AlaskanDame: Luckystar5: . I know in our club, the lower tiers played a lot more 2 weeks ago, than they are now. So if just a few don't play as much, then participation is down, multiply that many in ur club alone, times all the other clubs, it would amount to quite a few, monies lost by wgt.
Totally agree with this.
Not sure I agree though that taking fewer points to reach the same place on the leaderboard means overall participation is down. When fewer birdies and eagles are scored, then fewer points are awarded, esp. lower top ten multipliers. (e.g., 120 x 10 on a tough course = 1200, where as on an easier course 200 x 10 = 2000 --- and on down the top ten). When all clubs have tough time, won't the leaderboard shift accordingly to lower points all down the spectrum to achieve placement (i.e., top 10, top 50, top 100)?
To a certain point, yes what you say plays into it, but there are the lower tiers that normally might play that dont, that plays into it also. I have been working with a couple of other clubs, and between us we have come up with a conclusion, that in order to attain the same point level, for a designated placing on the leaderboard, we would have to play a little over 13 clashs, to reach that same point total. Take just 30 players, that say would average 40 points when they play, one free pass would be 1200 points then use maybe 7 clashs out of 11, that's 8400 points, if they don't play, that's what u lose. Take that 8400 points and add it to your total under nasty conditions, and point total comes back up. Some lower tiers play more than that, but not under nasty conditions. If every club had just 5, players not playing due to the conditions, times how many clubs that play the clashs, participation is down. Easier conditions, these same players will play more than their free pass, participation is up, so is the point standings.
I've also kept track of stronger clubs when they play against us, and when conditions are easier, the number of players against us is higher, than under these types of conditions. Again, participants are down.