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Nassau sand trap
Nassau sand trap






Pretty similar to what we teach for the short game. Like I said, the Utley books are pretty good. Which… I won't link to, and rarely ever do. We've never sold our books on Amazon, FWIW. Enough people have called it really good things (I don't even want to type them out, I feel silly doing even that), though, that I'm semi-comfortable with that book's place in the world. I worry that it'll seem over-hyped, and can't possibly live up to expectations.īut we've sold over 25,000 copies, and I think it's some of the best $30 you can spend on your golf game (if only because so few things in golf are ≤ $30). Even I kinda feel odd with everyone singing the praises. I'm pretty big into the "imposter syndrome" stuff. I look forward to hearing your true thoughts on the book. I don't really have a list beyond that, though. They're better than the James Sieckmann stuff (but similar in the technique). I think the two Stan Utley books are worth reading. Because so much of my learning has been by talking with others, watching videos and asking questions, or observing other lessons. I don't have a big list, mostly because I take bits and pieces from all over the place. We are working on Nassau bets and Nassau bets with two down automatics. You put the number next to the golfer's name in one block and their opponent's number next to their name in the second block and it tells you who wins and by how many (match bet) and closes the bet when there is no chance for the other person to catch (3 up with 2 to play). It calculates net skins, but a net cannot beat a gross skin.Įach sheet has a normal match call bet application at the bottom. It can also be changed to count lowest gross ball too. The worksheets calculate the net lowest score for the team on each hole (either counts two of the best or three of the best). If you have three or four man teams, they will be listed by alphabet and number in the far left column. You enter the golfer, their handicap, and their gross scores. At 50 players, it pays out eight places) and figures for ties and equal splits of the pot.ģ. It uses a table on a different page to calculate the the total number of players and how many places paid (if you have 10 players, it pays three places 16 players, pays four places 25 players, pays 5 places, etc. It also calculates gross and net skins (both get paid). Then, it calculates 1/2 peterson points quota on the front nine, 1/2 peterson points quota on the back nine, and total peterson points quota for the entire round. It ranges from a +4 handicap to a 18 handicap for skins and 22 handicap for peterson points quotas.Ģ. It uses formulas to determine the person's handicap and where their strokes fall. It uses the number of golfers and a set amount per person (each person pays 25 matchsticks and it is split between the two pots).

#Nassau sand trap skin

It calculates their total score per nine holes, per 18 holes, peterson points quota, skins (net skins, but a net cannot beat a gross skin (if an 18 handicap gets a 4 net 3 and a 5 handicap gets a gross 3, the gross three holds)). My brother and I have developed a few spreadsheets (excel) for some games at our club.ġ.






Nassau sand trap