Why is a handicap so important? See how the USGA has made it easier than ever to get one

Those with handicaps play more rounds, spend more on golf, and consider themselves to be passionate about the game.

(Editor’s note: This is the first of a four-part series explaining the mission of the United States Golf Association, all in advance of the U.S. Women’s Open, the U.S. Open, the U.S. Adaptive Open and the U.S. Amateur. The USGA, which governs the game of golf in Mexico and the United States, serves a number of functions. What exactly is the USGA? Why is the organization important? This series delves into these questions and others. This initial article looks at handicapping, which the USGA provides, and how it helps to unify players.)  

Ever since the World Handicap System was established on Jan. 1, 2020, the USGA has been on a mission to make obtaining a handicap easy and accessible.

“Four months ago, it wasn’t that easy,” said Steve Edmonson, the USGA’s managing director of handicapping and course rating.

That may have something to do with the fact that the number of golfers with handicaps – 2.86 million in 2021 – has been static for the better part of the last two decades. But the USGA has instituted several popular features to the Golf Handicap Information Network (GHIN), a service offered by the USGA to allied golf associations worldwide. By addressing the wants of its users, the GHIN app continues to push boundaries and the USGA is bullish that the percent of card-carrying handicap golfers will increase 50 percent — to 75 percent of golfers — said Gareth Londt, the USGA’s managing director of product, data and technology.

New system makes it easier

Beginning in February, any golfer in the U.S. can sign up for a Handicap Index by visiting USGA.org/getahandicap. Previously, you had to find your state and regional golf association. In Ohio alone, there are five state and regional associations to consider. The USGA will now direct users to the appropriate AGA.

Moreover, new golfers are issued a handicap faster, needing only to post scores for 54 holes in either nine- or 18-hole increments. Previously, the USGA didn’t issue a handicap; it was issued instead by a golf club. It was a fragmented structure. Now the USGA has a national pulpit to promote handicaps that beforehand it lacked.

“There’s no excuse,” Londt said. “Everyone has an internet browser, everyone has a mobile phone, and everyone is connected through the world wide web. Three clicks and you can have a handicap. There’s no longer the need to get off your sofa and get in a car and drive to a green-grass facility. You can do it while you are watching the U.S. Open.”

In a 12-week period and without heavy promotion, 30,000 golfers already have registered for a handicap.

Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer
Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer look over a scorecard during a practice round in 1974. Photo by Associated Press

The USGA’s GHIN product has some competitors but of the 58 Allied Golf Associations, only two don’t use GHIN products. The USGA licenses the handicap indexes to the AGAs for a nominal fee (free to juniors) and those AGAs are allowed to mark up costs based on their perceived market value in their own community.

The USGA also set a high watermark of no more than $80 across the US (in some states it costs less). The money generated from handicapping is intended to fuel local programs that engage golfers.

The history of handicaps

The USGA’s adoption of the handicap system dates to Oct. 11, 1911, the year of the first Indianapolis 500, back when Cy Young wasn’t an award but a pitcher who had just notched his 511th and final victory. The handicap system has become one of golf’s great distinctions, whereby participants of different skill – whether male or female, young or old, and even from separate tees – can compete fairly and equitably. In no other sport is it feasible for players of all skill level to play on equal footing.

In golf, a handicap is a measure of a player’s potential. For some, it is proof of progress, for others of incompetence and the deterioration of skill. It is a golfer’s photo I.D., allowing admittance to local, regional and national competition.

The system has continued to evolve ever since and received its latest reboot in 2020. Golfers no longer have to wait two weeks for their updated index. Now it is updated on a daily basis or faster than one can lose a sleeve of balls. Last year, it added hole-by-hole scoring via mobile devices while you play, which reveals how many drives hit the fairway, how many putts per round and other stats that can be tracked.

More recently, a distance-measuring device and green-reading materials that were banned at the elite level through a new Model Local Rule, but comply with the game of golf and can be beneficial to the recreational game are gaining in usage. (A free piece and an extended version for golfers who want to upgrade are available.)

