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Post by zzfr33b1rdzz on May 24, 2024 10:57:10 GMT -5
If you want to know the problem, find a mirror and wave. It's you Mark. It's not the time of day, weather, velcro cup grabbing gravity arm things. Its not Maverick and Goose buzzing over your house in F16s or your sore hands either. Its also not the the non-forward putting swinging whatever the hell you are trying to explain thing, or the the game, its not the lighting, the society, the green speeds, or the color of your frigging golf balls either. Its you. I have my putting speed and tempo locked in to never miss a putt on the most common green speed. I don't try to adjust to other green speeds. Once you put the ball on the golf hole, you have no control of if the ball goes in the hole. It is a computer process entirely determined by the speed of your connection and luck! again, not true. You have the answer in your own words - "I don't try to adjust to other green speeds." = if you don't adjust, you're doomed. So please, we get it, you won't change because that's what you've always done. No need to keep posting about the game being broken.
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Post by meunier33 on May 24, 2024 21:04:00 GMT -5
This is a really wonky question about the weather report, but why list default as the green speed when fast is the default and this can be read on the course description page?
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Post by Nicholas254 on May 24, 2024 22:38:42 GMT -5
This is a really wonky question about the weather report, but why list default as the green speed when fast is the default and this can be read on the course description page? DUDE!!!! Why cant you get it. ITS NOT THE GAME! I dont normally do this but $%#@ cmon ITS NOT THE GAME!
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Post by Nicholas254 on May 24, 2024 22:39:21 GMT -5
We have tried helping you over and over and over again.
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Post by DoubtfulObelisk on May 25, 2024 0:27:58 GMT -5
This is a really wonky question about the weather report, but why list default as the green speed when fast is the default and this can be read on the course description page? DUDE!!!! Why cant you get it. ITS NOT THE GAME! I dont normally do this but $%#@ cmon ITS NOT THE GAME! I don't think that's an entirely fair response to this question. I know it's similar to ground we've covered many times before, but I can understand how this particular detail might be confusing. Let me try to explain, meunier33 : When schedulers set up a course, they have six options for green speed: Very Slow, Slow, Moderate, Fast, Very Fast, and Default. The Default speed is set by the designer of a particular course and can be any value between 104 feet and 186 feet. To reiterate, the Default green speed changes from course to course and depends entirely on the setting chosen by the person who made the course. The other five remain the same no matter what: Very Slow is 104, Slow is 117, Moderate is 134, Fast is 155, and Very Fast is 186. Now, the course description page may say a course's default green speed is "Fast", but the speed listed on that page is functionally useless. Your best bet is to simply load up a round and view the green speed while playing the course. I cannot emphasize that enough. Do not pay any attention to the "speed" listed on the description page. In case you don't know how to view the speed while on the course, it's very easy. You change your club to the putter and look at the number in the top-right part of the screen (that is, the number that usually indicates the maximum yardage you can hit a given club). As an example, the Default speed for South Homer Bluff, the site of the upcoming American Open qualifying, is 161. That's shown as "Fast" on the description page, but in reality it's 6 feet faster than the "Fast" listed on the Weather Report. The Weather Report lists green speeds for the event as Default, Fast, and Very Fast, so you know there will be at least one round at 155 (Fast), at least one round at 161 (Default), and at least one round at 186 (Very Fast). I hope this helps. I know it can be a fairly tricky concept, and things would be so much easier if the description page just listed the exact green speed. Alas, things don't work that way. Let me know if you have any additional questions.
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Post by Nicholas254 on May 25, 2024 1:20:55 GMT -5
DUDE!!!! Why cant you get it. ITS NOT THE GAME! I dont normally do this but $%#@ cmon ITS NOT THE GAME! I don't think that's an entirely fair response to this question. I know it's similar to ground we've covered many times before, but I can understand how this particular detail might be confusing. Let me try to explain, meunier33 : When schedulers set up a course, they have six options for green speed: Very Slow, Slow, Moderate, Fast, Very Fast, and Default. The Default speed is set by the designer of a particular course and can be any value between 104 feet and 186 feet. To reiterate, the Default green speed changes from course to course and depends entirely on the setting chosen by the person who made the course. The other five remain the same no matter what: Very Slow is 104, Slow is 117, Moderate is 134, Fast is 155, and Very Fast is 186. Now, the course description page may say a course's default green speed is "Fast", but the speed listed on that page is functionally useless. Your best bet is to simply load up a round and view the green speed while playing the course. I cannot emphasize that enough. Do not pay any attention to the "speed" listed on the description page. In case you don't know how to view the speed while on the course, it's very easy. You change your club to the putter and look at the number in the top-right part of the screen (that is, the number that usually indicates the maximum yardage you can hit a given club). As an example, the Default speed for South Homer Bluff, the site of the upcoming American Open qualifying, is 161. That's shown as "Fast" on the description page, but in reality it's 6 feet faster than the "Fast" listed on the Weather Report. The Weather Report lists green speeds for the event as Default, Fast, and Very Fast, so you know there will be at least one round at 155 (Fast), at least one round at 161 (Default), and at least one round at 186 (Very Fast). I hope this helps. I know it can be a fairly tricky concept, and things would be so much easier if the description page just listed the exact green speed. Alas, things don't work that way. Let me know if you have any additional questions. I agree with that.
