How to Win Your Flight

Want to know how to win or place more in the Metro Seniors Weekly Tournaments?

What increases your chances of winning or at least placing in the money?

Want to know if you score is likely to be a 1st or 2nd place for your flight?

Bottom line – Or Short Answers

  • If your net score is lower that the course rating, you are probably going to win some flight prize money.  Example – Course Rating 68.5     Net Score 66    Probably wins.
  • If your net score is 2 to 3 strokes below the course rating, winning chances improve significantly.
  • Frequent players are more likely to win, more chances, and perhaps improved play.
  • Very few players win more than once in a season.  Competition is significant.
  • 15 to 20 different players win their flights over 25 tournaments.

There are several factors will increase your chances of winning in your flight.

  • Play more outings
    • Members playing less than 10 outings won less than 10% of flight prize money
    • Members playing 15 or more outings won 74% of flight prizes
  • Improve your game
    • Playing more is a big factor in improving
    • Practice – especially putting and short game
  • Play strategically
    • Select the best tees for your scoring (usually forward tees)
    • Use rules properly for lost balls and hazards
    • Plan you shots for reality not wishful thinking
    • Play more low attendance outings – less competition

 

For those of you who want more data, read on.

Here is some real data that may help.

Actual data for 2017 for Division 1 (Friday, 18 hole). We had about 130 members for 2017 and played in 24 events (one rainout). Handicap distribution for Division 1 is a little higher than other divisions, but the trends and concepts will be the same.

For 2017, First Place Flight winners were well distributed. Between 15 to 20 different players won a 1st place in each flight. There were a few 2 time winners, and only 4 with 3 or more wins for the season. No one player is dominating any flight.

1 Time 2 Time 3 or more Total
Wins Wins Wins Players
First Place A Flight 8 Players 6 Players 1 Player 15
B Flight 16 Players 4 Players 20
C Flight 15 Players 3 Players 1 Player 19
D Flight 11 Players 3 Players 2 Players 16

Almost all of the first place flight winners in every flight played at least 15 or more rounds.

One important point, handicap is calculated at about your best 25 percentile – it is the about the average of the best 50% of your history. So matching or just beating your handicap can be a 10% to 20% event. Beating your handicap significantly – more than 5 or 6 points could be a 1 or 2% event.

Winning a flight once or twice a year is likely. Winning three or four times per year is very unlikely. Reduced competition, fewer players, course conditions, weather, will all be factors that influence who is winning and the winning scores.

What scores does it take to win a flight?

To win or place in your flight you will usually have to play better than your course handicap for the tees played.

Net Scores – Rating and Flight Placement
Net Score
– Tee/Course
Rating
1st Place – All Flights -0.8
2nd Place – All Flights 1.2
3rd Place – All Flights 3.5
4th Place – All Flights 4.1
5th Place – All Flights 5.3

To take 1st place in any flight, on average your net score would have to be about 1 stroke better that the course rating. Example – with a course rating of 68.8 a net score of 68 would put you close to winning. A net score of 64 would give you a very good chance of placing first.

Scores of 70, 72, 73 and 74 would give you an “average” chance of placing in 2nd through 5th place respectively. This placement is more competitive and you will usually need to be 2 to 4 strokes lower to really be competitive.

But we know that flights A – D have different competition. Looking only in 1st or 2nd in the different flights the competition is tougher.

Flt Net Score
– Tee/Course
Rating
1st Place A -1.3
B -1.0
C 0.4
D 2.7
2nd Place A 0.0
B 0.3
C 3.7
D 6.4

Essentially scoring a 1st place in A, B and C flight requires a net score about 1 to 4 strokes LOWER that the course rating. Example – a net score of 67 vs a course rating of 68.5 gives an “average” chance to win (68.5 course rating – 1.3 = 67.2). Getting to a net score pf 65 would be more likely to win.

2nd place in A or B flight would require about 68 or lower (68.5 – 0.0).

By contrast, D flight winners and 2nd place in D and C flights can be higher that the Course rating and still win. Why? Division 1 D flight frequently has low attendance. Fewer players, less competition, and higher scores will win. Flight C also has a little lower attendance and more variability in players skills week to week.

 

 

2018 Season Started – Pace Information

The new season is now officially underway.  All our 18 hole divisions (Div 1-5) completed the first tournaments.

