daymond
Tour Rookie
If snooker players are allowed to have the white ball cleaned, why should we not be allowed to remove a pile of mud off ours, on the fairway, at time other than 'winter rules'.
Fixed that for you!Courses should not be allowed to operate without a competent marshal :thup:
There is nothing stopping you from asking your partner what club he played.
Apart from rule 8-1b that is. The definition of partner being crucial. If you're playing a pairs match you can ask your team mate or either of your caddies, if it singles you can't ask advice from your playing partners or anyone else except your caddy
If it is singles, you do not have any partners.
Strictly speaking no you don't but you often hear people use the term partnes or playing partners to describe the players in their group, which is why I said the definition Of partner was important.

I'd also make stones in bunkers a moveable obstruction
The rules allow committees to make a rule defining stones in bunkers as movable obstructions - most clubs where this is a problem have such a local rule.
that is part of the problem - most, or rather some, do - others do not. to me it's a safety issue and there is no valid reason that I can see for it to be at a committees discretion.
Penalty drop from a flooded bunker. It is not my fault that the course suffers from rubbish drainage, so why am I penalised?
I think that's a good rule, perhaps you might want to try avoiding them Murph
They are hazards after all![]()
I'd scrap the handicap allowance in competitions. The conditions and rules should be the same for everyone, to allow a fair competition. Playing under different rules to fellow competitors makes the 'competition' a farce.
Divot rule to me seems to be grossly unfair, so does the spike marks on the green. I'd probably go for those two.
I've always thought rules should be there to either punish bad play or illegal actions in the context of the game.
Where the above two seem to penalise bad luck.![]()
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