Some things in golf are genuinely confusing. Handicap math, rules relief, launch monitor numbers and shaft specs are not exactly simple.
Other things are not that complicated but golfers still mix them up all the time. Here are 12 golf concepts I’ve seen golfers confuse through the years and the simple difference that matters.
Handicap Index vs Course Handicap
Most golfers say “handicap” when what they really mean is Handicap Index. Your Handicap Index is the portable number that represents your demonstrated playing ability. Course Handicap is what that number becomes when you apply it to a specific course and set of tees.
Your Handicap Index is converted into a Course Handicap using Slope Rating, Course Rating and par. That Course Handicap represents the number of strokes you receive from those tees. In other words, your Index travels with you. Your Course Handicap changes depending on where you play.
That’s why a 10.0 Index is not always “getting 10 shots” every time they tee it up.
Course Rating vs Slope Rating
Course Rating and Slope Rating are both on the scorecard but they don’t mean the same thing.
- Course Rating tells you how difficult the course should play for a scratch golfer under normal conditions. The USGA gives the example of a 71.2 Course Rating meaning a scratch golfer can expect to shoot around 71 when playing well.
- Slope Rating is more about how much harder the course plays for a bogey golfer compared to a scratch golfer. A course can have a modest Course Rating but still have enough forced carries, trouble and uneven lies to make it much more difficult for higher-handicap players.
Scramble vs Scrambling
A scramble is a format.
Scrambling is a stat or skill.
In a scramble, everyone on the team hits, the team picks the best shot and then everyone plays from that spot until the ball is holed. MGS explains the scramble format exactly this way: everyone tees off, the team selects the best shot, all players hit again from there and one team score is recorded.
Scrambling is what happens when you miss the green in regulation and still save par. One is usually played in charity events with drink tickets and questionable scorecards. The other tells you whether your short game is bailing you out.
Best Ball vs Scramble
This one gets mixed up constantly.
In best ball, everyone plays their own ball for the entire hole and the team uses the lowest score.
In a scramble, everyone plays from the best shot location. So if you hit your drive in the trees during best ball, you still have to play your own ball unless your partner already has the hole covered. In a scramble, you can usually just pretend that drive never happened and play from the best location.

Fourball vs Foursomes
These sound way too similar for formats that are completely different.
Fourball is basically better ball: two partners each play their own ball and the lower score counts for the side. The USGA explains that each side has two players, each player plays their own ball and the lower score among the partners is the team score for the hole.
Foursomes is alternate shot. The partners play one ball and alternate strokes until the hole is finished.
Gimme vs Conceded Putt
A gimme is a casual agreement. A conceded putt is an official match-play action. In a Saturday morning game, your group might say, “that’s good,” and let you pick it up. That’s fine if everyone agrees to it.
But under the Rules of Golf, a true concession happens in match play. The USGA says that in match play only, you may concede your opponent’s next stroke, the ball is considered holed and the concession cannot be declined or withdrawn. So a gimme and a concession may look the same but they are not the same thing. In stroke play, if you are playing by the Rules, you need to hole the putt. I once played with a guy who thought a gimme was “free.” If you told him his putt for par that just missed was good, he’d write down par.

Penalty area vs Out of bounds
A penalty area is not the same as out of bounds. Penalty areas are marked red or yellow and are part of the course.
Penalty areas and out of bounds are not the same thing. If your ball is in a penalty area, you can play it as it lies or take relief outside the penalty area for one penalty stroke. Out of bounds is different. Under the standard Rules, a ball that is lost outside a penalty area or comes to rest out of bounds requires stroke-and-distance relief, meaning you add one penalty stroke and play again from where the previous stroke was made.
Some courses use the optional Local Rule that allows a two-stroke drop instead but only when that Local Rule is in effect.
Loft vs Dynamic loft
Loft is the number built into the club.
Dynamic loft is the loft you deliver at impact.
OEMs determine static loft but the player determines dynamic loft. Dynamic loft is the amount of loft delivered to the ball at impact. So two golfers can hit the same 30-degree iron and create very different ball flights. One player may lean the shaft forward and deliver less loft. Another may add loft through impact and launch it much higher.
Club Path vs Face Angle
Golfers love blaming club path, especially when they slice it. Path matters but it is not the whole story. Club path is the direction the clubhead is moving through impact.
Face angle is where the clubface is pointed at impact. Face angle is responsible for about 75 to 85 percent of where the ball starts, while the curve comes from the relationship between face angle and path. That means the ball usually starts closer to where the face is pointed, then curves based on how the face and path relate to each other.

Attack Angle vs Launch Angle
Attack angle is what the club is doing. Launch angle is what the ball does.
Attack angle measures whether the clubhead is moving up or down at impact. A more positive angle of attack generally produces higher launch, less spin and more distance with the driver. Launch angle is the angle the ball takes off after impact. It is influenced by attack angle but also by loft, dynamic loft, strike location and speed.
Club Speed vs Ball Speed
Club speed is how fast the clubhead is moving. Ball speed is how fast the ball comes off the face. Club speed gives you potential. Ball speed tells you how much of that potential you converted into the ball. Some of the best clubs are the ones that consistently turned higher clubhead speed into higher ball speed.
Shaft Torque vs Shaft Flex
Golfers use “too stiff” or “too whippy” to describe almost anything they don’t like about a shaft but shaft torque and shaft flex are different things.
Shaft flex is about bend. Shaft torque is about twist.
Torque is a measurement of how much a shaft twists under a prescribed amount of force. The lower the torque number, the more the shaft resists twisting. Flex is also not as clear as golfers think. There are no universal standards for shaft stiffness, meaning one company’s stiff can be another company’s regular or X-flex.
Final thoughts
Some golf concepts sound almost the same. They are not. And once you know the difference, the game starts to make a little more sense. If you want to learn more golf terms check out our full glossary here: More Than 100+ Golf Terms (A-Z)
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