Should the club championship be stroke play or match play?
Stroke play
At my club, four rounds of stroke play decide the club champion for the year. I wouldn’t have it any other way as it establishes the best player and the rightful winner.
The vagaries of match play mean better players can easily lose out over an 18-hole sprint. A lesser golfer could produce a blinding performance and knock out the favourite, only to be beaten soundly in the next round as their form returns to normal.
It can be then that you end up with two unlikely candidates making it through to a disappointing final, not really representative of the talent in the field. It sometimes happens in the Wgc-match Play! In stroke play, the cream will rise to the top.
When Martin Slumbers announces the ‘Champion Golfer of the Year’ on the final green at The Open, there’s no doubt the honour is hard won, fully deserved and justified. That player has beaten all in the field to come out on top. At a slightly lower level (although it means a great deal to those involved), it’s the same. The winner should have beaten all entrants to earn their title.
A good thing about a stroke play championship is that more members will be involved competitively to the very end of the event. There might be a finals day when the last round of the men’s, women’s, juniors’ and seniors’ championships are all played. That means more people around the club to watch the final stages, better atmosphere and more chance of a party afterwards.
Each club has knockout tournaments, and these have an important place. Always throwing up some unlikely results, they’re great fun, but should be used to find ‘match play’ rather than ‘club’ champions. For the latter, only stroke play will do.
Match play
SAYS
The one thing you learn travelling around various clubs is that there is no set format for the club championship. At some it’s stroke play over a varying number of rounds; at others it’s straight match play; and at others still it’s a combination of the two, most typically stroke play qualifiers leading into a knockout phase.
There is obviously no right or wrong, and I’ve never been a member of a club where match play plays any role in deciding the club champion. But I’ve often thought I would prefer that.
Much as out on tour, a bit more variety would make for a nice break from a steady diet of club medals and Stablefords. But while there is a reluctance about too much match play on tour for fear of the ‘wrong’ players progressing through from a TV perspective, wouldn’t it be great at club level if the format allowed a few more members to become contenders?
Yes, the best players should still win, but they might not do so quite as often as in stroke play, where their greater consistency comes to the fore. A less good player on a hot streak or someone who mixes birdies with too many doubles might just prevail in match play, whereas a stroke play triumph will probably always just elude them.
My best ever finish in a 36-hole stroke play club championship was third one year when bad weather sent scores soaring in round two, but that’s about the best I could ever have done. Perhaps I’m deluding myself, but if the stars had aligned when I was in good form, I like to think I might just have had a bit more of a chance in match play.
In February, suffered a near-fatal car crash. He made his return to the PGA Tour the following season.
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Nineteen Eightyfour was first published.