Friday, March 21, 2014

Ask Linda #814-Preventive umpiring


Hi Linda,
I was wondering if I can remind a player to move his marker back to its original position during a stroke-play competition, or would this mean I was not protecting the field?
Thanks again for all your help.
Lou from Ontario

Dear Lou,

Pointing out a potential violation of the Rules to another player is good etiquette and commendable behavior. I call it “preventive umpiring,” and I encourage it and practice it all the time.

Protecting the field consists of pointing out violations that a player neglected to include in his score. A few examples:
• a player is asked to lift his ball on the fairway because it interferes with another player’s stroke, and he cleans the ball;
• a player searches for his ball for more than five minutes, finds it, and plays it;
• a player takes a practice swing in a bunker and contacts the ground;
• a player removes loose impediments in a hazard or bunker prior to hitting his ball.

Players should always be on the alert for potential rules’ violations, and should assist each other in avoiding them. Players who intentionally withhold information that would save another player from a penalty should be placed in a stock and pelted with rotten tomatoes!

Linda
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