2021 U.S. Amateur
Young fans watch the action on the 7th hole during the round of 16 at the 2021 U.S. Amateur at Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pa. on Friday, Aug. 13, 2021. (Jason Miczek/USGA)

In early June, the USGA will be adding an Apple watch function that will allow golfers to see front-middle-back yardages to the green and allow golfers to input their hole-by-hole scores and record stats. It will be especially appreciated at clubs that don’t allow phones on the course. What do golfers want most? Surveys conducted with their customers indicate it’s data. While there are numerous products that do this, the USGA is anxious to provide these features in one app.

The USGA has poured $100 million in handicapping over the last 5 years – inclusive of WHS and GHIN –with the lion’s share directed to the GHIN/innovation/technology side. The handicap index is a key cog in the USGA’s effort to unify the game.

Handicaps equal engagement

A survey conducted by Jon Last of Sports & Leisure Research Group, which provides custom research and market analysis, found that those with handicaps significantly out-index those without across key demographics, engagement with golf and related behaviors. For instance, those with handicaps play more rounds, spend more on golf, follow the game more closely and consider themselves to be “passionate” about golf.

As a result, the USGA is motivated to grow the number of golfers with handicaps. But there are still too many golfers who don’t have a handicap because they believe they don’t compete in tournaments, they aren’t good enough or don’t play enough.

Part of the plan is to demystify why a handicap is needed in the first place, and that begins with changing the nomenclature that a handicap is only needed by elite golfers to play in competitions.

“There’s a perception that you have to be a good player or competing in competitions,” said Edmondson. “That’s just not true.”

The USGA knows that the average handicap for a male is 14.1 and 27.7 for a female. Ninety percent of golfers with handicaps are male. It is pouring resources into attracting a new audience, particularly with women – the move to 54.0 as the max handicap embraces high-handicap females – juniors and public golfers.

2021 U.S. Girls' Junior
Bailey Davis react to her tee shot on the 16th hole during the quarterfinals at the 2021 U.S. Girls’ Junior at Columbia Country Club in Chevy Chase, Maryland, on Friday, July 16, 2021. (Kathryn Riley/USGA)

Edmondson said he sees an opportunity to look at off-course play and promote the importance of handicaps beyond competitive means. In the not-too-distant future, the USGA will debut a “Play Games” feature, which will integrate match play, Stableford scoring and other USGA-approved formats.

“It’s all interconnected to get more people to use the app and grow the community,” Edmondson said. “You need a handicap to be part of the community.”

[listicle id=778165409]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=none image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

USGA puts an Alaska championship on the books for 2022, checking off its final state

The USGA’s state bingo card will be full in 2022, when the USGA visits Alaska for the first time to host the U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur.

The U.S. Golf Association has been growing its “states visited” list since for more than 100 years. The organization conducts 14 championships annually, and takes them to all corners of the United States.

The bingo card will be full in 2022, when the USGA visits Alaska for the first time to host the U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur.

Upon completion of that event at Anchorage Golf Course, the USGA will have hosted a championship in all 50 states, in addition to the District of Columbia. Both of those locations join the list of places that have only hosted a single USGA championship (a list that also includes Idaho, Maine, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Utah and Vermont).

“It’s a monumental occasion for us to bring a championship to Alaska, something that has been a long time coming,” said Mike Davis, CEO of the USGA. “Players from all over the country dream of becoming USGA champions, so it is important we bring our events to all corners of the United States to expose golfers and golf fans to the inspiration and competitiveness of our championships. We’re so thankful to Anchorage Golf Course for working with us to make this dream a reality.”

Anchorage Golf Course delivers the views you might expect in scenic Alaska. It’s a public golf course designed by Bill Newcomb that sits on a hillside overlooking the city of Anchorage. The fairways are rolling and tree-lined, and the views of surrounding mountain ranges – including Denali, the highest peak in North America – are stunning.

Anchorage Golf Club is No. 1 on the list of Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play, state by state.

“We’re thrilled and honored to be a part of this historic moment and become the first golf course in Alaska to host a USGA championship,” said Rich Sayers, general manager. “To showcase to the world what sort of golf we have here in Alaska, and demonstrate both the challenge and beauty of our golf course on such a grand stage, is something we cannot wait for. The championship can’t come soon enough.”

