"999 Questions On The Rules Of Golf" - A Perfect Last Minute Gift For A Golfer
Looking for a an excellent last-minute gift for the golfer in your life?
2010 will long be remembered as the year that professional golf should be called "The Year of the Rules Gaffes." Indeed, tournaments large and small have been turned on their heads by players trespassing the Byzantine rules and decisions that govern the game, and often because they did not know that they were breaking a rule until it was too late. We saw Dustin Johnson lose strokes on the last hole of the 2010 PGA Championship thanks to breaking a rule, and we saw the record for penalty strokes assessed to player shattered when Ryuji Imada broke a local rule. Other tournaments on the LPGA, PGA and European Tours saw incidents of their own, large and small.
The rules still apply even in club competitions, of course, and even a mid-handicapper is expected to know them and to properly penalize themselves when they break a rule. Golf, at its core, is a game of honor where a player is their own referee, and as such, they are required to know the rules of the game and to apply them with integrity. Problem is, most casual golfers don't know the rules past a few basics. Reading the rules themselves is easy enough, but the rubber meets the road with the rules in the accompanying Decisions on the Rules of Golf - a huge book that is like reading a book of court decisions, dry, complicated stuff that is almost painful to read...and subsequently, very few players do.
Please read on for more...
\Golf’s rules are simple and can fit in the back pocket of any typical player. Reading through the USGA Rule Book might take two hours from cover to cover, and they are written in relatively plain and understandable language. The R&A’s rules are essentially the same – easy to read. But as it is with all things, the devil is in the details, and the "details" of the Rules of Golf are in its various "decisions." Those, known as the Decisions on the Rules of Golf, fill a relatively thick tome, and can cover anything from dangerous course conditions like snakes or hornets to smacking a ball back at the a member of the trailing foursome that just hit into your group…for the fourth time.
A golfer should ask themselves these questions about the rules of the game:
1. How well do you know them?
2. Why should you know them well? For your own good as a golfer. Follow the rules, you'll never be called a cheater, and also this: your opponent won't be able to pull the wool over your eyes and cheat on YOU.
We, as golfers, are expected to be relatively familiar with these rules and decisions and abide by them. When we attest to a score on a card for our Sunday foursome, we are attesting that the match was played according to Rules of Golf, the Decisions, and also to the local rules that cover the course we are playing. We then enter them into our handicaps, where again, the assumption is that an honest score was attained.
Remember, the rules are in place to protect you. They are eminently fair, and in a match, will provide an equitable solution to nearly any situation. By knowing them well, you’ll keep your opponent from possibly pulling the wool over your eyes, and at the same time, you’ll know the right thing to do and not set yourself back by breaking them.
The thing is, the official Decisions publications can read like the U.S. Code, the laws that govern this land. They are not exactly something you can curl up in bed with and have a good read before it’s time to turn out the lights, even if you are an attorney. You are still expected to abide by them, and there are indeed penalties for trespassing the law. Fortunately, as far as golf is concerned, author Barry Rhodes has simplified things for us. Rhodes is a bona fide expert on golf’s rules, and was the first person to achieve a 100% score on the Public Advanced Rules of Golf Examination run by British PGA. He’s an expert on golf’s sometimes arcane rules, and he’s done an excellent job in making them understandable.
In his new book "999 Questions On The Rules of Golf" you can learn about the rules and decisions in an easy way: Rhodes presents a given situation, ask a question about what to do, and then gives you the answer in a clear, understandable and non-legalese manner. Your brain won’t be taxed reading through his 999 questions, and you’ll find yourself learning as you go.
In the book, Rhodes presents 333 questions about simple situations that every golfer should know how to handle , no matter their skill level; 333 more challenging questions that tournament players and more serious golfers should know the answers for; and finally 333 advanced questions for people wanting to go in-depth and gain a deep understanding of the rules. The 999 questions are presented in three formats: true/false, Q&A and multiple choice, which keeps things lively and completely unlike a final exam. 999 Questions also features a thorough index makes finding a given situation a simple matter that takes only a few seconds, thus making it a handy reference book that one will visit time and again through the years. Rhodes writing is clear, concise and easy to follow. In short, the book is organized in a logical, sensible way, making it easy to locate something that you might be interested in, and easy to read when you do.
For example:
"Tee markers are deemed to be fixed and may not be moved under any circumstances. True or False?"
Do you know the answer? I didn’t. And once upon a time, it cost me dear.
Rhodes answer cites Decision 11-2/1, where the answer is false. The tee markers may not be moved until a player tees off. Afterwards, they are obstructions. So if you whack a tree and send your ball behind the original teeing location, you are entitled to move the marker if it is an obstruction to your next shot.
Bet you didn’t know that. As I said, I didn’t, and a couple of years ago, the exact situation that Rhodes describes happened to me in a match play event. There, I hit a perfectly awesome pull hook into a sign that flung my ball four inches directly behind one of the tee markers in a match play event. Funny, yes I know, but not at the time, not in the heat of battle. My opponent swore I couldn’t move the marker so I had to chip over it, and thus I couldn’t get my ball to the green on a par-3 as a result. He won the hole, I was steamed and now I wish I had known the relevant decision. I probably would not have had it memorized, but it would have stuck in the back of my mind, and I could have asked the Tournament Committee to clear matters up. But I had to have some familiarity with this particular oddball situation, which I didn’t. That left me at the mercy of an opponent, a bad situation in any event.
