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Golf Stinks When Your Equipment Stinks

June 30, 2014 | By Chris Chirico | 2 Comments

th9Y615RPZThere once was a point when I thought the phrase “You get what you pay for” was true.  For a while, I thought just because something was more expensive, it must be better.  Well, all these years later, I now know better.  Sometimes the phrase does hold true.  However, it seems more often it doesn’t.  And now that I’ve had the experience over the years in golf, I’m going to say that this especially holds true in golf.

I probably don’t need to even mention the courses themselves.  How many times have you dropped $60 or so, only to find that the $35 course you played two weeks ago blew it away?  Happens all the time friends.  So, if I may plug ourselves here – that’s why we can all help each other out by signing up for a free Golfstinks account and posting some reviews of the courses you play.  Help out the next guy before he wastes his money.

But the courses themselves are not really the concern for me.  My concern today is more along the lines of the golf equipment we use.  Many of us pay more for certain equipment because we expect we’re getting something superior.  I’ve fallen victim to the game myself.  Let me give you three specific examples.  I’ll start by saying that I will not name the brand, however I will say that all three examples were from the same maker.

I’ll start with a simple golf umbrella.  Normally, I won’t play in the rain, which makes this even more stupid on my end.  But, I paid a little more to get the brand name rather than settle for a “lesser” brand anyway.  However, upon the second use…it ripped.  You know, it’s not like I was playing in gale-force winds or hurricane conditions.  So two uses?  I have since purchased a lesser brand and have had no issues.

Moving on to something more important…my golf shoes.  The tough part about buying a pair of shoes, not just golf shoes, is simply that you never really know until you try them for an extended period of time.  I can put them on and walk around the store for a bit.  But until I’m out walking the course…who knows?  So once again, I went with the bigger name.  Horrible mistake.  The first time I got these shoes out on the course, my feet hurt by the 11th hole.  And by the time I hit 16, I was ready to finish up the round barefoot.  Once again, I dumped one pair, spent $20 less on the next at the advice of the guy who worked at the store, and was satisfied.  I bought the same brand the next time.

But most importantly, obviously, is the golf clubs themselves.  For roughly the first twelve years of my golfing life, I played with the same inexpensive, off-the-shelf clubs I purchased from Sports Authority.  After I was done with them, I passed them along to one of my kids who is currently using them until he decides he wants to play more often and will then purchase a “better” set.  But my issue was, as much as I didn’t want to go ahead with the purchase of that same brand, I was encouraged by the pro who fitted me, plus, the price was just too good to beat.  All was good until just a couple of weeks ago.  Now, I’m down a club.  Hitting my approach shot on the final hole, I watched my ball sail beautifully toward the pin, but the head of my pitching wedge sailing about 15-20 yards out was more important at the time.  Yup, the head of the club snapped clean off the shaft.  Needless to say, I have now decided that I am done with this brand.

So what I’m saying is, shop around, do your research and ask questions before spending your money on anything. Just because the product comes from a big name doesn’t necessarily make it better.  Yeah, you get what you pay for…except when you don’t.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: golf clubs, golf course reviews, golf equipment, golf shoes, Sports Authority

Analysis: What Makes a Golf Course Great

March 2, 2011 | By Golf Stinks | 5 Comments

For the last year or so, Golfstinks has been collecting information on what makes a golf course great. We intend to apply what we’ve learned to the Golfstinks Golf Course Rating System, which will rank every course at the state/province level and at the national level.

Why would we want to do this? Well, for one, it would be cool to have rankings for every course, wouldn’t it? Think about this scenario; You’re traveling to a city and want to squeeze in a round of golf while you’re there, but which course should you play? Just zip on over to Golfstinks.com’s course search, filter by location and then sort by course rankings – voilà, instantly find the highest ranked course within your price range, pack the clubs and enjoy!

