horseracing.com wrote:...The origin of the practice is credited to one Admiral Henry John Rous, a steward of England’s historic Jockey Club, who in the 1860’s devised the Weight for Age Scale (often abbreviated to WFA)...
Golfers have apparently used the word for about 140 years. It doesn't seem to have hurt that sport. It has been used even longer in horse racing, and they don't seem to be adversely affected by it. ( dare I say handicapped by it? ) So I see no need to change our use of it.popeofslope.com wrote:...the Scots also invented handicapping, that almost unique apparatus that allows players of any skill level to compete fairly against one another on the identical field of play...
The term handicapping originated in horse racing; a jockey was handed his odds for the race in a cap (hand-in-cap). But the concept far preceded the word. Early on, the act of allowing strokes in golf was called "assigning the odds," and was done by the precursor of the modern Handicap Committee Chairman, who was called "adjustor of the odds."...
In the 1870s, English clubs adopted the term "handicap"; events with odds were called "handicap contests" or "handicap tournaments." ...
Where is the "I don't feel guilty, so don't change it" option?