Contributing

What is the penalty for hitting the wrong ball in a hazard?

What is the penalty for hitting the wrong ball in a hazard?

In almost all cases, playing the wrong ball results in loss of hole in match play and a two-stroke penalty in stroke play. (The rare exception involves swinging at a wrong ball that is moving in water inside a water hazard.) In stroke play, the offender must go back and replay any strokes with the correct ball.

What happens if a golf ball lands in a hazard?

If your ball ends up in a yellow water hazard, you can drop any distance back from the original line it entered the water. This means you can drop it back a few clubs or go 20, 30 or further yards back to find a distance you like. Like the red stakes (lateral hazards), there is a one-shot penalty.

What happens if a golfer accidentally makes contact when addressing the ball 1 point?

It only becomes a ball in play once a stroke is made. When the practice swing accidentally hits the ball, you are considered to have not made a stroke. Thus, the golf rules simply allow you to re-tee the moved ball (or replace it with another one) without penalty.

Can you hit out of ground under repair?

Ground under repair is an area on the golf course considered unfit for play. A player can drop out of this area with no penalty. The golf course or tournament committee is responsible for marking all such areas as ground under repair.

Is a lost ball a 2 stroke penalty?

Instead of the player returning to the spot of the previous shot in the event of a lost ball or a ball out of bounds, the player can take a drop in the nearest spot of the fairway (within two club-lengths of the edge of the fairway), no nearer the hole than where the ball crossed the OB line, with a two-stroke penalty.

Can you take Unplayable in hazard?

An unplayable lie can be declared anywhere on the golf course at any time, except in a water hazard. An unplayable lie can even be declared in a bunker, allowing a player to take a drop inside the bunker for a one-stroke penalty or take the ball out of the bunker for a two-stroke penalty.

Can you move your ball out of a divot?

Answer: No, you cannot move a golf ball out of a divot hole even when that divot is in the fairway – at least, not without penalty. (You can declare the ball unplayable, assess yourself a 1-stroke penalty, and drop.) This is probably one of the more disliked rules in the game by golfers of all skill levels.

What happens if you accidentally move your ball?

If your ball is in the fairway and you accidentally kick and move it, that will be a one-stroke penalty and the ball must be replaced on its original spot. If you move a leaf next to your ball in the rough and that causes your ball to move, the same penalty will apply.

What is the golf rule for ground under repair?

To take relief, you must find the nearest point of complete relief from the ground under repair and drop your original ball or another ball away from the ground under repair and within one club-length of that point not nearer the hole (see Rule 16.1).

Do you get relief from a plugged ball in a hazard?

Within the rules of golf a plugged lie is known as an embedded ball. The good news is that unless you are in a bunker or penalty area, you do now get relief without penalty.

What if I hit wrong ball?

Hitting the wrong ball during any competition played under the Rules of Golf will typically result in a penalty. The standard penalty for playing the wrong ball during stroke play is the loss of two strokes. The actual strokes taken with the wrong ball do not count on the golfer’s score.

What is the penalty for double hitting the golf ball?

As for double hits, if a player hits his ball twice in one stroke, accidentally or intentionally, he must count the original stroke and incur a one-stroke penalty, and then play it where it lies. In effect, it’s a one-shot penalty.

What if golf ball hits another golf ball?

Ball in Motion Hits Another Ball at Rest or Ball-Marker on Putting Green . The stroke counts and the ball must be played as it lies. (See Rule 11.1a for whether a penalty applies in stroke play ). Ball in Motion Accidentally Hits Flagstick or Person Attending Flagstick. This is covered by Rule 13.2b (2), not by this Rule.