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Home Golf

World Handicapping System: An ‘easy to abuse’ system or helping to increase golf’s popularity?

March 3, 2025
in Golf
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There are 722,000 golfers affiliated to England Golf through clubs and the number is continuing to rise. Since November 2020, 38m handicap scores have been submitted to the federation’s central database, with 10m in the last year alone.

Players do not have to be a member of a club to gain a handicap, and the Woodhall Spa based organisation offers it’s iGolf app as a means for an ever growing number of more nomadic golfers.

“We’ve seen an increase in the number of competition scores, general play scores, 18 holes scores and nine hole scores, which is great and long may it continue,” England Golf chief operating officer Richard Flint told BBC Sport.

Nevertheless grumbles abound and clubs are being encouraged to take action to maintain the integrity of their competitions. “Griping is a big word, but I think that those complaining are frustrated that it is different,” Tomlinson said.

“Golf has become a lot more inclusive in providing the opportunity for different people to win, and especially when their handicap is on the way down, while they’re getting into golf and getting better and better.”

Tomlinson added: “The handicapping system is about integrity. It is more transparent than it’s ever been because it is about the scores that you do. But there is a need for check and challenge.”

Sitting next to the England Golf boss, Flint nodded agreement. He said: “There is sometimes this thought that, oh, let’s just ban the higher handicappers from competitions because they’re always winning it.

“It’s a myth. Clubs can use the terms of competition and have categories, so everyone can play the competition from an inclusivity point of view. Have a prize for the low handicaps as well as mid and high handicapper.”

Several county unions are now insisting that more scores from competitions, rather than general play, are used to calculate low handicaps when determining eligibility for elite tournaments and representative teams.

“We reserve the right to be able to review any handicap that has more than four general play scorecards,” Tomlinson insisted. “We have denied players entrance to some of our championships because they’ve had too many general play cards.”

Tomlinson insists the authorities, including the R&A and United States Golf Association who brought in WHS, are keen to further the probity of the mechanism.

“The R&A are just about to bring out a specification within the system which will identify where they think manipulation’s happening,” he said.

“It’s another tool that the club handicap committee can use to address that issue. It’s not 100%, but it’s something that will help.

“Ultimately, any system – if people want to manipulate it, they will. It’s not the system that’s at fault, it’s the individuals.”

Tomlinson believes he is presiding over a growing recreational sport that profited from the bounce golf received by being the first sport people could play after the 2020 Covid pandemic lockdown.

As the nation shut down, hundreds of clubs in the UK feared for their future. Tomlinson sat in emergency meetings across all British sports. “We were inundated with clubs saying we’re going to rack and ruin,” he recalled.

“Amazing. From that point onwards, people were starting to think about their health. Golf clubs became inundated with people writing to them wanting membership, wanting to have playing rights.

“And I promise you that the back four weeks of that initial lockdown, I went to those meetings and I hardly said a word because I was watching in my sport compared to sports like swimming, athletics, even cricket that were suffering immeasurably because they weren’t able to open up their facilities.

“We were building something, and by 13 May when we came out of that lockdown, we’d almost got to zero with regard to our concerns up and down the country because almost every golf club was reporting in that they were filling up.

“And of course, by the end of that year, they were pretty much full with waiting lists. That’s what happened to golf from from the pandemic.”

Tomlinson believes his sport, at a recreational level, has been left far healthier as a result. More people are playing at every level, whether on traditional courses or at driving ranges, in simulators or at crazy golf courses.

He wants to exploit this enthusiasm to grow the sport by creating pathways from these fringe versions to actual courses, club memberships and handicap competitions.

Despite anecdotal grumblings, the figures stack up to suggest such movement is occurring. “And that’s brilliant,” he said.

“And to those crusty old golfers; we still love them. We still want to take care of them, but we need them to be a bit more progressive in their thinking.”



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