That’s why I can’t recommend Rhodes fine book enough. He covers that, another 998 situations and you will undoubtedly come across one or more situations that have happened to you on the golf course that was handled incorrectly. The next time you run across it, you’ll know, and you will be a better golfer for it. At $15.99 plus shipping from Amazon.com, this book is a bargain, and it should be a well-visited member of your bookshelf. I have had mine a little more than two months, and already it’s been used three times to settle on-course discussions. That’s saved me some Nassau money, and has paid for itself twice over already.
You can also read Mr. Rhodes’ fine web site at www.barryrhodes.com. If you are like me, you will quickly add it to your bookmarks and will find yourself visiting again and again.
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What's the rule about
“smacking a ball back at the a member of the trailing foursome that just hit into your group…for the fourth time”?? I’ve done that a couple of times in the past. Other times I’ve just gotten into my cart a drove back and confronted them….is there a penalty for that??
Signed: Lucky to be Alive……..:)
The Saints ARE the SUPER BOWL CHAMPS....WHO DAT!
I wish that had been an option
The worst time was on a day when it was terribly slow. The group behind had come close to us a couple of times, then on 18 we were waiting for the group on the green and here came a ball. It was rolling pretty good, and almost hit my wife. No warning from the group. Well I was torked that they almost hit her, so I wave my arms at them and then walked over to the ball and pointed to it. Then I teed it up, waved at them again and then nailed back toward them. It was cool watching them cover-up, but I didn’t hit it near them(purposely), but they couldn’t see it. We finished the hole and watched them “slowly” come up the fairway. They didn’t say anything to me…..must have thought I was crazy or something…..lol
The Saints ARE the SUPER BOWL CHAMPS....WHO DAT!
Em - that was EXACTLY the same question I wanted to ask ;o)
So what’s the answer?
Easing – I may be a rubbish golf player – but I’m a fast rubbish golf player. What is it with these people who can see that there’s no way I can play until the green has cleared?
Too late to order for Christmas – but I will definitely buy the book.
Charles – I once (& only once – so far, that is) hit a similar shot. It hit a metal marker and sounded like a gunshot. There was an appalled silence from the nice man waiting behind us at the tee & my playing partner. Then the little boy with the nice man, cracked up. We all fell on the ground & couldn’t play for at least 5 minutes through our tears of laughter. I don’t care if it was in the rules or not (wasn’t a competition), but I did play a perfectly good 2nd tee-shot (for 3) to much sardonic applause.
Wendy...who said you were rubbish ?
I read somewhere most players never break 90. You do. I also read the average handicap in Britain is about 18. Anyway…I’m not much better.
It's my usual riposte to being teased on the 1st tee
Always a bunch of blokes who shout out encouraging “C’mon, Wendy – get a move on” the moment I step onto the tee. I draw myself up to my full 60" and state “I’m entitled to one practice swoosh and I’m going to take it” . Followed by “I may be a rubbish, etc, etc, etc”. It’s all in good fun, Easing. .
Easy..besides taking her one allowed swoosh, you do know she i hailed
as the Rules Guru of her club….they lcome from near and far, just to get her decisions, oft time even missing drinks at the bar and a warm dinner…..And did she know, she was assesed a 1 stroke penalty for falling down laughing? Now, if she would have fallen down whilst drunk, no penalty….I suggest we have Chip give her an open book exam, just to make sure she really does know the rules, and just isn’t “pulling the wool” over oponents eyes in the 4 balls…..Oh, and whilst I am posting to you, Would you please be so kind as to recommend the Scotch I should get a dear friend….bearing in mind, my palette is sensative due to years of the worlds best Martinis….thank ya kindly sir…..STUB
The Glenlivet 15 Year Old French Oak
I like a lot. Not too expensive (21 is twice as much) Happy Christmas mate
Ahh, thank you sir....You are indeed a Gentleman....
never mind what Wendy says about ya in private…..All us Genelmens has to stan together, or shirly we shall hang alone……you and yours have safe, happy Holidays, and please be informed, I shall raise my glass many times in your honour……stay thirsty my friend…..STUB
The Byzantines played golf ?
If you’ve seen the commercial the the video clips asking what the hardest rule in golf to remember is – that’s Barry Rhodes. You can find a lot of videos of him on YouTube – search on his name. Fun stuff.
"When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves in the course of time a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that justifies it." - Frederic Bastiat
I need to get this book translated in khmer...:-)
Life would be so much easier on the links if only they had the slightest knowledge of the rules…like, never drive from green to tee if you don’t own the golf course..do not picnic on the greens if you don’t own the golf course…do not bring guns and do not use the golf course as a hunting ground, for exasperated foreigners aren’t fair games, unless you own the golf course…;-)
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