Archive for May, 2009

There’s no such thing…

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

How often do you hear (or use) the words “line of flight?” Would it surprise you to know that there is no such thing? The concept is often called upon (incorrectly) to determine a place to drop a ball that has gone into a  water hazard or is unplayable in some other way.

If your ball is in the water and you need to put another ball in play, you must take your drop based on where the ball last crossed the margin of the hazard. You have two options if the hazard is a direct hazard and is marked in yellow: 1) replay the shot; or 2) go back as far as you’d like on an imaginary straight line  beginning at the hole and going through the point on the margin where your ball last crossed. If the hazard is marked in red, you have two additional options: 1) take two club lengths from the point on the margin where your ball last crossed (not closer to the hole); or 2) find the point equidistant from the hole and not closer to it  on the opposite margin of the hazard. All of these options are based on the point at which your ball crossed into the hazard, not the ball’s “line of flight,” and they all require taking  a one-stroke penalty.

If you’re in some other kind of awkward situation (i.e. under a large pine tree) and need relief, you have three options:  replay the shot;  take two club lengths from where the ball lies not closer to the hole; or, keeping the ball between you and the hole, go back as far as you like. These options also come with a one-stroke penalty.

Winter Rules

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

We’re now playing golf in Minnesota! And with spring golf comes the question of “winter rules,” that nebulous privilege of being able to move your ball in your own fairway if you find it lying on a bare spot.

Harvey Penick, one of the game’s all-time greatest teachers, when asked by his college team players whether they would be playing winter rules that day, replied with this: “Well, are you going to play golf or some other game?”

There are a number of reasons I choose not to play winter rules even if others in my group are doing so. The most important is just what Penick said above. It’s not real golf. Secondly, moving the ball can develop into a very bad habit to the point where you mentally can’t get past a bad lie. If you never practice hitting off a bad lie, you’ll never be comfortable with that shot.

Finally, there are all kinds of things that might keep you from hitting a good shot, including wind, rain, a loud noise, an uphill lie, a sore toe, etc. etc. Don’t make a big deal out of a bad lie. Mind over matter….