Great post John. I’d love to go to one of these. The
real question is what is the penalty? My guess is it’s either two strokes
or no penalty and if pressed I’d go with the two strokes. My memory of
this rule is that you can rake a bunker after the stroke is played even if the
ball stays in the bunker providing it doesn’t do anything to improve the
present lie. The case for no penalty is that the caddy
raked the bunker and the rule talks about the player not allowed to test or
ground his club. It’s an interesting twist. You would assume the actions
of the caddy are the same as the actions of the player but something tells me
this might be different. As I said earlier I’d go with the
two strokes but I wouldn’t put money on it. Cheers Graham -----Original
Message----- Hi Guys, Did you ever do something
and say "what was I thinking"? I guess when you get
older you do some weird things. At least that's what my wife keeps telling me.
Of course I reminded her that she's eligible for social security in three
weeks. She hasn't talked to me a in a few days. Last summer I noted on
the USGA web site that they were holding one of their two dozen or so four day
rules schools in the area so I signed up. I thought it might be interesting to
learn something although I thought I had a reasonable knowledge of the rules.
The school started last Sunday. Four days, eight or nine hours a day with a 100
question 3 1/2 hour exam at the at the end. Half closed book , and half open. My first impression
Sunday when I arrived was the size of the group. About 115 people with 16 on
the waiting list. The group included about two dozen women which also surprised
me. We went around the room introducing ourselves and indicating how many of
these schools we'd attended. Of course I was a virgin this being my first. The
vast majority ranged from 5 to 12! I was amazed. We started with the
definitions and then went through all 34 rules. Anywhere from 15 minutes to an
hour and a half or more on each. There were two instructors, a USGA rules
official and a PGA rules a official. They were both very good of course but I
was really impressed by the USGA guy. Somebody would ask a question and he'd
recite off the top of his head "well in accordance with Decision 12-6b2
such and such.". The presentation was a PowerPoint computer animated slide
show intermixed with many videos right off the PGA tour. Just about every screw
up you ever saw from Love hitting his putt during a practice stroke at the TPC
(an $80,000 screw up) to Stadler kneeling on his towel at San Diego was shown.
(DQ'd). The one that got the most laughs was Els taking some practice
swings in the rough near an over hanging limb. Some leaves came down. They
broke for commercial but they still had the audio and Venturi was going on and
on about how he was obviously guilty of a two stroke violation. When they
returned from commercial it was found the official had declared no penalty
(definitely a correct ruling) to which Venturi commented "I full
agree"! They indicated that they had offered the course to various TV
anouncers and nobody has taken them up on it yet. By the second afternoon
my mind had turned to mush. The third day I recovered somewhat and it wasn't
too bad. The fourth day of course was the exam. After about two hours my mind
was like scrambled eggs. After three hours I actually could not focus my eyes
on the fine print in the decisions book anymore and had could no longer use
it. Here's a typical example. Guys in a horseshoe shaped bunker. Caddie
goes over to the other side of the green to get a rake and rakes some foot
prints he finds there. Player skulls ball over green near just raked
area. Caddie rakes area the player just hit from. Player again skulls the ball
over into the other side of the trap (sorry bunker, there is no such thing as a
trap) to where the caddie has just raked. Caddie goes over and again
rakes bunker on the other side. Player again skulls ball. This is
repeated four times. What did the player score? I have no clue. I will be
getting my score from the USGA in a few weeks but if I got 50% I'd be
surprised. Interesting experience. Now that that's over I can relax and start
on my 1040. Piece of cake. Cheers, John |
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