The U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur is open to any female golfer 50 years of age or older whose Handicap Index does not exceed 14.4. The field will consist of 132 players.

Lara Tennant of Portland, Oregon, has won the past two U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur Championships, defeating Australian Sue Wooster both times to do it. The championship was canceled in 2021 because of the pandemic.

[lawrence-related id=778068455,778067429,778067190]

Mike Davis is leaving the USGA to pursue lifelong passion in course design

Mike Davis is leaving the USGA. Though not immediately. The USGA has announced that Davis will step down as CEO at the end of 2021.

Mike Davis is leaving the USGA. Though not immediately, or even this year. The USGA announced on Tuesday that Davis will step down as CEO at the end of 2021 to pursue a new venture with Tom Fazio II in golf course design and construction. The transition has been in the works for some time.

“It’s something I’ve wanted to do,” said Davis of a passion that started with doodling golf holes. “It’s the right time I think for the USGA too … there’s been a lot of change the last decade.”

Davis, 55, joined the USGA in the spring of 1990. When he was promoted to executive director in March 2011, Davis told his wife Cece that he would devote 10 years to the position and then move on. Three and a half years ago, Davis shared that timeline with the executive committee. About a year ago, he said, a search committee was formed. A search firm has since been retained and the organization hopes to have a successor on board by May of next year, June at the latest.

In the months following his departure from the USGA, Davis said he plans to spend time with Gil Hanse and Bill Coore on some of their current projects. His new firm will be called Fazio and Davis Golf Design, LLC.

“I’m closer to 60 than I am to 50 and still have years left,” he said, “and I just felt like if I didn’t do it, I’d regret it.”

USGA executive director Mike Davis prepares to putt at Pinehurst on the eve of the 2014 U.S. Open.

There’s plenty of work left to be done over the next 15 months. On the heels of bomber Bryson DeChambeau dismantling Winged Foot over the weekend, focus returns to the Distance Insights project, a subject of great passion for Davis that has been underway for roughly three years.

“What’s happening with distance over the last 100 years and what’s happening with golf courses that have followed,” he said, “that’s moving golf in a wrong direction in terms of its long-term health, which is one of the reasons we took it on ourselves, along with the R&A, to say we need to make some changes for the future.”

As Davis continues to navigate the organization through the impacts of COVID-19, he’ll work to bring the new Golf House Pinehurst to life and help create a smooth transition for his successor.

Thirty years ago Davis was working in commercial real estate in Atlanta when the USGA called out of the blue. He was first hired as assistant manager of championship relations in 1990 and took over as U.S. Open Championship director in 1997, becoming senior director of rules and competitions in 2005.

After becoming the USGA’s seventh executive director in 2011, the affable Davis was named the organization’s first CEO in 2016.

“I think he’s really been a transformational leader in somewhat of a quiet way,” said USGA president Stu Francis.

[vertical-gallery id=778067447]

Davis’ mark as a set-up man for the U.S. Open, a role he relished but relinquished in 2019, includes the implementation of graduated rough, a greater risk/reward component in the drivable par 4 and the mentality of firm and fast.

He took a lot of heat in recent years for the greens at Chambers Bay, the Dustin Johnson ruling at Oakmont, the generous fairways at Erin Hills and two years ago at Shinnecock, when strait-laced Zach Johnson said the USGA had “lost the golf course.” Davis admitted in 2018 that they’d misjudged the wind and created conditions that penalized well-executed shots.

Social media has fueled criticism in recent years, though Davis long ago learned how to chalk that up as part of it.

“Sometimes you can’t win,” he said, “because if you set it up too hard, the players don’t like it. If you set it up too easy, the fans don’t like it.

“I think you do need a little Teflon for the job.”

Noteworthy undertakings in his near decade at the top include spearheading the rules modernization, the new World Handicap System, the creation of the USGA Foundation, four new championships (U.S. Senior Women’s Open, men’s and women’s U.S. Amateur Four-Balls and a championship for disabled golfers, still in the works), the anchoring ban and the ongoing distance report.

