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Rules: Are you allowed to fix the green around the hole if you notice an irregularity?

Due to COVID-19, the pin must remain in position at our course. Fine, but my group often tees off mid-morning, meaning 50 or so players have played ahead of us. It’s clearly noticeable that balls rolling in a straight line to the hole suddenly turn within the last inch, a phenomenon that appears at almost every hole. We suspect that the lip is being slowly prised up due to the removal of balls with the pin in position. Can we tamp down the immediate area around the hole before putting to counteract this?




Rules Guy is prepared to drop many things, including a steaming bag of you-know-what, at Covid’s door … but not this.

The issue of player’s footprints around the hole, and their impact on a putt’s roll, has been around since before Dave Pelz was a twinkle in his parents’ eye. Fortunately, the Rules allow you to repair damage on the green caused by a person (player or otherwise) or an outside influence (like, say, an elk).

Under Rule 13.1(c)2, damage on the putting green, whether spike marks or elk hoofprints, can be repaired. This can be thought of as an exception to the general restrictions in Rule 8.1a against improving the line of play or one of the other conditions affecting the stroke.

But there are some things, like corked wine, that cannot be repaired. These include natural wear of and around the hole as well as uneven grass growth. When in doubt about fixable damage versus unfixable natural wear, discuss the situation with the course’s or competition’s powers that be.



Article originally appeared on: Golf.com

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