Scores for Division 3, 4, and 5 are in.  Div 1 and 2 are in the mail.  Check out the top scores at OurGolfStats – CLICK HERE

We also have our first Pace of Play results for Div 1-4.

Generally we are doing well.  We did have a few groups that fell behind and slowed groups behind.

We will continue to measure Pace of Play.  Our targets are 4:30 pace with less that 15 minute finish gap for each group. Most groups already finish with less than a 10 minute gap.  Your Division VP will be able to help groups that are having problems.  Groups or individuals who are frequently “slow” will be warned and asked to improve.

Start Gap and Finish Gap are important indicators.  Div 3 had an average Start Gap of less than 7.7 minutes for 34 tee groups.  Other divisions averaged 1 to 2 minutes longer.  Taking a minute or two to each tee off simply delays everyone behind.  Adding 1 minute to each start tee off can delay the last groups’ start time by 15 to 20 minutes.

Almost everyone should be able to start their round about 8 minutes after the group ahead.

Please be at the start tee box ready to get started as soon as the group ahead moves off.  Start your tee off as soon as it is safe to hit.  Have everyone in your tee group ready to hit.  Don’t make the groups behind wait for you.

Division 1 at Incline Village.  We started with good weather, but had a 30 minute lightning delay.  We had only 19 tee groups (about 70 players) – due to lower headcount in Div 1 and distance to the course.  Adjusting for the delay and restart sequences, the pace was about 4:31, with the fastest group in at 4:20.  Start gap and finish gap both averaged 8.8 minutes.

Division 2 at Emerald Greens.  Strong turnout at 26 tee groups, about 100 players. Pace averaged 4:31, lead by about 10 tee groups in the front who finished in 4:15 to 4:20.  Unfortunately there were 6 tee groups, mostly  starting on the front nine who had big finish gaps – between 17 to 23 minutes.  Later groups who started on the front finished about 30 minutes slower than the late groups who started on the back nine.  Only one group finished over 4:50.  Start gap averaged 8.6 minutes, but finish gap was 10.7 minutes – indicating that the later groups were falling behind.

Division 3 at Aberdeen.  With excellent weather we again had a huge turnout – 34 tee groups, 130 players.  Average time was 4:38, a great time for this many groups.  Last year we had 4:31 average pace. The fastest group was 4:26.  Three groups finished between 4:50 – 4:53, two of these immediately followed the only group with a large finish gap > 15 minutes. Start time gap was 7.7 minutes and the finish gap was 8.1 minutes.

Division 4 at Wentzville. Turnout was strong with 31 tee groups, about 120 players.  Average pace was 4:38, again a good time.  Start time gap was 8.7 minutes average – groups were a little slower getting started.  Finish time gap averaged 9.4 minutes.  There were 5 groups with Finish gaps over 15 minutes.  The fastest group was finished in 4:20.  Unfortunately three groups finished over 4:50 and they did slow the groups following.

Division 5 – Data not yet available.

2018 Championship Tournament Brackets

The Championship Tournament for Metro Seniors is split into 4 “Brackets”, each one representing 25% of the total membership in Divisions 1 through 5 as of January 31.  All Metro Seniors members are required to renew their membership for the next year by December 31.  Then, each year on January 31, after all the renewals have been processed, the handicap index (or handicap guide as it is called in OurGolfStats.com) for all members are reviewed, and the lowest 25% determine the range for Bracket 1, the next lower 25% determine Bracket 2 range, etc.

These Brackets, unlike the Flights in each Division, do not change each week.  They are set for the year.  Golfers handicap guides may change after each time that they play, but these ranges for identifying the Brackets for qualifying for the Championship Tournament, do not change during the year.

Where one stands in qualifying for the Championship Tournament can be found by accessing the Weekly Results Directory for 2018 and clicking on the Championship Qualification link.  The top 75 qualifiers in each Bracket are listed on that report.  The report is updated weekly after the results of the Division tournaments are posted.  One must play at least 10 times in the first 18 weeks of the season in order to actually qualify.

For 2018, the handicap guide ranges for the 4 Brackets are as follows:  

Download (PDF, 93KB)

Holes In One for 2017

Back in 2016, we reviewed the Holes In One for the regular weekly seasons for 2013, 2014, 2015. We had 14 Aces recorded over 28,000 rounds of golf – 1 for every 1999 rounds.  CLICK HERE to see the details.

