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Slow Progress

St Andrews Old Course Slow Pace of Play in Golf
© Chris Duthie Photography

TV ratings are down and golf participation has been flat at best. One big reason: Golf is slow, both to play and watch

Recently I played in a stroke-play club competition. My group of three happened to draw the first starting time on the Old Course: 7 a.m. None of us played particularly well, but when we walked off the 18th green, the big red clock on the side of the R&A clubhouse said 9:55. 

Granted, my two partners were low handicappers—one and three—and one was actually a professional race car driver, so he knew something about speed. But the truth is, we never rushed. Since it was a tournament, each of us took a bit of extra care in planning our shots. We also spent some time looking for miscues in the fescue, and of course we putted out everything. Nonetheless, we finished in less than three hours.

So why can’t the rest of the world play at that sort of pace? Mind you, I don’t expect everyone to move as quickly as I do (my game has been described as a cross between golf and polo) but there was no excuse for the time posted by the three-ball behind us. Starting at 7:10, they finished at 10:50—a full three holes out of position. Thus, every ensuing group was compelled to play at that pace. Sadly, golf has become unconscionably slow, even in St. Andrews.

The old-timers here are fond of recalling a time—not too many summers ago—when 54 holes a day was common. In an elegant essay, Bernard Darwin wrote of his annual September fortnight at St. Andrews when daily double rounds were comfortably navigated “in three hours—no more, no less.” In those days the starting interval on the Old Course was four minutes—now it’s 10.

So what happened? Why, in this 21st century society where every other aspect of life moves more quickly, has golf slowed to a snail’s pace? Why, despite the aid of motorized trolleys, gas-powered carts and yardages beamed up by satellites and lasers, is modern golf slower than ever? 



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