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Rules Question
We play ready golf so sometimes someone will putt when another person in the group is walking to a ball off the back of the green. This means that someone tends the pin rather than pulling it since it will have to be put right back in for the other person. My question is at what point must the pin be pulled? Does it have to be pulled as soon as the ball is hit or is it ok to pull it as the ball nears the hole?
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As long as it gets pulled before the putted ball hits it, it's all good. Hopefully it's already pulled and you are just holding it in the middle of the cup so you don't try to yank it out if it gets stuck and lifts part of the cup out at the same time.
Whenever I am tending the pin, it's already pulled out of the hole at the bottom of the cup. |
Correct. It's a 2 stroke penalty only if the putt is holed from the green while the pin is still in the hole.
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As long as the ball in motion on a stroke made from the putting green doesn't strike the flagstick, no foul. We do this all the time in the interest of pace of play, even in tournaments. It beats the heck out of everyone just standing around waiting while one player chases after an errant ball.
I suspect that we all play with companions (never any of us of course http://www.discussworldissues.com/fo...s/rolleyes.png) who may on occasion skull a ball over the green.... It actually takes pressure off his next shot if you all aren't standing staring at him and waiting. |
Foourputt - What if it gets stuck in the hole? Or the person tending doesn't move quickly enough? Does the person putting incur a penalty?
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I'd say whoever struck the putt gets the penalty. The person tending the flag gets a dirty look from whoever is putting.
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And even so, if the flag is not in the hole in the middle of the cup that keeps the flagstick in place, the person tending it could have it up against the back of the cup. If the ball lags in, it could go in the cup with the flagstick still in the hole. But aside from that, what are the actual terms used in the rule? EDIT: The rule does say "strike the flagstick": 17-3. Ball Striking Flagstick or Attendant The player's ball must not strike: a. The flagstick when it is attended, removed or held up; b. The person attending or holding up the flagstick or anything carried by him; or c. The flagstick in the hole, unattended, when the stroke has been made on the putting green. Exception: When the flagstick is attended, removed or held up without the player's authority - see Rule 17-2. EDIT#2 Rules Decision: 17-3/1 Holing Out Without Ball Touching Flagstick Q. A player plays a stroke from the putting green without having the flagstick attended. The ball stops momentarily on the lip of the hole and then falls into the hole. The player claims that the ball fell into the hole without striking the flagstick and therefore he incurs no penalty under Rule 17-3. Is the claim valid? A. No. A ball is not holed until it is at rest in the hole — Definition of "Holed." If the flagstick is in the hole, it is impossible for a ball to come to rest in the hole without striking the flagstick. So Fourputt was correct (no surprise there.) But that still leaves open the possibility (albeit microscopically small) that someone is tending the flag, but doesn't take it out of the hole. Instead, pulls it from the center position and hold it in place at the back of the cup, and the ball falls in without striking the flagstick. |
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This is Rule 17-3 from the book: 17-3. Ball Striking Flagstick or Attendant The player's ball must not strike: a. The flagstick when it is attended, removed or held up; b. The person attending or holding up the flagstick or anything carried by him; or c. The flagstick in the hole, unattended, when the stroke has been made on the putting green. Exception: When the flagstick is attended, removed or held up without the player's authority - see Rule 17-2. Penalty for Breach of Rule 17-3: Match play - Loss of hole; Stroke play - Two strokes and the ball must be played as it lies. Point "a" and "b" refer to a ball hit from anywhere on the golf course. If the flagstick is attended, the ball cannot strike it or the attendee without penalty, no matter where the stroke was played from. |
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On another note - Fourputt - would you refresh my memory about tending the pin. What is the rule if someone asks you to tend the pin from the apron? |
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Exception: When the flagstick is attended, removed or held up without the player's authority - see Rule 17-2. |
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