Anyway, we created a survey and posed some pretty basic questions, including “How often do you play?” and “How much do you typically pay for greens fees?” But the meat of our survey asked; “Of the following six criteria, which is most important to you?” Here are those criteria:

  • Difficulty
  • Layout
  • Grooming
  • Hospitality
  • Scenery
  • Price

Recently, the survey reached 100 responses (thank you)! We’ve taken those initial 100 responses and have begun looking at what you said about a great golf course experience.

Findings
First, let’s take a look at who took the survey: That would be predominantly males (91%) between the ages of 50-59 (28%). The second most frequent age group was 30-39 (23%), followed by 40-49 (22%). These golfers predominantly play at public/muni courses (56%) and average 50 rounds or more annually (24%). It should be noted that 22 percent of the respondents average between 30 & 39 rounds annually, while 20 percent of them average between just 10 & 19 rounds annually.

Now onto the meat and potatoes: Of the criteria listed above (based on three possible answers: Very-, Somewhat-, and Not Important), most respondents (74 out of 100) chose “Layout” as a “Very Important” feature of their hypothetical great golf course. In addition, 71 chose “Scenery” and 69 chose “Grooming” as also “Very Important.” This came as somewhat of a surprise to the Golfstinks team. We figured scenery and grooming would be very important to most golfers, but layout?

what makes a golf course great - golfstinks

We then asked respondents to rank the six criteria in order of importance to them (which forced them to reveal what they felt would be the most important feature of a great golf course). As with the previous question, “Layout” again proved important – receiving the most top votes (26). Then something interesting happened: “Price” garnered the second-most top votes with 24 (“Grooming” and “Scenery” only received 17 and 15 top votes respectively, placing them 3rd and 4th). What’s interesting about this is in the previous question, more respondents (49) felt “Price” was only “Somewhat Important” versus the 43 respondents that felt it was “Very Important.” Even more interesting, 23 respondents said “Price” was least important to them (which is just one less than those who felt it was most important)!

what makes a golf course great - golf stinks

Perhaps not surprisingly, course “Difficulty” is not very important. In fact, it received the most least important votes (33) of the six criteria. Meanwhile, many respondents (55) said “Hospitality” was “Very Important” to them. But when the next question forced them to rank it amongst the other criteria, it placed second-to-last.

Screen Shot 2013-11-20 at 1.01.23 PM

Some discussion on the findings:
While an appealing course layout is a matter of personal style, it’s clear golfers feel strongly about how a course is designed – even though individual opinions may differ from course to course (which makes it extremely difficult to establish what a good layout actually is). What we have learned is layout matters; and our ratings will reflect such.

Greens fees are another hard-to-guage area – it’s either the end-all, or just an after thought. To a good chunk of the respondents (26), price is everything – so much so, that cost was more important to them than any other course attribute (e.g. they’d rather the course be inexpensive than beautiful). Perhaps the current economy played a role in their answers, but remember, the whole point of the survey was positioned as “what makes a golf course great” – despite this, price was still an important factor to many, which is interesting. BTW, it should be noted that most respondents (46) said they typically pay between $40 & $60 for greens fees.

Conclusions
What we liked about this survey was how the first two questions checked each other. While our first survey question (asking if the 6 criteria were Very-, Somewhat-, or Not Important) established what an off-the-cuff reaction would elicit, the second question forced people to really think about which criteria was most important to them. In other words, we could have just casually asked a bunch of random golfers what their dream course would offer, but they would have just said the same for everything (e.g. good grooming, good layout, good hospitality, good scenery, good price). By forcing them to rank those criteria, we can now better pin-point what ingredients make a golf course great.

The survey did have some issues we hope to fix going forward. For example, our custom age ranges cannot be cross-tabulated with those from the US Census Bureau. In addition, it may be beneficial to have a question asking what makes a good course layout.

Overall though, these results are a promising start to weighting our course rating criteria. The original survey can be seen HERE. Feel free to comment below on how we can improve on our survey.

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: golf course ratings, golf course reviews

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