Back in issue #2 of Flying Horseshoes,
we explained how the handicap system works in our horseshoe pitching
club. So has it worked the way we said it does? Following
is a quote from the handicap issue of this newsletter:
“In effect the
handicap system does not necessarily reward only those who are better,
but it mostly rewards those who are getting better. Wow, what a
concept! A system that favors those individuals who show
improvement over their “average”, rather than a system that only
rewards those who are the best.”
The average score of a pitcher in our league if their average is
pitched and added to their handicap is between 66 points and 69
points. However, we have seven pitchers who are averaging between
69.3 points (with hdcp) per game and 74.3 points (with hdcp) per
game. How can this be? It has happened because these
pitchers, more often than not, pitch a night of three games above their
game averages. When their handicaps go up a point or two, they
continue to improve their game averages the following weeks and score
more for their team than what their average plus handicap would give
them (66, 67, 68 or 69 points).
Who are the pitchers who are showing improvement? Our top 30 feet
pitcher is our vice president Frank Adams who is averaging 74.3 points
per game with handicap added. Our top 40 feet pitcher is our
president Sam Payne who is averaging 71.3 points per game with handicap
added. It happens that Frank and Sam also have the best ringer
percent in the club at this point in time, 39.0% and 32.8%
respectively. But week after week with few set-backs, they have
each pitched over their average, lowered their handicaps, but in the
meantime given their teams extra points over 66 to 69 points.
Averaging 70.6 points per game, I’ve found lately that I struggle to
throw my average and give my team the 68 points that my average with my
handicap is designed to achieve. Clarence Warthan and Ron
Stockberger are pitching a total points average per game of 70.1 and
69.8 respectively. Following closely behind them is Norm Morris
(pitching from 30 feet) at 69.4 per game and Keith Smith at 69.3.
The rest break down as follows:
R. Smith 69.0
P. Smart *30 ft.* 68.8
R. Impson 68.6
D. Estes 68.2
B. Querry *30 ft.* 68.2
B. Plass 67.2
A. Furr 67.1
S. Johnston 66.9
K. Russell 66.9
L Fish 66.9
D. Spray Jr. 66.7
D. Lungsford 65.0
So to answer the question posed in the beginning of this article, I
would say the handicap system in our club is working fine. We
have had some very exciting and close evenings of play between
different teams and the more accomplished pitchers have not had a
noticeable advantage, unless they were showing improvement from week to
week in their own games.
The combined team total averages per game with the eight teams that we have are as follows:
Adams-Morris 143.7
Payne-Wolf 141.9
Warthan-K. Smith 139.4
Stockberger-Querry 138.0
Smart-R. Smith 137.8
Impson-Russell 135.5
Fish-Johnston 133.8
G. Furr-Plass 131.9
With this system in place, any team can beat any other team on a given
night, if the pitchers on the winning team out-pitch their own averages
enough compared to how the losing team pitches around their averages.
Even the standings at this point in time do not totally correspond to or reflect the above team averages:
1 Payne-Wolf 40 12
2 Adams-Morris 37.5 14.5
3 Fish-Johnston 30.5 21.5
4 Smart-R. Smith 28 21
5 Querry-Stockberger 22 30
6 G. Furr-Plass 20 32
7 Russell-Impson 18.5 33.5
8 Warthan-K. Smith 16.5 27.5
Remember, all of this is dealing with averages over a period of 13
weeks. As I said, on any given night, one team might really be up
for the contest and out-pitch the opposing team; not caring what their
opponents’ position is in the standings, the personal pitching
abilities of their opponents, or any other factors. They might be
able to pitch better on that night and want to win badly enough.
That is what has made this season interesting.
