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Search Result for “eighth hole”

Showing 1 - 10 of 90

SPORTS

Repair the green, respect the game

Sports, Brett Brasier, Published on 01/04/2026

» Ball marks, shoe damage such as spike marks and scrapes or indentations caused by equipment or a flagstick are regarded as damage to the putting green and therefore may be repaired. Also included would be old hole plugs, turf plugs, seams of cut turf and scrapes or indentations from maintenance tools or vehicles, animal tracks or hoof indentations, and embedded objects such as a stone, acorn, hail or tee and indentations caused by them.

SPORTS

Mind the green for better play

Sports, Brett Brasier, Published on 25/03/2026

» If you lay down the flagstick, place it off the green to prevent doing any damage to the green and to hinder it from getting in the way of play. Generally, if there is no caddie, the player closest to the hole will be regarded as the one to look after and tend the flagstick when applicable. Try not to hang around after putting; therefore, after everyone has holed out, immediately walk to the next tee.

SPORTS

Simple golf etiquette every player should always follow

Sports, Brett Brasier, Published on 18/03/2026

» Replacing your divots is a must and probably the first etiquette rule that we learn. If the divot has disintegrated then try to find a container of soil/sand and simply fill in the divot.

SPORTS

Smart play! Time to know your bunker relief options

Sports, Brett Brasier, Published on 04/03/2026

» There is no penalty for accidentally hitting the ball twice during a single stroke. If a player's club strikes the ball more than once, it only counts as one stroke, and the ball is played as it lies.

SPORTS

Find the ball fast or pay the price -- costly

Sports, Brett Brasier, Published on 18/02/2026

» The common feedback I've received from my recent rule tips have been asking for more clear simple explanations on queries involving penalty relief, ball movement, and on-course procedures. How long can you search for a ball and what's the penalty if you accidently move your ball on the green or bunker together with the ability to take free relief from abnormal ground conditions for example: ground under repair or temporary water.

SPORTS

Free relief, OB stakes and the one-club drop

Sports, Brett Brasier, Published on 11/02/2026

» Please allow me to try and explain what is an immovable obstruction once more. They are basically artificial, fixed objects like cart paths, sprinklers, or fences -- they allow for a free, one-stroke relief drop if they interfere with a player's lie, stance, or swing. Relief is not permitted for line-of-sight interference. Players must find the nearest point of complete relief, not closer to the hole, and drop within one club-length.

SPORTS

Unplayable lies: Know the three relief options

Sports, Brett Brasier, Published on 04/02/2026

» You have basically three options if your golf ball finds itself in an unplayable lie. An unplayable lie allows a golfer to take relief almost anywhere on the course but comes with a one-stroke penalty, excluding penalty areas. The player is the sole judge of whether a ball is unplayable. The 3-options for relief are -- stroke-and-distance, back-on-the-line, or lateral relief within two club-lengths of where the ball is at rest.

SPORTS

One wrong move, two strokes gone

Sports, Brett Brasier, Published on 31/12/2025

» Giving or asking for advice like "What club did you use?" from anyone except your caddie or playing partner results in a penalty of two strokes in stroke play or loss of hole in match play. Unsolicited advice from strangers or spectators is okay, but the player must not encourage it.

SPORTS

Penalty or no penalty? These tricky scenarios will test you

Sports, Brett Brasier, Published on 12/11/2025

» Let's see how good you know your golf rules; Here's some questions that will get you thinking -- You and your opponent are using the same type of ball in a match and inadvertently play each other's ball into the green. You're not sure who played a shot with the wrong ball first, so you finish out the hole as if nothing happened. Penalty or no penalty?

SPORTS

What happens when two golf balls collide on the course?

Sports, Brett Brasier, Published on 29/10/2025

» Golf balls do occasionally collide. It doesn't happen too often but it does occur occasionally. If a shot is played from off the putting surface and your ball hits another ball, what should you do?