65 par 1340 yards 72.0 rating 115 slope
Tees | Par | Slope |
---|---|---|
White | 58 | 58 |
Red - Women | 58 | 58 |
The Lakes at El Segundo/Topgolf Fact Sheet 9-hole executive golf course with: Lighting for golfing at night.
146Chambers BayClub informationPar72Length7,585 yards (6,936 m)Course rating78.1 (Teal)Slope rating146 (Teal)15 more rows
In the Amateur, Chambers Bay proved to be hard, both in the firmness of its dry fescue turf (Jones called his fairways, “hardwood floors”) and its difficulties around and on the windswept greens. For the U.S. Open, the firmness and surrounds were more manageable, but the greens were notoriously bumpy.
Stenson then went on to discuss how physically difficult Chambers Bay is to play — a 10-mile walk with so many elevation changes that you climb up — and walk down — more than 600 feet. That's 50 feet more than marching up the Washington Monument.
While frequently unused by new or casual golfers, slope and course rating are two of golf’s most important, and most commonly confused numbers. These two numbers might be a seemingly random arrangement of numbers on your scorecard, but in reality , they are two of the great equalizers in the game of golf.
While the course and slope ratings of a golf course are unlikely to change dramatically, they are usually re-evaluated every 4-5 years.
This scorecard shows the course rating (first number) and slope rating (second number) for each set of tees at a course.
It turns out that that statistically, no matter how easy or hard a course is, scratch golfers will almost always shoot in the high 60’s to low 70’s. While this might not seem like a big deal, having a very narrow spread of scores even on courses that are much easier or harder than average ones creates a rating that underestimates changes in course difficulties for the rest of the golfing population. However, they also realized that this phenomenon was the exact opposite for mid-high handicap golfers. While one course might only play slightly harder in the eyes of a scratch golfer, less proficient golfers might find their scores to be significantly higher on this new, harder course.
If you’re interested in calculating your handicap for a particular course, multiply your handicap by the course rating divided by 113. This will adjust your handicap to the difficulty of the course.
For example, if you have two courses that each have a course rating of 72, they should be the same difficulty for a scratch golfer. However, if bogey-golfers on course A averages a score of 90 while bogey-golfers on course B average a score of 95 the slope rating for course B would be higher than for course A; indicating a higher level of difficulty for higher handicap players.