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A Simpler Game: The 10 Golden Rules
ArizonaBlue
Professional Champion
 
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LINKS Magazine’s "A Simpler Game, Presented by IBM,” is a series of stories promoting firm, fast and natural playing conditions. For golf to thrive in these challenging times, it makes sense to raise awareness in favor of a simpler game. For more information, visit www.linksmagazine.com.

Since the humble beginnings of organized golf, more than two and a half centuries ago, almost every element of the game has changed and grown. But surely no aspect has expanded more dramaticallyâ€"and some would say needlesslyâ€"than the Rules. Back in 1744 the original Rules of Golf issued by the Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers numbered just 13â€"340 well-chosen words covered everything from lost balls to “wattery filth.” By contrast, today’s Rulebook weighs in at 126 pages.

There are 34 Rules, with 122 sections and 106 subsectionsâ€" more than 25,000 words in all. In addition, there’s a separate Decisions bookâ€" covering what the Rules don’tâ€"and that one is nearly 600 pages thick. Do we need all this? Well, in one sense, it was inevitable. Those first 13 Rules applied to just one golf club, one course. Now there are nearly 50,000 courses around the world, no two of them alike. As a consequence, all sorts of odd situations have arisen. Had the Rules not expanded a bit, the disputes would have been innumerable and unresolvable. Like the tax code, however, it’s all become too complicated for the average human being.

“The weep for simplification of the Rules of Golf is a stock-in-trade of the journalist during the winter months.Countless words on the subject have been poured out to an ever-tolerant public, but still the long-sought simplification does not come.” So wrote Henry Longhurst, 75 years ago, and his words remain true today. What has been needed for a long time is a simplified Rule book, something brief, comprehensive yet comprehensible, and endorsed by the USGA and R&A for the benefit of the world’s weekend golfers. Until that happens, we present the next best thingâ€"something called The 10 Golden Rules of Golf. A version of these first appeared back in 1982, the result of a collaboration between the USGA and GOLF Magazine. They were an instant success as 60,000 people wrote in to order 10 Golden Rules bagtags. In the intervening three decades, however, they have been utterly ignored. So LINKS Magazine has taken up the cause, and the USGA has partnered with us, updating the original 10 with a few tweaks and clarifications.

Our 10 Golden Rules are not quite as terse as those the Scots came up with, but they do reflect golf in the 21st century and we think they cover 90 percent of the situations that golfers routinely encounter in the course of an 18-hole round. Here they are, in the spirit of a simpler game.

The 10 Golden Rules Of Golf

1. Play the ball as it lies.

2. Don’t move, bend, or break anything growing or fixed, except in fairly taking your stance or swing. Don’t press anything down.

3. You may lift natural objects not fixed or growing, except in a water hazard or bunker. No penalty.

4. Movable man-made objects may be moved. For immovable objects, you may take relief by dropping away from them within one club-length of the nearest point of relief, no nearer the hole, except in a water hazard or if the object defines out of bounds. In a bunker, you must drop in the bunker. No penalty.

5. You may take relief from casual water, ground under repair, burrowing animal holes or casts, anywhere except in a water hazard. On the putting green, place at the nearest point of relief, no nearer the hole; otherwise drop within one club-length of the nearest point of relief, no nearer the hole.
6. In a bunker, you must drop in the bunker. No penalty.
In a water hazard or bunker, don’t touch the water or ground with your hand or club before the stroke.

7. If you hit your ball into a water hazard and cannot find or play it, either drop behind the point where the ball last crossed the hazard margin or at the place where you played the shot. On the tee, you may tee the ball. One penalty stroke. If you hit into a lateral hazard, you may also drop within two club-lengths of the point where the ball last crossed the hazard margin, or, within two club-lengths of a point equidistant from the hole on the opposite margin. One penalty stroke.

8. When you hit your ball out of bounds or can’t find it after five minutes of searching, add a penalty stroke, go back and drop a ball at the place where you played the shot. On the tee, you may tee the ball. If you think you have hit your ball out of bounds or lost it outside a water hazard, play a provisional ball before searching for the first one.

9. When you have an unplayable lie, you may drop a ball at the place where you played the previous shot, adding a penalty stroke. On the tee, you may tee the ball. Alternatively, drop within two clublengths, no nearer the hole, or any distance behind the unplayable spot, keeping it between you and the hole. If the ball is in a bunker, you must drop in the bunker, under either of the alternative options. If you can’t play your ball that is in a water hazard, see Golden Rule No.7.

10. You may repair ball marks and old hole plugs on the putting green that are on the line of your putt, but not spike marks.
Duckhunter
Legend
 
# 1    11/30/2011 10:26:24 AM   
Why not spike marks?


ArizonaBlue
Professional Champion
 
# 2    11/30/2011 11:05:42 AM   

Why not spike marks?


USGA Rule 16 only allows repair of hole plugs and ball marks. Spike marks cannot be repaired. Many a putt has been deflected by spike marks that can't be repaired ... a good reason for not wearing metal spikes ... although some golfers including pros still wear them.


ArizonaBlue
Professional Champion
 
# 3    11/30/2011 11:07:23 AM   


Why not spike marks?