The other statistic I found interesting was the percent of a pitcher’s
shoes that score, either for a 3 points ringer or 1 point. Some
of the top pitchers in this category are:
88% F. Adams
82% S. Payne
71% K. Wolf
70% R. Smith
69% R. Impson
68% K. Russell
67% B. Plass
66% R. Stockberger
62% C. Warthan
Beginning with the 5th week of pitching (first 4 weeks being used to
establish handicaps); Individual and team, game and series, records
with handicaps are presently as follows:
High Individual Game With Handicap
F. Adams 88
P. Smart 85
R. Stockberger 83
N. Morris 82
R. Impson 82
S. Payne 82
K. Wolf 82
High Team Series With Handicap
F. Adams-N. Morris 464
P. Smart-R. Smith 448
K. Wolf-S. Payne 439
B. Querry-R. Stockberger 432
K. Russell-R. Impson 427
The top High Game scores without handicap (also counting only games pitched after pitching for 4 weeks) are as follows:
F. Adams 67
S. Payne 56
K. Wolf 52
R. Impson 51
Statistics have been fun to keep this year as we have everything set up
on Excel spreadsheets. The spreadsheets do all the work for
us. We only have to key in the individual scores and ringers per
game for each pitcher and update the standings after each week of
pitching.
Curt Day Club House gets new look
Ron Stockberger deserves most of the credit for spending much of his
time painting the club house with white paint and Teeny Bikini Blue
trim. Keith Smith also spent some hours helping with this
project. Some of the rest of us spent a few hours painting, but
Ron took it on himself to see to it that we had a look to our clubhouse
that would make us all proud of our entire facility. Ron even
spent quite a bit of time helping rake the entire court to get it ready
for the Hot Dog Festival Tournament. He has become quite an asset
to our whole club in his capacity as a “Get ‘R Done” guy. Thank
you Ron for a job well done!
Keith Smith was the one who leveled our Curt Day Horseshoe Courts sign
and did a very good job. A few months ago, Frank Adams went
around to all the courts and painted the backstops with white
paint. Pete Smart has helped prepare the courts for our two
tournaments this year as well as paint the yellow stripes on the first
six courts for the 30 feet pitchers.
Besides the contribution of the gravel that Sam Payne poured into the
parking lot near the road, he continues to lead our club with the
leadership that a club needs to be successful and fun to participate in.
We are getting all our ducks in order to present horseshoe pitching to
this community, in a way that will attract many new pitchers and even
some who might have left the fold for a number of years. With the
nucleus of voluntary workers we have in the club now and the good
spirited enthusiasm we get from all our members on league night, we are
positioned to bring this sport back to the awareness of this community.
I hope that our members and others who have had the opportunity to read
some or all of our Flying Horseshoes newsletters have enjoyed the
materials we have presented for your reading enjoyment. I enjoy
writing these newsletters and presenting them to our members and the
public in an effort to promote the sport of horseshoe pitching.
Also, for those who have Internet access, the Curt Day Horseshoe Courts
web site continues to draw attention to and email from folks around the
country and I’ve even answered email from a Canadian. Curt Day
was a champion in every sense of the word and it is an honor to be able
to honor him and his horseshoe pitching achievements over his own life.
The state of Indiana and its horseshoe pitching organization (INHPA)
was also long overdue to have their own web site, displaying its long
history of great horseshoe pitchers and records in the sport. The
Official home of the Indiana Horseshoe Pitchers Association is located
at the Internet web site of
http://www.geocities.com/indianahorseshoepitching. I presented
the site to the president and the vice president of the INHPA.
They liked it and I’m fortunate to be the creator and editor of the web
site, where we can show off our current and past state pitchers to the
rest of the country and the world. It is listed on the National
Horseshoe Pitchers Association web site on their Indiana page.
A lot has been accomplished in the last year towards promoting our
sport in our community, in our state and in the country. Those of
us who pitch at the Curt Day Horseshoe Courts have a great legacy in
the person of Curt Day, who spent many many hours of his life
perfecting his own game on the very courts that we pitch on each night.
Our 6 O’clock Tuesday night league usually has between four and six
pitchers who show up for a more casual format of pitching. As we
discussed in issue #3 newsletter, we pitch two 40 shoes partner games,
with each pitcher pitching their own horseshoes and we walk back and
forth to each pit.
Each of us has the opportunity in our daily living to find potential
horseshoe pitchers and encourage them to come out and share in the
activity that the rest of us are enjoying.
Let’s not keep it entirely to ourselves!