View Full Version : Golf Ball Snatcher
jtdraig
05-02-2012, 09:01 AM
Yesterday morning I hit a screamer down the left side of the fairway at Bacall #9:pepper2:but unfortunately it hit a sprinkler head and bounced high in the air and rolled into the gutter on Canal Street:cus: Amazingly, a passing car stopped dead in the middle of the road, a woman jumped out, snagged the ball, and headed back to her car:swear:. I yelled at her, she stopped in her tracks, looked at her husband, looked at me, and dropped the ball back into the street.:spoken: Meanwhile, two cars had stopped behind them. She jumped back out of the car, snagged the ball, horns were honking, and we yelled again. This time she tossed the ball up onto the golf course, jumped in her car, and they took off. I got to my ball, properly repositioned it, and put it on the green.:laugh: Only in The Villages.......LOL:beer3:
villager
05-02-2012, 09:06 AM
Now that is funny. Did you feel like you were on one of those punked shows?
Bill-n-Brillo
05-02-2012, 09:08 AM
I keep telling Sandy she needs to stop doing that........... :shocked:
Bill :)
BostonCelt
05-02-2012, 09:17 AM
Yet ANOTHER reason for driving defensively, both on the tee and on the road, at TV.
Patiently awaiting for someone to post your true accurate official legal score for the hole......
graciegirl
05-02-2012, 10:14 AM
Yet ANOTHER reason for driving defensively, both on the tee and on the road, at TV.
Patiently awaiting for someone to post your true accurate official legal score for the hole......
Let me see, It was one out, three in,four out, seven in.........this is challenging! ;).
ajbrown
05-02-2012, 10:51 AM
Yet ANOTHER reason for driving defensively, both on the tee and on the road, at TV.
Patiently awaiting for someone to post your true accurate official legal score for the hole......
Are you teasing me for the last time I commented on a thread like this because I did not feel like making the standard comment on how crazy I felt the people behaved that are the subject of the thread :ho:
You asked for it this time :laugh:
It comes down to if Canal Street is deemed out of bounds where the ball came to rest. I suspect it is, so the player has no score for the hole.
The player would lose the hole in match play and would be disqualified in medal as he never finished the hole. Decision 15/9 covers this.
USGA: Rules and Decisions (http://www.usga.org/Rule-Books/Rules-of-Golf/Decision-15/?)
Even if in bounds, we would need to investigate what the player means by "properly repositioned it", prior to hitting the ball ...
PS. I apologize to anyone who takes this too seriously :beer3:
BostonCelt
05-02-2012, 11:08 AM
Are you teasing me for the last time I commented on a thread......[/SIZE]
Ha ha! Nope, not teasing at all. This is something for which I think I need to know the correct answer, 'cause my game is at the point where....up to now....I'd thought I'd seen/heard/done it all. And now I fear a repeat!
So...how does one play it? What if she threw it on to the fairway? Or what if he had to follow her home to retreive it??
We can kindly assume he one-putted, right?
Mikeod
05-02-2012, 11:13 AM
I keep telling Sandy she needs to stop doing that........... :shocked:
Bill :)
Bad Bill, bad, bad. Now go to your room! :spoken:
Bill-n-Brillo
05-02-2012, 12:06 PM
Bad Bill, bad, bad. Now go to your room! :spoken:
I'm still laughing out loud............. :1rotfl:
Bill :wave:
The street is OB. Designations for OB are found on the scorecard. In this case it is the "inside edge of street curbs". He should have hit a "provisional" from the tee box if he was not sure it was OB. In a tounament, if he discovered ball#1 was in fact OB he plays the "provisional" (hitting 3). If he did not hit a provisional, he must go back to the tee and hit again (hitting 3). In casual play in this situation, we sometimes drop it inbounds to save time but that is not the correct procedure.
..In casual play in this situation, we sometimes drop it inbounds to save time but that is not the correct procedure.
And it's not golf either.
entemedor
05-02-2012, 02:33 PM
Which reminds me of a story. Years ago, up north, I was walking alongside a golf course. Long par 3, green shaded by a huge oak tree, tall chain-link fence between where I was walking and the course itself.
So this foursome was teeing off and one of the guys hit his ball into the tree...kind of a line drive shot. He was way, way left of the green. The ball did its usual whack, whack etc. as it bounced from limb to limb, then dropped on my side of the fence. I looked back at the golfers and they started walking down off the tee and I couldn't see them anymore.
Soooo...I picked up the ball, tossed it over the fence onto the green. It ended up about 3 feet from the pin and I kept on going.
Bet that golfer is still talking about that shot.
:-)
l2ridehd
05-02-2012, 06:11 PM
I was playing in a club tournament once and on a par three, something amazing happened. This a very elevated tee, maybe 50 feet above the green and the tees were playing about 160 yards that day. This is a true story. I hit my ball and it landed on the green about 25 feet from the pin. My opponent hit his shot dead at the pin, ball was rolling toward the hole, looked like a possible hole in one or at least a very close shot. When the ball was maybe 3 feet from the hole, a dog came running across the green, grabbed his ball and took off like his tail was on fire. We laugh about that every time we play that par 3.
uujudy
05-02-2012, 07:26 PM
Which reminds me of a story. Years ago, up north, I was walking alongside a golf course. Long par 3, green shaded by a huge oak tree, tall chain-link fence between where I was walking and the course itself.
