Virginia Golfer Nov / Dec 2018 | Page 18

TheRules Relax! The Rules are Changing ONE OF THE MAJOR AREAS THE USGA AND R&A FOCUSED on when modernizing the upcoming 2019 Rules of Golf was relaxing many of the Rules. On Jan. 1, 2019, these overly penal rules will swing in favor of the player in many cases. shoe damage, scrapes and indentations, With these changes, the Rules are encour- seams of cut turf, and embedded objects, aging relaxed requirements and reduced in addition to what you were allowed to penalties throughout the course, includ- repair before. ing on the putting green, in bunkers, and Off the putting green, bunkers and pen- in penalty areas (formerly known as water alty areas have always caused players to hazards). Rules 12 – 13 single out rules for tread lightly or risk being penalized for bunkers and putting greens, as they are things they were free to do elsewhere on specifically prepared for a different type the course. With these changes, of challenge than is presented else- penalty areas are essentially where on the course. recognized in equivalence We’ve all been there. It’s with the fairway or rough, late in the afternoon af- COMMON SENSE if you choose to play ter many people have WINS OUT IN 2019, from these areas. If played the course. You WITH MANY OF THE your ball lies in a pen- walk up to your ball on alty area, the follow- the putting green, and EXTREME PENALTIES ing are now allowed: there are spike marks BEING REDUCED OR moving loose impedi- all over your line. For EVEN REMOVED ments, making practice years, you would not COMPLETELY. swings, grounding your have been able to fix that club, or touching the water damage and it may have in the penalty area. impacted your putt. In the When playing your ball in a pre-2019 Rules, golfers were lim- bunker, many of the same relaxed rules ited in their actions on putting green. apply. Common sense tells us that most Now, players will be allowed to fix al- of the actions taken in a bunker do not most any damage that they see—no mat- do anything to make the shot less dif- ter whether their ball lies on the green ficult. The difficulty of playing out of or not. Damage that may be repaired sand is already penalizing enough, and under the Rules of Golf now consists of 16 V I R G I N I A G O L F E R | N O V E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 18 players do not need to also deal with leaves, stones, or loose impediments left in the bunker. Therefore, loose imped- iments may now be moved or removed from any bunker on the course. The majority of what players do in a bunker will not result in a penalty, un- less you improve the conditions affecting your stroke. There are still a few times where touching the sand in a bunker may result in a penalty, as there still needs to be some challenge to the unpredictability of sand. Touching sand may result in a penalty when you de- liberately touch sand to test its condition or make a practice swing or backswing for a stroke. Touching the sand with your club di- rectly in front of or behind the ball may also be a penalty, but exceptions include when you are searching for your ball and when removing loose impediments. Once the ball is out of the bunker—those few restrictions no longer apply and players may touch the sand without penalty, even if they have to come back to the same spot! As you can see, a major theme of these modernized rules is one that is benefi- cial and friendlier to the player. Common sense wins out in 2019, with many of the extreme penalties being reduced or even removed completely. Courtney Jones is the VSGA’s One-Day Manager. vsga.org In many cases, new Rules will swing in favor of the golfer by COURTNEY JONES