Marking the ball and treatment of the green Never saw this before...
#1
Posted 04 October 2009 - 04:25 PM
Great guy- really enjoyed playing with him. Shot in the 80's and he seemed to know what he was doing. But he did something I didn't think was right.
When he got on the green and marked his ball with a tee (which is fine), then had to move his marker because he was on someone else's line, he removed the tee, then scraped a line about 6-8 inches in length in the green, then repositioned the tee. After the other player's putt, he put his tee marker back on the other end of the line.
He didn't scrape the green down to the soil, but he did leave a visible line on the green, even after patting it down with a putter.
Am I wrong, should this have bothered me as much as it did? I'm sure it's not the worst thing done to a green, but it certainly was intentional. I offered him a couple of ball markers (I have a few hundred in my bag), but he declined- really likes using the tee.
The other thing he did was when removing the flag, he just dropped it on the green. Normally, I try to remove it and place it on the fringe. If I do place it on the green, I place it gently. This guy just put one end down on the green and just let the flag fall.
I didn't want to rock the boat in our foursome as we otherwise had a great time and played pretty well to boot. But I thought he was a bit rough.
What should I have done in this situation?
#3
Posted 04 October 2009 - 04:51 PM
Question: The Note to Rule 20-1 provides that “the position of a ball to be lifted should be marked by placing a ball-marker, a small coin or other similar object immediately behind the ball.” Is a player penalized if he uses an object that is not similar to a ball-marker or small coin to mark the position of his ball?
Answer: No. The provision in the Note to Rule 20-1 is a recommendation of best practice, but there is no penalty for failing to act in accordance with the Note.
Examples of methods of marking the position of a ball that are not recommended, but are permissible, are as follows:
• placing the toe of a club at the side of, or behind, the ball;
• using a tee
• using a loose impediment;
• scratching a line, provided the putting green is not tested (Rule 16-1d) and a line for putting is not indicated (Rule 8-2b). As this practice may cause damage to the putting green, it is discouraged.
However, under Rule 20-1 it is necessary to physically mark the position of the ball. Reference to an existing mark on the ground does not constitute marking the position of a ball. For example, it is not permissible to mark the position with reference to a blemish on the putting green.
When moving a ball or ball-marker to the side to prevent it from interfering with another player’s stance or stroke, the player may measure from the side of the ball or ball-marker. In order to accurately replace the ball on the spot from which it was lifted, the steps used to move the ball or ball-marker to the side should be reversed. (Revised)
_____________________________________
Having said that, it doesn't sound like he marked his ball with "sufficient accuracy". You said he lifted his tee and then scratched the line in the green. That sounds like a penalty to me. See Decision 20-1/21...
Question: A player consistently places his ball-marker approximately two inches behind the ball on the green. He says that he does so to ensure that he does not accidentally move the ball. Does such a procedure comply with the Rules?
Answer: No. A player who places a ball-marker two inches behind his ball cannot be considered to have marked the position of the ball with sufficient accuracy. Accordingly, each time he does so, the player incurs a penalty of one stroke, as provided in Rule 20-1, and must place the ball as near as possible to the spot from which it was lifted (Rule 20-3c).
The player's action was unnecessary because Rule 20-1 states that no penalty is incurred if a ball is accidentally moved in the process of marking or lifting it under a Rule.
#4
Posted 04 October 2009 - 04:57 PM
OpusX20, on Oct 4 2009, 05:51 PM, said:
Thanks for such a detailed response. As far as inaccurately placing his ball, that was just my bad description... I'd say as he removed the tee, he dragged it across the green. He was able to replace the ball with sufficient accuracy. I was more concerned with the damage to the green.
As far as the flag stick goes, yes, I tried to get to it first but that wasn't always possible. Sometimes I was the last one on the green and he was already there.
#6
Posted 04 October 2009 - 05:23 PM
I fancy that a day of ostentatiously tapping down all the lines he'd made after the hole had been completed and very obviously taking the flag to the fringe only to gently, and highly visibly, place it against the turf would have been in order.
More diplomatic than coming out with 'Stop wrecking the course you blanking blank' but just as effective at getting the point across if it's done well.
#7
Posted 04 October 2009 - 05:39 PM
It has never damaged the green in any way and no-one has ever said anything to indicate there is something wrong with it.
Perhaps it's not the gentlemanly thing to do, but really, is it harmful to anyone?
#8
Posted 04 October 2009 - 05:49 PM
#10 Gallery_midasmulligan2000_*
Posted 04 October 2009 - 06:19 PM
bigred90gt, on Oct 4 2009, 06:49 PM, said:
x2. On both counts. (So is that, like, x22? ...
I'm actually sort of suprised the rules still allow scratching the green (or doing anything like it). Anything that leaves a visible enough mark to be useful certainly can effect the line of a putt (or even the rolling of a pitch) of future foursomes (though admittedly not by much). Still, it just somehow feels wrong to delibrately scratch a green. Thanks goodness very few people do it. Seems like it is now universally either the head of a putter, or the length of the shaft that is used.
So far as placing the end of a pin on the grass, and then letting it fall ... doesn't do anything at all. As bigred says ... the effects are less than those of the foursome merely walking on the green. Indeed, I played today at an NJ course with a friend - that actually owns the course - and while he did act like an owner ... i.e., raking traps even if he was next to them, not in them, fixing a half dozen different ball marks on damn near every green, etc. ... he also commonly just dropped the flagstick on the green when he pulled it. Apparently didn't think it hurt anything at all.
Thing that really peeves me is people that drag their feet on greens. Now and then I'll get behind a foursome (or usually, it is only one guy in a foursome) ... and every damn green has these big scrape marks. Serious enough that you need to tap them down with a putter head if they're in your line. Much worse than someone scratching a light line to re-mark a ball.
#15
Posted 04 October 2009 - 10:17 PM
As far as scraping the ground, that's even more bush league. USE A FRICKING BALL MARKER!
I like to take the pin off the green and place, or sometimes drop it, there. Just habit I guess. Less distractions and it just seems right to me.
#17
Posted 05 October 2009 - 03:48 PM
bigred90gt, on Oct 5 2009, 05:40 AM, said:
You may find it difficult to convince anyone that you have replaced your ball exactly on its original spot.
#19
Posted 05 October 2009 - 07:59 PM
Newby, on Oct 5 2009, 03:48 PM, said:
bigred90gt, on Oct 5 2009, 05:40 AM, said:
You may find it difficult to convince anyone that you have replaced your ball exactly on its original spot.
How is that? I use the same method as I would just using the head. I pick a tree or bush for a reference, and move it on a line using the club. when I put it back, I use the same line of reference, just like you would using the putter head, it is just a bit further.
Typically, if I am using a tee to mark my ball, it is a casual round and if someone tries to tell me they think my ball is not in the exact place it was, I'll tell them to worry about what they are doing, and not so much about what I am doing. If I am playing a tourney, I always have a coin or a ball marker to mark my ball.
#20
Posted 06 October 2009 - 07:32 AM
hattrick3518, on Oct 4 2009, 09:57 PM, said:
Well as I said in a previous post, I wasn't always the first one on the green- if he beat me to the green and all four balls were on the green, he would pull the flag before I even got there. I certainly wasn't going to race him there because it didn't bother me that much.
If I was on the green first and was in a position to pull the flag, I did it.





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