Friday, July 8, 2016

Slow Play at US Women's Am Qualifying

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I worked the US Women’s Amateur Qualifyier at Sequoyah CC in the Oakland Hills this week.  This is an major event, as seven women would advance to the championship at Rolling Green GC in Springfield, PA.

 Looking down the 18th fairway from behind the green
I was assigned checkpoint timing at the ninth and eighteenth greens.  We used the USGA four hole checkpoint system, meaning groups had to either meet their designated time or be within fourteen minutes of the group ahead of them at four checkpoints: holes 4, 9, 13 and 18.  The first time a group missed a time, they would receive a warning, the second miss would mean a one stroke penalty for each player, third would be two strokes for everyone, and the fourth disqualification.  The 9th and 18th are only about 40 yards apart, but it was still going to be an interesting and complicated day, bouncing back and forth, while keeping track of two groups at a time.


Over the course of the day, we gave out about ten warnings for first misses, and two groups were assessed one stroke penalties for the second miss.  I gave I believe five of those warnings and both penalties.  This is not something any Tournament Official wants to do (I think), but it is a part of the job, and it is necessary to be comfortable doing so when needed.



Fortunately, and to their credit, not a single player gave me any push back.  Each player either simply nodded or said thank you, and hustled to the next tee.  This was a great contrast to the MacKenzie last year, a men’s collegiate event.  That day, a player was told he was being timed.  He argued, and his coach brought it up with at least two other officials, including me, over the course of the rest of the round. 



Things got really interesting toward the end of the day.  The 10AM start times off both #1 and #10 had received warnings.  They both came to their last holes in jeopardy of missing a second time.  The group finishing at 18 got there first.  As I approached the green to watch them putt, clipboard and phone (atomic clock) in hand, one of the caddies came over to me, and said “We need to hurry, don’t we?”  I looked at the clock and said “Yes you do.”  He went back to the green, informed the players, and they made their time by less than fifteen seconds.  I got a big thank you when I gave them the “safe” sign!



The other group got to nine green a few minutes later.  I watched them putt, again with clock in hand, and as the last player was getting ready to finish, I approached the caddy and told him “As soon as that putt goes in, put the flagstick in.”  (Times are taken when the flagstick is replaced in the hole.)  She finished, and he put the stick in with seconds to spare.  What would have happened if he had dawdled, or if the flagstick was lying on the other side of the green, and they missed by a few seconds?  I’ll just say I’m glad it didn’t happen.



Pace of play is the bane of every Tournament Official’s existence.  We continually see players not ready to when it is their turn.  We see players seemingly not even start their decision process until it is their turn, both in the fairway and on the green.  Professional golf gets much of the blame, as players grow up watching and listening to player and caddie routinely spend two minutes discussing what looks like a most straightforward shot.  At the US Junior Am Qualifier a few weeks ago, a group somehow got to a checkpoint twenty-eight minutes behind the group ahead, about twice the allowable time.  Junior players need to be broken of that habit early.



It was good to see the players accept the warnings and get moving without any argument.  That showed that they are at least aware of the issue.

  Lucy Li, one of the qualifiers, teeing off on #1, her 10th hole

Thursday, March 31, 2016

Rule 6-6d: The Rules of Golf Become Kinder and Gentler

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George Gandranata is a friend and former Cal golfer.  He plays on the Asian Development Tour.  A few weeks ago he received a four stroke penalty.  His caddie had gone to fetch some water while George’s group was putting on the 14th green.  Unfortunately, the caddie accepted a ride back, which is a two stroke penalty under tour rules.  George didn’t find out about the ride until after he had finished his round, and signed and returned his scorecard.

Previous to this year, since George returned a card without the two stroke penalty, he would have been disqualified for submitting a card with a score lower than he was due.  This year Rule 6-6d says that if the competitor incurs a penalty he was unaware of, he is not DQ’d.  He receives the penalty and an additional two strokes for each breach of the rules.  So George received the two stroke penalty for his caddie's ride, and the two strokes under 6-6d.  His first round 67 became a 71.   George recovered to finish 18th.

There’s a happy ending, however.  The very next week George became the first player from Indonesia to win on the Asian Development Tour.