Click Here for a Golf Digest information on Holes In One.

So – how did we do in 2017.

6 Holes In One for regular weekly tournaments covering 10,109 total rounds.

1 Hole In One for every 1685 rounds played.  Plus we had another Hole In One at an extra outing.

We are still about halfway between the typical “amateur” and the “low handicap” golfer referenced by USGA.

Pretty good for a group with average age of 70 and average handicap of 20.

The 2017 Hole In One class:

Weekly Tournaments Division
Eldon Hulbert 3
Peter Knese 4
Roy Migneco 5
Rick Hines 5
Ron Deines 5
Brad Bradley 2
Ham and Beer Special  
Ron Pierson 3

Special note – these guys have handicap guides ranging from 17 to 26.  Three are in C Flights.

 

Results – Div 1 and 2 – July 7 – 2 Man Scramble

70 Golfers from Division 1 & 2 participated in the holiday 2 person scramble @ Deer Creek Golf Course to benefit the United States Veterans on July 7th. Organized by Larry Roth and Charlie Van Deman from Division 1, golfers for the most part enjoyed a golf course not part of our weekly tournament schedule.

Not including “skins” there were 41 different winners out of the field with 50 total winners.

CTP winners Jerry Wells-2838, Dan Loyd-1815, Ron Lipovsky-1633, Rod Hollenbeck-2327, Bill Kolar-1361, Bob Cooper-2555, Terry Johnson-2177, and Jim Pisoni-2290 were all $10.00 winners.

Each flight paid $60.00 1st place team, $40.00 2nd place team, $25.00 3rd place team, $20.00 4th place team and $10.00 for 5th place team.

In “A” Flight, 1st place went to, Mike Stoll-2643 & Jerry Moore-2717, 2nd Jerry Wells-2838 & Gary Pahl-2008, 3rd Bob Cooper-2555 & Gerry Rachels-2344, 4th Bill Kolar-1361 & Dan Loyd-1815 and 5th to Tom LeFaivre-1140 & Mike Smith-1288

In “B” Flight 1st place went to, Nick Meyers-2053 & John Morgan-2527, 2nd Ray Lowry-2438 & Jim Pisoni-2290, 3rd John Reinhardt-2369 & Bob Nelson-2472, 4th Jim Wilson-1482 & Bob Debrock-1120, 5th to Larry Roth-1080 & Charlie Van Deman-1515

In “C” Flight 1st place went to, Thomas Shadrach-2989 & Michael Ebert-2831, 2nd Charlie Page-2430 & Dave Pikul-2204, 3rd Bob McDaniel-1938 & Wardell Patterson-1947, 4th Mike Henry-2830 & Pat Smith-2550, 5th to Larry Beeman-1747 & Mike Campbell

In “D” Flight 1st place went to, Don Brandt-1311 & Rich Perschbacher-1738, 2nd Vince Italiano-1007 & Bob Seitrich-1249, 3rd Keith Brown-2252 & Terry Johnson-2177, 4th Glenn Young-2682 & Rod Hollenback-2327, and 5th to Brad Bradley-2070 & Ned Buckmaster-2071.

The 2 skins winners were the teams of Bob Cooper/Gerry Rachels & Larry Roth/Charlie Van Deman

 

Division 1 Birdie Pool Winners – Week 1 and 2 Announced

There were 5 winners in the “Birdie Pool” of $7.00 each from Emerald Greens, Congratulations to Greg Deen, Tom LeFaive, Mike Haywood, John Kalin and Vince Italiano.

There were 5 winners in the “Birdie Pool of $9.00 each from Columbia Golf Course. Congratulations to Steve Deen, Tom Lefaive, Ron Lipovsky, Larry Beeman and Mike Torrence.

Larry Roth

larry@lgr-sri.com
Please remember, you must place a completed scorecard from your round in the envelope at the end of the round. I will pick up the envelope from the previous week when I get to the course each week. I will then send everyone a email congratulating and announcing the winners. After that I will have your money. Good luck.

If you have not been paid please see me at your next tournament you participate in and I will have your money with me.

