that par would be.
But, many courses have had no tourneys, and let's be honest--that's a lot of work when one plays several courses a week.
Any thoughts?
Is there anyway, either on this forum, or elsewhere, to get some idea of how my just completed round at course X might be rated, were there a tournament there? Now I know each tourney is different--weather, tee position changes, propagators present, etc.
I also know about SSE, but that is almost the opposite of what I would like. That shows what a 1000-rated player (scratch) would likely score on that layout, on average. I am just a wee bit from being a 1000 rated player, so not much help there.
Example:
Course X is a par 58, 6500'. SSE is 49, meaning the average 1000-rated pro would be most likely to score -9 on average, playing it multiple times.
I play it, and get, say, even par. What round rating would that equate to?
I also know one can go to PDGA and look at prior tournaments, see scores with the rated rounds for a particular layout, and usually get a close guess at what that par would be.
But, many courses have had no tourneys, and let's be honest--that's a lot of work when one plays several courses a week.
Any thoughts?