There is nothing like playing: shooting the lowest score, being with your friends, enjoying the moment or whatever else you find satisfying about playing the game.
So, point blank, how long should it take?
It’s a loaded question with a lot of variables.
How many holes are you playing? How busy is it? How many people are you playing with? How expensive is it? How much time can you devote to it given everything else going on in life?
But let’s make some assumptions.
You are playing 18 holes. You don’t have to wait on anyone. Cost is reasonable. The only time factor is how much you want to spend playing golf. Add playing partners to this scenario or don’t.
I believe the perfect amount of time is 3.5 hours
I believe the perfect time investment for an 18-hole round in these conditions is three and a half hours.
The longer the round stretches past this time window, the more antsy I get. This means we have likely been waiting on groups ahead (or, worse, a particularly slow golfer in our own group). The round is dragging.
Honestly, anything beyond four hours is unpalatable. In my golf utopia, there is no waiting on shots for more than a few moments.
I believe in the sign posted on the first tee at Seminole—”Play well, play fast. Play poorly, play faster.”
If you are a beginner or a bad golfer, take a certain number of shots (double par) and then pick up. Take a quick look for lost balls and then move on. Use common sense.
However, I also think there is a sliding scale where rounds taking shorter than three and a half hours result in a worse experience.
Keep in mind, this is specifically for 18 holes on a regulation course (I love playing fewer holes and that is a different conversation).
If you are playing 18 holes in two hours, that is not enjoyable to me.
I get that there are a lot of people who want to cram in as many holes as possible. They only have so much time to get in 18 holes, so they are willing to scramble around. Good for those people.
Personally, even in the scenario where I would be a single on an empty course, I would prefer to still take closer to 3.5 hours to play the 18 holes.
Life moves so fast that I just want to chill. Be out in nature. Maybe I’ll listen to music. Maybe I’ll do some short-game practice or re-try certain shots. Maybe I’ll take my time on each shot and work on my pre-shot routine.
I’m not saying it has to take exactly 3.5 hours—but that’s how much time I want to spend.
And in a scenario where I was a part of a foursome with an empty course ahead of us, I would still want to be there for 3.5 hours.
That’s plenty of time to focus on each shot, have conversations, come up with different formats/matches and not feel rushed.
Ready golf, not speed golf.
I feel like golfers are sometimes guilty of bragging about how fast they play or aspiring for the fastest rounds possible.
I want to play in rhythm but I’m also not trying to set any pace of play records, if that makes sense.
When I’m finished, I want to feel like I played a full round
There is a fulfilling, satisfying feeling of playing 18 holes of golf.
It’s not the only way to play the game, but it’s one of my favorites.
I love that feeling when you come back home and you are a little bit sweaty or sun-kissed or slightly sore or whatever feeling you have from being outside playing golf.
That feeling where you go to bed at night and think back on all of your shots (“I had 144 to the hole on No. 7 and I should have hit a 9-iron instead of an 8-iron”).
To me, that feeling gets diluted the further you get from 3.5 hours in either direction.
Agree? Disagree? Let me know below in the comments.
The post The Perfect Length For An 18-Hole Round Of Golf Is Three And A Half Hours appeared first on MyGolfSpy.
Article Link: https://mygolfspy.com/golf-talk/the-perfect-length-for-an-18-hole-round-of-golf-is-three-and-a-half-hours/