Access to OurGolfStats.com

Recently, something changed on the internet for OurGolfStats.com, causing all links that start with the world wide web prefix of www. to lose track of what league is being accessed. Any “links” or “bookmarks” or “desktop shortcuts” that you use to access OurGolfStats, should have the www. removed. We have tried to “re-direct” all www.OurGolfStats.com links to plain old OurGolfStats.com, but it looks like some access is leaking through.

Any time that you do get the wrong page, pressing the Ctrl key along with the F5 key should get you to the correct page. The key sequence Ctrl plus F5 tells the browser to go all the way back to the server to get the correct copy of the web page. Once all the search engines re-index OurGolfStats.com, they should have the latest versions of the web pages and you should not see the problem any more. “Should” is the operative word here.

The above key sequence works with Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer and Opera browsers. If you use the Safari browser, there are different commands for different versions of Safari. Try one of these

    Ctrl+Alt+E
    Opt+Cmd+E
    Cmd+Shift+R
    Alt/Edit/Empty Cache
    Settings/Clear Cache

Hope this explanation is not too complicated. We are continuing to find better solutions to this issue. If you have any specific questions, send them to CustomerService@OurGolfStats.com.

Quick Access to the Metro Seniors Weekly Results

Rather than accessing the many reports on OurGolfStats.com, many people just put a “shortcut” on their computer to the Metro Seniors Weekly Results Directory, which is at this web address – http://ourgolfstats.com/ms_weekly_results_dir2017.php

To build a shortcut on your computer’s desktop, put your cursor on an empty spot on the desktop, right-click the mouse to get options, left-click on “new” and then “shortcut”, and put the address above (starting with http) in the box for the address. If you built a shortcut last year, change the “dir2016” to “dir2017” for the 2017 Directory. To change last year’s shortcut, right-click on the shortcut icon, left-click on “properties”, then change the “2016” to “2017”.

The Directory of Weekly Results can be accessed each year in this manner.

Holes In One – Stats Had YOUR Ace Yet? (Revised)

Note: Revised again – for Aces not included in the online reports for Steve Sauter.  Sorry for reporting Jim Bausch in error – my source had a head cold.

Ever wonder how many Holes-In-One Metro Seniors Members get?  Are we getting more or less Holes-In-One than “average”?  Who had one recently? How about “Celebrating” these events a little more?

The most referenced numbers for a Hole-In-One on a Par 3 are:

  • Odds of an amateur making a hole-in-one: 12,500 to 1
  • Odds of a low-handicapper making a hole-in-one: 5,000 to 1
  • Odds of a professional golfer making an ace: 2,500 to 1

Assuming four (4) Par 3 holes per round, for each 18 hole round of golf the odds are:

  • Odds of an amateur making a hole-in-one: 3125 to 1 per round
  • Odds of a low-handicapper making a hole-in-one: 1250 to 1 per round

How does Metro Seniors stack up to those odds?

From 2013 through 2015, we played a total of 28,000 rounds of golf.  We had 14 Aces paid out.

Drum Roll Please!

That is 1999 rounds for every Ace:  1999 to 1 per round

About half way between the “average” amateur and the low-handicapper.

It is most interesting, that the number look like they are improving.  But, I may be missing some data.

  • 2013 – 1 Ace  (bad year for aces)
  • 2014 – 5 Aces
  • 2015 – 8 Aces

The fourteen players who made these are:

2013 Div 2 Patrick Wampler
2014 Div 1 Jack Hipolito
Div 1 John Ammon
Div 2 Bill Molz
Div 3 Bill Riley
Div 1 Richard Bourisaw
2015 Div 1 Wardell Patterson
Div 1 Steve Sauter
Div 4 Allen F. Rector
Div 4 Donald J. Lemp
Div 5 Ed Rodgers
Div 5 Cap Kovarik
Div 5 Michael Walters

Division 1 has the most at 5, but Division 5 had 3 in their first year.

Now for those quick enough, thirteen players, 14 Aces. Hmmmmm

Yep, Allen F. Rector should have bought a lottery ticket. He got TWO (2) Aces this past year.

So how we get our Holes-In-One?  Play More (and perhaps pray more)!  Get that handicap down to 5, play 1250 rounds, and you’ll get it.  That is only 60 rounds per year for 22 years.

Now the final question – did they all buy the foursome a round?????