op prison giveaway :o
This topic contains 21 replies, has 12 voices, and was last updated by Anonymous 9 years, 3 months ago.
-
AuthorPosts
-
melee tell a joke
[edit] oh wait thats not possible
- This reply was modified 9 years, 3 months ago by ChillzKillz99. Reason: expected the impossible. rip
AnonymousJoke: how many failures are there in SGDQ 2015?
And yes Chillz, a negative net score is possible, in fact, it is better than a positive net score, because a person with a negative net score will win instead compared to a person with a positive net score…
Remember to chill lax and watch SGDQ 2015
AnonymousExplanation:
There are 18 holes in a golf course. By international standard gameplay, all 18 holes are played. The ideal number of each par scores are 6 3s, 6 4s and 6 5s. A par score is basically an ideal number of strokes to get a par, which is a term used to indicate that someone used that ideal amount of strokes. A golfer who gets all 18 par scores will get a stroke score of 72, and a net score of 0, because he has 0 offset from the total par score of 72…
There are special terms for small offsets from the par score. Birdie is used for a -1 offset, while Bogie is used for a +1 offset. Double Birdie is -2 while Double Bogie is +2. By common sense, Birdies are better because negative offsets win over positive offsets.
How do we calculate?
For the Stroke score, its easy. Just add up the number of strokes in the 18 holes…
For the net score, negative numbers come into play. For each hole, calculate the offset from the par (negative numbers are fine). Then, add up all the offsets to derive at an integer. A net score of 0 means the golfer is a perfect average, a positive net score means the golfer is below average, and a negative net score means the golfer is above average…
How do we determine the winner?
Usually, by international standards, the net score is used to determine the winner. However, for newbies, strokes are more commonly used, to get used to the basics of the game.
In terms of strokes, the golfer with the lower number of strokes is the winner.
In terms of offsets, the golfer with the lowest offset is the winner.
If there is a tie, usually in competitions, there is a tiebreaker. For causal gameplay, a tie may be declared instead.
Summary:
*Strokes: The lower the better*
*Offsets: Birdies > Bogies*
Hope this helps everyone to understand how golf is played in such a way that everyone will make educated guesses…
After a long winded explanation, everyone is probably tired, chill lax and enjoy SGDQ 2015 instead at:
AnonymousEdit button is gone -.-
Oops, didnt pay attention to my numbers carefully.
My entry:
Name: melee49
Rank: P8 Free (Halfway to P9-L)
Jmillz’ total strokes: 70
Friend’s total strokes: 77
Total Par Score: 72
Jmillz’ net score: -2 (This is possible)
Friend’s net score: +5
Btw Josh Miller, could you provide us the link instead of the image? Its too small, and we cant see the par table… Also, could you tell us whether you are playing first 9, last 9 or all 18? And hope theres a video of the results or the gameplay…
With a better image, we can analyse the course more carefully and accurately (with the par table), and give better and more accurate results, rather than joining in blindly…
Good Umbreon o’ Clock People!
Remember to check out SGDQ 2015 @:
Name: Tony412
Rank: I
Jmillz’ score: 12
Friend’s score: 15
A joke: A gang of default PCs enter a bar, the bartender say “get out of here, we don’t server your kind here”
I don’t know very much about golf
I’ll just revoke my entry in this, I don’t really need the money, nor the pickaxe.
Good luck, though.
Anonymous -
AuthorPosts
You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.