This greatly broadens the area in which players may move casual obstacles. This change responds to requests from players that the rules grant the ability to clear casual obstacles from a larger area to accommodate a run-up.

C. The following actions also violate the above standard. Players who commit one or more of these violations will not receive a warning. and will be immediately disqualified by the Tournament Director: . . . 4. Public display or use of alcohol at PDGA events sanctioned at B-Tier C-Tier or higher, or of marijuana cannabis (other than as permitted by the CBD Product Use Policy) at PDGA events sanctioned at any Tier level, even where otherwise lawful or permitted, from the two-minute signal to the time the player's scorecard is submitted. This rule does not apply to Leagues, where, if local law and event venue rules permit it, players of legal age to do so may consume alcohol during the round (see 1.14.C.4).


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The TD will need to clarify their intentions in this situation. If the course rules are unclear, use a provisional. In general, if the edges of the water are the OB line, then if the disc is completely within that area regardless of the item it is resting on, then the disc is considered OB. The out-of-bounds line extends a vertical plane (806.02.F). If any part of your disc is over the in bounds shore, then your disc is in bounds.

D. . . . The above options for an out-of-bounds area may be limited by the Director only with prior approval from the PDGA Director of Event Support. Whether or not prior approval has been granted, during tournament play players must still observe the course rules announced by the Director.

A:

No. Note that the interference and position rules are written in terms of a disc being moved rather than merely touched. The other player did not change the location of your disc. In fact, a disc must sometimes be manipulated in order to determine its status or whose it is. If you move your possibly OB disc, it is automatically OB. But there is no corresponding rule that makes it automatically in-bounds (nor automatically out-of-bounds) if someone else moves it. If that happens, you restore your disc to its approximate position as agreed upon by your group.

This clarifies that Tournament Officials may carry digital copies of the rules, as well as that the prohibition on Tournament Officials who are playing making calls in their own division applies to all Tournament Officials, not simply appointed ones.

E. If an appointed any Tournament Official competes in the tournament, they may NOT not officiate for any ruling within their own division other than as a member of a playing group as allowed by the rules.

The NFHS offers digital rules publications through NFHS AllAccess. You can access/purchase digital publication from AllAccess.org and download the AllAccess mobile app on the Apple and Google Play stores, while print publications can be purchased on NFHS.com.

The IGF Olympic Golf Regulations (version 20 July 2021) provide the official rules and regulations for the Olympic Golf Competition. They include both field of play policies and procedures as well as Olympic-specific regulations. An addendum addressing COVID-19 regulations was developed especially for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.

Clothing and shoes worn by athletes shall be consistent with currently accepted golf fashion. A policy on Athlete Uniform Guidelines may be found within the IGF Regulations. Clothing shall be in conformance with the Olympic Charter in particular in accordance with the golf-specific application of the Guidelines regarding Authorised Identifications (Olympic Charter, Rule 50).

I really didn't think this method during a scramble format was against any rules until I heard this and it actually makes sense. My instinct at the time was to tap it in only because I was within "gimme" range and that my marker may affect the next shot attempt-I simply wanted to get out of the way and that would be the "normal" thing to do when playing a regular type of round and not in a scramble.

I'd like to hear your thoughts, opinions on this matter and or maybe even get the true "skinny" on the rule. Our group has yet to participate in a formal tournament, but if we do, I want us to play & practice by the rules at all times, so...Set us straight Spies!!!

I am fine with tapping it in. It speeds up pace of play, which is a big deal right now. Scrambles are just for fun anyway. If for some absurd reason the USGA adopted a scramble format tournament, it would be against the rules to tap in and then let others try to make the first putt.

Once a putt is holed the hole is over and the score counts regardless if there are more attempts. That being said a lot of times scrambles are just hit a giggle type tournaments where the rules of golf are taking for granted. However is you are playing in a formal tournament that includes a scramble where the rules are taking seriously don't hole out.

As we headed back into the room he said, "You remember the pre-tournament pow-wow, and how I mentioned following USGA Rules other than what was noted on the tournament's rules sheet your team got when y'all signed up, and I'm certain it mentioned marking your ball and putting out." And I nodded again.

Later, as I was loading my clubs into the truck of my car in the parking lot, and one of the players from the winning team walked up to me and said, "That was the most honest thing I've ever witnessed, but thanks a lot." We laughed. And he handed me his trophy he received, saying, "This is yours." And I said "how about we split it, and screwed the little golfer off the top and dropped it into my pocket and handed the rest back to him. And he said, "You're not going to mind if I keep the cash though, are you?" And we laughed some more, shook hands, and went on our separate ways.

That little gold golfer figurine sits somewhere on the trophy shelf, with a little piece of masking tape on which I'd scrawled with a sharpie, "always follow the rules." Great lesson and great reminder.

This is a great write-up RP, I really appreciate it and it helps me settle my question completely. As I said, even though we've not yet played in a tournament, I've always thought best to play by the rules in any given game or sport or whatever. Having this particular issue cleared up now will allow us to do so in the future and better prepare us for when we do make an attempt or 6. Thank-you!

Later, as I was loading my clubs into the truck of my car in the parking lot, and one of the players from the winning team walked up to me and said, "That was the most honest thing I've ever witnessed, but thanks a lot." We laughed. And he handed me his trophy he received, saying, "This is yours." And I said "how about we split it," and screwed the little golfer off the top and dropped it into my pocket and handed the rest back to him. And he said, "You're not going to mind if I keep the cash though, are you?" And we laughed some more, shook hands, and went on our separate ways.

Your self-proclaimed "gaff of etiquette" was technically a breach of tournament procedure plainly conveyed on the rules sheet. Despite being your team's A player and a self-professed "Teaching Professional", what began with the appropriately salient gasps of your teammates, implausibly culminated in your thinking "nothing more about it". The notion of a "Professional" ignoring the self-policing requisite in a tournament format turns my stomach; but you managed to take it to a whole new level with that drawn out and misleading allegory.

To be clear, your actions were the cause of an entire room of golfers to scream at one another about individual degrees of integrity. And while we're being technical, your team should have been DQ'd as a result of your attempted cheating. Yet somehow, the string of terrible choices leading up to being erroneously awarded a tie for 3rd place (presumably cheating the rightful 3rd place team out of half their prizes) and sharing it here years later, has you laboring under the false impression that your reminder to "always follow the rules" could ever pass for anything more than a hollow humblebrag. Regarding this particular scenario alone; believing any of your behavior up to the present (including the clumsily disguised self-praise in your recounting) could be framed as laudable is both laughable and ironic. 006ab0faaa

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