The Rules of Golf are tricky! Thankfully, weâve got the guru. Our Rules Guy knows the book front to back. Got a question? Heâs got all the answers.
At a recent tournament, the driving range was adjacent to the first tee. In his warm-up, a player who hadnât seen the course before was hitting balls from the range onto the first fairway to see if he could clear a pond hazard on his opening drive. Clearing the pond leaves a flip wedge; playing short or to the side of it requires a longer approach. Since he was gaining course knowledge, is he penalized for playing the course on the day of the tournament?
âAndy Brown, via email
It feels like he should be penalized â that this should be treated differently from the guy who accidentally slices one onto the course from the range.
And yet, perhaps unsatisfyingly, it isnât.
Rule 5.2 indeed prohibits practicing on the course prior to the dayâs round. Despite where his practice shots ended up, however, this player is making them from the designated practice area, not from on the course in breach of Rule 5.2.
Even though he may have gained insight, itâs not a breach. That said, if there are golfers on the course while heâs doing this, itâs dangerous and worth a pointed remark to the player â or finding the committee in charge and asking them to have a word with him.
For more guidance from our guru, read on …
I play year-round here in Colorado. Come winter, it can be hard, and sometimes impossible, to get a tee in the ground, so I use a rubber tee like the ones at driving ranges. Is this permissible â and, if so, is it permissible year-round? I like that the ball is always the same height at address, and my drives are more consistent as a result. âDean Marraccini, Niwot, Colo.
You want to know where the rubber meets the road, Rules-wise.
As long as your rubber tee doesnât exceed four inches in height, itâs perfectly acceptable to use, regardless of the ground conditions.
Keep burning rubber on those tee shots and you might just turn into a trendsetter.
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