woofers
Medal Winner
Just out of interest, where would you draw the line...6, 7, 8, 9, 10 minutes or more?...... they ended up being only 5 minutes late.
Just out of interest, where would you draw the line...6, 7, 8, 9, 10 minutes or more?...... they ended up being only 5 minutes late.
That's a judgement call, something that golf seems to struggle with. I would allow 2, perhaps 3, time slots so that is around 15 minutes. I would base that on how late the person would likely be, the knock on effect of moving the other time slots, the knock on effect to the other players in the grouping. If the disruption is too great then you would need to be strict, if not then the organiser can allow for the extra time.Just out of interest, where would you draw the line...6, 7, 8, 9, 10 minutes or more?
That's a judgement call, something that golf seems to struggle with. I would allow 2, perhaps 3, time slots so that is around 15 minutes. I would base that on how late the person would likely be, the knock on effect of moving the other time slots, the knock on effect to the other players in the grouping. If the disruption is too great then you would need to be strict, if not then the organiser can allow for the extra time.
The decision would be made by the organiser, not on the basis of asking the other players. The players should not be put in an awkward situation, that is for the organiser to decide.
In other amateur sports, if a team is stuck in traffic or has to change a wheel the start time gets put back. They don't just award the game to the other side. The referee / umpire would allow a certain amount of time that is deemed reasonable but that time is not set in stone.
For some reason I thought I had previously read it was 5 minutes. You are quite correct, it was 15 minutes and that would need 3 tee times to be moved. It is moving each group forward by one slot, that could be anyone of 7, 8 or 10 minutes depending on the intervals used. That would be part of the judgement call for the organiser. I personally don't see moving forward any of those times as an issue but that would depend how ready the other groups were. If they were not then it is an issue but that was never mentioned, they simply stated the ruling.The article clearly states that the boy missed his tee time by 15 minutes. So that would have meant moving at least 3 other groups forward all of whom had been asked to arrive no more than 30 minutes before their tee time. This would have given them no more than 10 minutes to warm up, do you feel that would have been fair.
Can you not also see the problem in your approach with setting a precedent.
For some reason I thought I had previously read it was 5 minutes. You are quite correct, it was 15 minutes and that would need 3 tee times to be moved. It is moving each group forward by one slot, that could be anyone of 7, 8 or 10 minutes depending on the intervals used. That would be part of the judgement call for the organiser. I personally don't see moving forward any of those times as an issue but that would depend how ready the other groups were. If they were not then it is an issue but that was never mentioned, they simply stated the ruling.
In terms of setting a precedent, golf is not a court of law, it is a sport. In this case it is an amateur sport. To be so rigid is unnecessary in my view. In this instance leeway could have been given, another time it may not have. That wont bring down the game, judgements can be made.[/QU Would you feel the same if you were one of the players who with already a reduced warm-up time was being asked to take a further 10 min cut in what is your biggest event of the year?
You're right it wouldn't bring down the game but would provide plenty of ammunition for others with grievances going forward, including the media.
In a county event I've been moved to an earlier time than I had been expecting. I don't know why, but as I was there early I wasn't bothered.
So changes can be made to accommodate people. A little flexibility never hurt anyone.
At the moment the media are hammering golf for this. Golf is not coming well out of this, golf journalists are at the front of the queue criticising the decision. Had they altered the tee off time it would not have raised a mention in the media, it really would not have been a big deal.
I've yet to see a golf journalist do anything but despair about this, they know how it looks to the non golf world.Do you think you are going a little over the top in regards the “hammering”
Golf as a sport isn’t being harmed at all - it’s no different to any sport where a person is late.
How many times do people want Rules of Golf to be bent or changed when someone breaks one. Everyone else in the field managed to get there in time so imagine how they would feel if they bent the rules of golf just to allow the person to play and he then won ? Not really fair is it
The young lad was fully supportive of the rule and accepted it with a lot more maturity and grace than a lot of the “social media” journos just looking for traffic.
No, he was 15 minutes late. I was in a refereeing break at the time. There wasn't any leeway to adjust groups easily, they had all been set up in GolfGenius with group codes and start times. In addition to the fact that there was no space to slot in between the am and pm rounds.It would have been simple enough to jiggle around a couple of groups. They were in contact, they ended up being only 5 minutes late. Bring forward two, 3 groups at most, slot this group in after that. It really isn't hard and it would be what any other sport would do. It is another 'golf shoots itself in the foot' moment with its rules pedantry. People looking from outside will just shake their heads in bemusement.
The issue here is that he's broken a rule of golf, not just a rule imposed by the organisers.
If you're more than 5 minutes late its a DQ..simples.
If you start bending that rule, for whatever reason, you have to start bending other rules too....
A 3 1/2 minute search, a drop 2 and a bit clublengths away, its only just OB - play on.
You just can't do these things.
If I arrive late for the monthly medal there's no way theyre going to faff around moving people here and there just to accommodate me...
And I think the fact that the lad has accepted the ruling and taken it on the chin shows it's the right decision.
In recent times Paul Casey and Rory have both come a whisker from missing their times....more than 5 minutes and the DQ kicks in.
There could only be one decision in these circumstances....
Don’t think I’ve ever factored in time to change a tyre for any of my journeys. I’ve been driving for 26 years and had to do it twice.Or he could have driven to within 5 mins of the place and stopped for a coffee. Harsh, yes but there was an alternative for the competitor too. Just pull into a lay-by round the corner. And if he'd set off with that in mind he'd have had enough time to change the tyre.
Time to change a tyre has always been the leeway I've scheduled into a journey.
No one who thinks this is an unfortunate situation is suggesting all rules should be broken, just those using extreme whataboutery against those thinking it was a poor outcome.What logic dictates that other rules would need to be bent?
This rule has a specific exemption for exceptional circumstances (I assume used somewhere before without the rules of golf falling apart) whereas the others don’t. As said earlier I personally think Covid restricting point of arrival makes this exceptional but understand the county decision.
If they had stated exceptional, then nobody is going to say their out of bounds shot shouldn’t count. That argument doesn’t make any sense personally.
Unlikely. Players rarely arrive very early for these competitions. The only ones arriving with an hour to spare are those who have breakfast when they arrive. As he only lives 15 miles away he would have had breakfast before leaving.After all, he’d have probably been there at least an hour early in normal conditions.
Christ, I leave home an hour before my teetime and Live less than 3 miles from my home course.Unlikely. Players rarely arrive very early for these competitions. The only ones arriving with an hour to spare are those who have breakfast when they arrive. As he only lives 15 miles away he would have had breakfast before leaving.