Notebook
General
Tournament Handicapping
Dress Code
Restaurants
DO NOT FORGET
Winning & Sandbagging
Pairings, Rooms, & Roommates
Pace of Play
Golf Rules
Day of Purchases
Weather, Bugs, & Weather Delays
Trophies & Awards
Registration
Registration Rules & Policies
Code of Conduct
Practice Balls
Registration Table
Bag Storage
Raven Map
Snowshoe Resort & Map
Beverages
Breakfast
Replay Round
Cornhole Teams
Event Rules
General Expectations
Money Handling
Cancellation Policy
Late-entries
Roommate & Playing Partner Policies
Code of Conduct
2+ Scorecard Policy
Golf Rules
Winning & Sandbagging

To some degree, the term "sandbagging" always finds its way into any handicapped event.

"Sandbagging" by definition is proactively posting higher scores than real, to gain an advantage in a golf tournament. Participants who use the term sandbagging in casual conversation are implying factual knowledge that a fellow golfer is a cheater.

Sandbagging does not occur at the Carl Spackler Open, but prior to the event. A participant who accuses a golfer of sandbagging or circulates rumors of sandbagging is implying he watched or experienced cheating prior to the event and ignored it.

The Carl Spackler Open is not designed to reward a golfer who plays better than his statistical averages. It is designed to recognize a single golfer who has played better than everyone else who are all playing against their statistical averages. To win this event, a golfer would almost certainly post scores that are not believable to anyone including himself. THESE UNBELIEVABLE SCORES BY DEFINITION WILL RESEMBLE SANDBAGGING.