On a recent Golf Monthly staff day out, I paired up with a member of the team who was receiving 45 shots (my handicap is 5.0 and I received six shots). Competing in a better ball format, we came in with 38 points, both contributing to the overall score and finishing in the middle of the pack.

The attempted levelling of the playing field through WHS means that every golfer from professional to beginner can compete with and against each other on any course around the world. It’s what makes golf so brilliantly unique.

It sounds perfect doesn’t it? And yet, to my mind at least, the handicap system has never felt as under fire as it does right now. If my inbox is anything to go by (please let me know what you think in the comments box below), there seems to be two main points of contention: 1) lower handicappers generally feel like they can no longer compete in handicap competitions and 2) some golfers are using the WHS to manipulate their handicaps. These complaints are hardly new and yet, perhaps because of the rise of social media, the disquiet surrounding them has become impossible to ignore.

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A handicap table with various figures

(Image credit: Future)

The essential question is, in a sport that is largely self-policing and with such varying abilities competing at the same time, can the handicap system ever truly level the playing field?