Billy Payne, Chairman of Augusta National Golf Club and Masters Tournament, Peter Dawson, Chief Executive The R&A and Mike Davis, Executive Director United States Golf Association, pose with the trophies during the 2014 Latin America Amateur Championship in Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photo: Amilcar Orfali/Getty Images)

Davis began his conversation with Golfweek with a tidbit on Francis Ouimet and later pointed to sustainability as one of the game’s biggest challenges going forward.

“We’re all going to be long gone,” he said, “but 100 years from now, what’s golf going to look like? Are we really going to be able to take 250 acres and continue to maintain them and use water the way we are?”

Francis says Davis acts the same in broader settings as he does in intimate ones. A thoughtful, strategic thinker who listens and works to build consensus rather than dominate.

Working for the USGA, Davis says, has been a dream job. Running the U.S. Open, which he attended with his father as a teenager, almost seemed too good to believe.

His best days on the job include witnessing firsthand all nine of Tiger Woods’ USGA championship victories, spending an hour on the phone with Mickey Wright and dinner for three with Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus.

That last pinch-me-moment came in 2013 when Nicklaus met Davis at Merion for a quiet hole-by-hole trip around an empty course on a Monday. For years Nicklaus had questioned Davis on whether Merion was long enough to host the U.S. Open.

They later flew to Latrobe, where Palmer picked them up at the airport. Over dinner at Latrobe Country Club, two of Davis’ childhood heroes offered their perspectives on the game and shared stories about his predecessors at the USGA. The next day they flew by helicopter, with Palmer as co-pilot, to Oakmont Country Club to shoot a documentary for the USGA, landing on the tennis courts.

“I will never forget that,” said Davis, who is building a home in Jupiter, Florida, where he and Cece plan to live full time.

Who could?

[lawrence-related id=778067417,778047015,777959688]

USGA announces more flexible family policy

The USGA will apply the policy, a result of feedback from top players like Stacy Lewis, to all 13 of its championships.

The USGA has announced changes to its family policy. The new more flexible plan allows players who have earned a spot in a USGA championship either through qualifying or exemption the option to defer his or her place in the championship for one year due to maternity or paternity.

The policy is in line with the LPGA’s recent changes, in that players can lock in their status, or in this case world ranking, before going on maternity leave. Stacy Lewis was among the players who provided input.

Last year the USGA offered Lewis and Brittany Lincicome, both new moms, a spot in the U.S. Women’s Open field in lieu of a policy change. USGA officials promised to take a fresh look at its maternity policy, and they delivered.

“Updating our family policy was an opportunity to support players as they welcome new family members and also to go a few steps further,” says John Bodenhamer, Senior Managing Director, Championships. “We are pleased to have a policy that affords players more balance between parenthood and competing at the highest levels.”

Players can also request an additional one-year extension based on special circumstances.

Lewis was No. 33 in the world when she went on maternity leave in 2018. The two-time major winner had competed in 12 consecutive U.S. Women’s Opens, finishing in the top 3 on three different occasions. During that stretch, she won a dozen LPGA titles and spent 25 weeks at No. 1.

She’d finished no worse than 21st on the money list since 2010 before quitting mid-year in ’18 to give birth to daughter Chesnee. She finished the season at No. 99 and was staring U.S. Women’s Open qualifying in the face before the USGA offered her a spot in the field.

Under the new policy, Lewis’ ranking of 33rd would’ve easily gotten her into the 2019 contest.

“I was thrilled when the USGA asked me to participate in the process to update the policy,” said Lewis. “Last year, I experienced the challenges that new parents often face and was fortunate that the USGA worked with me for my circumstance surrounding the U.S. Women’s Open. As players, we want a fair and inclusive policy, and that is exactly what this reflects.”

The policy applies to all 13 USGA championships.

“It’s super nice,” said Lincicome. “You never know how you’re going to come back, how your body is going to feel. When you get into it, especially your first child, there are so many what-ifs. You already have so much pressure to get your body back.”

[opinary poll=”which-of-these-pete-dye-courses-is-your-” customer=”golfweek”]