USGA Rule 16 only allows repair of hole plugs and ball marks. Spike marks cannot be repaired. Many a putt has been deflected by spike marks that can't be repaired ... a good reason for not wearing metal spikes ... although some golfers including pros still wear them.


Non-steel spikes also cause spike marks but not to the degree that metal ones do. Most courses prohibit metal spikes.


Dandy
Professional Champion
 
# 4    11/30/2011 11:56:52 AM   
With complete and blatant disrespect to the rule makers of the game - The golfers inability to repair spike marks on the intended line of a putt is, in my opinion, the dumbest rule not only in golf, but in all of sport....


ArizonaBlue
Professional Champion
 
# 5    11/30/2011 1:14:47 PM   

With complete and blatant disrespect to the rule makers of the game - The golfers inability to repair spike marks on the intended line of a putt is, in my opinion, the dumbest rule not only in golf, but in all of sport....


I agree ... hopefully, they will come around some day.


armygrunt47
Professional Champion
 
# 6    11/30/2011 1:39:23 PM   

With complete and blatant disrespect to the rule makers of the game - The golfers inability to repair spike marks on the intended line of a putt is, in my opinion, the dumbest rule not only in golf, but in all of sport....


Yep. That rule cost me my Club Championship. There was a group playing in front of us that twisted and turned on every single green leaving spike marks everywhere and especially around the cup.


Robert Premeaux Jr.
Professional Champion
 
# 7    11/30/2011 4:24:51 PM   

With complete and blatant disrespect to the rule makers of the game - The golfers inability to repair spike marks on the intended line of a putt is, in my opinion, the dumbest rule not only in golf, but in all of sport....


I'd like to know the history of that rule. How the hell does it make even a shred of sense?


cogolfer1
LowIndex
 
# 8    11/30/2011 4:54:26 PM   

With complete and blatant disrespect to the rule makers of the game - The golfers inability to repair spike marks on the intended line of a putt is, in my opinion, the dumbest rule not only in golf, but in all of sport....


That ranks right up there with not being able to take relief when you're ball is in a divot. When you're in the fairway that is.


JohnBarree
Professional Champion
 
# 9    11/30/2011 4:59:01 PM   
Makes sense to me.


bradley894
Legend
 
# 10    11/30/2011 7:34:55 PM   
i like the old rules.. wish the were so simple... AZ Blue.. you come up with the best stuff! Great post! What is with the spike marks? back in the day they were hitting stones around the course or feather golf balls BUT THEY INVENTED SPIKES ON THERE SHOES so on of the ten rules was..No fixing spike marks? lol.. sometimes players even walk over to a spot between there ball and the hole and tap the belly of there putter down on something .. or seem to sweep somthin away.. spike mark? Bug? Stick? who knows what it was.?


HIGH_LANDER
Legend
 
# 11    11/30/2011 9:02:59 PM   
#10 / 16-1 Spike Mark Rule..I,like it.play the course as you find it..No Spike Mark Rule and it would be undoubtedly lead to an increase of slow play as players attempt to perfect their LINE OF PUTT!....The rule that I,think needs to change is #8 Rule 27-1 Out-of-Bounds Stroke & Distance.just my two-cents.


Robert Premeaux Jr.
Professional Champion
 
# 12    11/30/2011 10:45:38 PM   

#10 / 16-1 Spike Mark Rule..I,like it.play the course as you find it..No Spike Mark Rule and it would be undoubtedly lead to an increase of slow play as players attempt to perfect their LINE OF PUTT!....The rule that I,think needs to change is #8 Rule 27-1 Out-of-Bounds Stroke & Distance.just my two-cents.


those are some sweet lies

i like the pink ball in water most :)


Mark Simmons
Legend
 
# 13    12/1/2011 12:52:04 AM   

With complete and blatant disrespect to the rule makers of the game - The golfers inability to repair spike marks on the intended line of a putt is, in my opinion, the dumbest rule not only in golf, but in all of sport....


Ah Dandy, there are certainly other contenders. Like the one where if your ball hits the 150 yard pole in the middle of the fairway and ricochets out of bounds, your ball is OB and you incur the penalty. Really???


PISC
Legend
 
# 14    12/1/2011 9:26:02 AM   


With complete and blatant disrespect to the rule makers of the game - The golfers inability to repair spike marks on the intended line of a putt is, in my opinion, the dumbest rule not only in golf, but in all of sport....


Ah Dandy, there are certainly other contenders. Like the one where if your ball hits the 150 yard pole in the middle of the fairway and ricochets out of bounds, your ball is OB and you incur the penalty. Really???


DAMN GOLFING GODS!!!!!!!


Dandy
Professional Champion
 
# 15    12/1/2011 5:08:54 PM   


With complete and blatant disrespect to the rule makers of the game - The golfers inability to repair spike marks on the intended line of a putt is, in my opinion, the dumbest rule not only in golf, but in all of sport....


Ah Dandy, there are certainly other contenders. Like the one where if your ball hits the 150 yard pole in the middle of the fairway and ricochets out of bounds, your ball is OB and you incur the penalty. Really???


I would make that concession, save for the fact that I can't think of a single time I've ever seen a ball striped right down the middle careem OB. Possible? Yes. But I've personally had too many putts to remember affected by spike marks on the green...