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The Rules of Ready Golf
Ready Golf
Summary
Ready Golf means BEING READY to play, not playing when you're ready. Here are
some simple rules.Statistically, if you shoot 120, you are only physically swinging the golf club
for a grand total 3 minutes. So how can it possibly take over 4 hours to play golf?--it never should! For a foursome, Par 3's should take approximately 11 minutes, par 4s approx 14 minutes, and par 5s no more than 17 minutes. Pace of play has nothing to do with skill at golf..people can shoot 150 in less than 4 hours if they play ready golf
Pace of play is determined by the group in front of you...not TIME.
Pace of play is NOT based on who is behind your group. It doesn't matter if no one is waiting...catch up to the group in front of you.
If you have 1 or more holes open in front of you, you should quite simply PLAY FASTER because you CAN.
The pace of play at Audubon should never exceed 4 hours.
1.Walk to your ball as soon as possible, so that you can choose your club and
think about the shot in ADVANCE, not when it is your turn. This includes using range finders, tossing grass etc.
2.When driving a cart, drop off your partner first, let your partner choose
his or her club, and then drive to your own ball to GET READY to play. You can also walk to your ball from the cart with several clubs so that you are ready to play when it is your turn!
3.When a ball is lost, hit your shot FIRST and then help look for the lost
ball.
4.Walk down the appropriate sides of the fairway to reach your ball and then APPROACH your ball from that angle. Unless a line of flight of another player may hit you, you should be at your ball and ready to hit. NEVER play in a caravan, moving in a group from ball to ball..
5.When on the Green, line up your putt BEFORE it is your turn, and putt out
immediately instead of marking, if you are not in someone else's line.
Do NOT emulate tour pros--99.9% of the golf population will perform worse when taking multiple practice strokes.
With putting, the longer you take, the less likely the putt will go in. Both are due to natural tension caused by the anxiety of preparing to hit the shot.
99.9% of all recreational golfers would improve the quality of their game, if they did not take one practice swing during the round. Often times,
the instictual, or 1st swing taken will be the best.
Simple thought--Look and Fire!
Introduction
We all know what Ready Golf is, don't we?
It means playing our shots when we're ready. Right? WRONG?
Ready Golf means THINKING AHEAD so that you're READY TO PLAY when it is YOUR
TURN.
Ready Golf applies EVERYWHERE on the golf course -- on the tees, on the
fairways and on the greens.
On The Tee
Ready Golf, we often hear, means that the person who is ready at the tee
should hit first. That is simply not true. Ready Golf means that the player with
the honors should be READY to HIT FIRST. If the player with the honors isn't
ready, only then should someone else hit first.
On The Fairway
Golfers are typically at their worst AFTER they have hit their tee shots. How
often do you see players watch other players hit first, and start thinking about
their shot only when it's their turn? How often do you see drivers of carts wait
for their partners to hit before driving to their own balls? How many times do
you see four golfers walk to the player's ball that is farthest from the hole
and wait for that player to hit, then move down the fairway to the other balls
as if they were a caravan?
Ready Golf means that ALL golfers should go to their balls as soon as
possible and get READY to play their shots. While waiting to hit, PLAYERS should
SURVEY their shot, SELECT their clubs, TAKE them from their bags, and STAND at
their balls READY to step up and make the shot when it is their turn. That's
Ready Golf!
Ready Golf particularly means that the DRIVERS of carts should DROP OFF their
partners, let them CHOOSE their clubs (take extra ones if required), DRIVE to
their own balls, and then get READY to play. DRIVERS should NOT wait for their
partners to hit the shot, and then drive to their own balls to make their shots.
All players should GO TO THEIR BALLS as soon as possible. The only time
players should wait for other players is if the first player's ball is in front
of the other players' in such a way that the other players could be hit by the
first player's shot. In particular, a CARAVAN of players should NEVER CONVERGE
unless their balls are all in the same location. The only time players should
stop in a group and wait for a player to hit is if the line of flight of that
player's shot prevents the other players from going to their own balls.
Hint: Walk down the sides of the fairway to reach your ball, determine your
club selection while waiting, and then move towards the center to your ball. You
can usually get close to your ball and get ready to play the shot, while players
behind you can still make their shots.
Helping To Find Lost Balls
It is important that everyone try to help out to find a lost ball in order to
keep playing moving. But players should do it AFTER hitting their shots, not
BEFORE. How often do you see four or five players searching for a lost ball,
while NONE of them are getting ready to hit?
Use common sense. The player who is closest to the pin and scheduled to hit
last should be the first to help the player whose ball is lost, while the
players who are farthest away from the pin should PLAY THEIR SHOTS FIRST. When
the players farthest away have played their shots, they should resume looking
for the lost ball, while the players who are closest should get ready to PLAY
THEIR SHOTS. In this way, slow play is not compounded because of a lost ball.
Entering And Exiting Greens
How many times do you see players leave their clubs in front of a Green? When
the players finish, they then walk to the front to get their clubs. ALWAYS, and
we mean ALWAYS, leave clubs at the back or side of the Green closest to the next
tee. If a shot is played in front of the Green first, the player should move his
or her clubs to the back or side of the Green before playing the next shot.
NOTHING is MORE ANNOYING than watching players walk to the FRONT of a Green to
retrieve their clubs AFTER everyone has putted out. AND don't stand around
chatting and writing down scores either. After the group has putted, go to the
next tee, so the group behind can play their shots.
Speeding Play On The Greens
Emulating the pros around the putting green has done more to slow down golf
than any other single event. How often do you see players waiting until it is
their turn to play, and then walking around the putt as though they were putting
to win a green jacket at the Master's?
Playing Ready Golf around the Greens means getting READY to putt BEFORE it is
your turn! Players should line up their putts WHILE other players are putting,
so they're ready to putt when it's their turn..
Ready Golf also means putting CONTINUOUSLY if the ball is not in someone
else's line, and if the player does not have to spend a lot of time surveying
the putt. If you miss a putt by one or two feet, for example, and have an open
stance to make the next putt, you should MAKE the putt INSTEAD of MARKING the
ball and waiting for another turn -- unless it is a tricky putt and you want
extra time to survey it. In that case, mark the ball and survey the putt while
someone else putts. When it is your turn, walk up to the ball, take your stance
and make your putt.
While there are no time rules associated with putting, a rule of thumb is to
get off your putt within 20 seconds from when it is your turn. This means you
should be able to approach the ball, take your stance and make your putt within
20 seconds. Obviously, you can only do this if you SURVEY the putt WHILE other
players are putting. When you putt, you should always take your time, so you
make a smooth, unhurried stroke. Ready Golf DOES NOT mean RUSHING.
If you prepare in advance to putt, you can take your time AND play Ready
Golf.
Farthest From The Hole
There is no reason Ready Golfers can't play in the order of who is farthest
from the hole. In Ready Golf, the person farthest from the hole should be READY
to play first. There are, however, a few common sense exceptions.
In a foursome in which one or two players are walking and one or two are
using carts, the players with the carts should hit FIRST if they reach their
ball first and are Ready to play.
When someone hits a shot, but is still farthest from the hole, players should
hit BEFORE that player if they are Ready. Here are two examples. If a player
hits a tree or some obstruction with a second shot and is still farthest from
the hole, the players closer to the hole should hit first to speed up play.
If someone is off the Green in a sand trap and hits it furthest from the
hole, the other players should not wait for that player to walk around the green
to play the next shot. Play should continue until that player is READY to make
the next shot. In fact, NOTHING is more DISCONCERTING than watching three
players on the green WAITING while the fourth player cleans up the sand, walks
to the ball, surveys the putt and then plays.
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