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Post by Demonondalinks on May 25, 2024 2:58:16 GMT -5
DUDE!!!! Why cant you get it. ITS NOT THE GAME! I dont normally do this but $%#@ cmon ITS NOT THE GAME! I don't think that's an entirely fair response to this question. I know it's similar to ground we've covered many times before, but I can understand how this particular detail might be confusing. Let me try to explain, meunier33 : When schedulers set up a course, they have six options for green speed: Very Slow, Slow, Moderate, Fast, Very Fast, and Default. The Default speed is set by the designer of a particular course and can be any value between 104 feet and 186 feet. To reiterate, the Default green speed changes from course to course and depends entirely on the setting chosen by the person who made the course. The other five remain the same no matter what: Very Slow is 104, Slow is 117, Moderate is 134, Fast is 155, and Very Fast is 186. Now, the course description page may say a course's default green speed is "Fast", but the speed listed on that page is functionally useless. Your best bet is to simply load up a round and view the green speed while playing the course. I cannot emphasize that enough. Do not pay any attention to the "speed" listed on the description page. In case you don't know how to view the speed while on the course, it's very easy. You change your club to the putter and look at the number in the top-right part of the screen (that is, the number that usually indicates the maximum yardage you can hit a given club). As an example, the Default speed for South Homer Bluff, the site of the upcoming American Open qualifying, is 161. That's shown as "Fast" on the description page, but in reality it's 6 feet faster than the "Fast" listed on the Weather Report. The Weather Report lists green speeds for the event as Default, Fast, and Very Fast, so you know there will be at least one round at 155 (Fast), at least one round at 161 (Default), and at least one round at 186 (Very Fast). I hope this helps. I know it can be a fairly tricky concept, and things would be so much easier if the description page just listed the exact green speed. Alas, things don't work that way. Let me know if you have any additional questions. Well explained Griff!
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Post by meunier33 on May 25, 2024 12:47:04 GMT -5
The TGC practice society is no longer being maintained.
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Post by moneyman273 on May 25, 2024 15:58:17 GMT -5
The TGC practice society is no longer being maintained. You're wrong.
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Post by zzfr33b1rdzz on May 25, 2024 18:47:06 GMT -5
Now, Griff explained it very well. But it comes down to whether or not meunier33 will change his habits to adapt to the green speeds. We shall see in coming posts..
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Post by r0nrun on May 26, 2024 10:43:48 GMT -5
Sir Markus Plantation is up and running prefered to be played in high to very wind try it or deny it
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grimbo
Weekend Golfer
Posts: 102
TGCT Name: Grahame Billington
Tour: CC-Am/TST
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Post by grimbo on May 26, 2024 11:08:55 GMT -5
SUPER SAINTS! 👀
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Post by xcltaff1980 on May 26, 2024 13:44:40 GMT -5
RIP Grayson Murray. Another person taken his on life. Great golfer and gone too soon 🙏
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Post by meunier33 on May 26, 2024 13:50:21 GMT -5
The TGC practice society is no longer being maintained. You're wrong. I looked it up and there were no events scheduled as far as I could see. Am I looking at the wrong one? This one says "TGC Practice". Oldmangaming's society has stopped posting events since two weeks ago also.
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Post by Demonondalinks on May 26, 2024 18:15:33 GMT -5
I looked it up and there were no events scheduled as far as I could see. Am I looking at the wrong one? This one says "TGC Practice". Oldmangaming's society has stopped posting events since two weeks ago also. Dear OldManGaming606 A little help for our friend.
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