So this foursome was teeing off and one of the guys hit his ball into the tree...kind of a line drive shot. He was way, way left of the green. The ball did its usual whack, whack etc. as it bounced from limb to limb, then dropped on my side of the fence. I looked back at the golfers and they started walking down off the tee and I couldn't see them anymore.
Soooo...I picked up the ball, tossed it over the fence onto the green. It ended up about 3 feet from the pin and I kept on going.
Bet that golfer is still talking about that shot.
:-)
Hahahahaha! :1rotfl:
PPreu
05-03-2012, 12:50 PM
There is a rule in the USGA specifically governing this type of "activity". I dont have it in front of me, so Im paraphrasing. "If an outside force moves the golf ball, the ball is to be replaced as near as is possible to its original position, with no penalty." Basically this is for the occasional animal, which I have seen, that picks up a golf ball and takes off with it. (NOPE, NOT CALLING SAID WOMAN AN ANIMAL, though a retriever is a type of dog!)
Now, seeing as it was apparently OB, when moved by the outside force, all bets are off and it is to be played as an OB, that is re-hitting from the original spot, incurring a two stroke penalty.
Whew, I need a beer!
graciegirl
05-03-2012, 02:21 PM
There is a rule in the USGA specifically governing this type of "activity". I dont have it in front of me, so Im paraphrasing. "If an outside force moves the golf ball, the ball is to be replaced as near as is possible to its original position, with no penalty." Basically this is for the occasional animal, which I have seen, that picks up a golf ball and takes off with it. (NOPE, NOT CALLING SAID WOMAN AN ANIMAL, though a retriever is a type of dog!)
Now, seeing as it was apparently OB, when moved by the outside force, all bets are off and it is to be played as an OB, that is re-hitting from the original spot, incurring a two stroke penalty.
Whew, I need a beer!
I love Golf. Most of the Golf played here on the executive courses doesn't remotely resemble the game I have played for 40 years.....and I am not complaining. It is kinda nice to once again hear a discussion on rules. I certainly have heard a lot of them over time. I used to be so interested in doing it right and listening to the debates on rules...and now I don't keep score and neither do most of the girls I play golf with. However...I am hitting them straighter than I ever did, but not nearly as long. But oh it is more fun than it ever was.
There are unusual and wonderful things that happen as we age. Not keeping score on the golf course and not caring about competing like I once did is one of them for me.
Pturner
05-03-2012, 02:37 PM
There is a rule in the USGA specifically governing this type of "activity". I dont have it in front of me, so Im paraphrasing. "If an outside force moves the golf ball, the ball is to be replaced as near as is possible to its original position, with no penalty." Basically this is for the occasional animal, which I have seen, that picks up a golf ball and takes off with it. (NOPE, NOT CALLING SAID WOMAN AN ANIMAL, though a retriever is a type of dog!)
Now, seeing as it was apparently OB, when moved by the outside force, all bets are off and it is to be played as an OB, that is re-hitting from the original spot, incurring a two stroke penalty.
Whew, I need a beer!
Isn't it a "strike and distance" penalty, I.e just one stroke penalty, but must hit from original spot?
Whatever
05-03-2012, 03:53 PM
There is no such thing as a lost ball, someone will eventually find it, and, use it.
entemedor
05-03-2012, 04:20 PM
Which reminds me of another story... (What a surprise?, my family would cry)..
We're having a birthday party for our large, extended family - maybe 50 of us - at a small, public country club. We rented a room ( a large room) and we had the place to ourselves. The little kids were all running around outside, having fun, and they came into the club showing us the golf balls they found.
"Where did you find them?" one of us asked. "On that grass out front." one of them said.
Oh my. We went outside and there were 4 golfers, walking toward the 18th green.
We apologized, gave them back their balls (of course) and after they dropped their balls and putted out, we bought them a couple of pitchers of beer.
They were nice guys, they had a good laugh about it.
logdog
05-03-2012, 04:42 PM
This reminds me of a story back when I was living up north. This was many years ago. I was playing a long par 3 and pulled my shot way left of the green. My ball hit a big oak tree and bounced around in the limbs. I thought it might end up in someone's yard but when I got to the green, I found my ball only 2-3 feet from the flag. It was my first birdie.
ajbrown
05-03-2012, 04:46 PM
Isn't it a "strike and distance" penalty, I.e just one stroke penalty, but must hit from original spot?
Strike and distance.... you bowlers kill me :a20:
PaPaLarry
05-04-2012, 07:47 AM
The street is OB. Designations for OB are found on the scorecard. In this case it is the "inside edge of street curbs". He should have hit a "provisional" from the tee box if he was not sure it was OB. In a tounament, if he discovered ball#1 was in fact OB he plays the "provisional" (hitting 3). If he did not hit a provisional, he must go back to the tee and hit again (hitting 3). In casual play in this situation, we sometimes drop it inbounds to save time but that is not the correct procedure. You are correct!!!! Out of Bounds!! Tee up again. LOL Even on Executives. But I was amused by the people getting out of car, for "just a ball". And we worry about cart accidents!!!:confused::shrug::rolleyes: Only in The Villages.
PaPaLarry
05-04-2012, 07:50 AM
Which reminds me of another story... (What a surprise?, my family would cry)..
We're having a birthday party for our large, extended family - maybe 50 of us - at a small, public country club. We rented a room ( a large room) and we had the place to ourselves. The little kids were all running around outside, having fun, and they came into the club showing us the golf balls they found.
"Where did you find them?" one of us asked. "On that grass out front." one of them said.
Oh my. We went outside and there were 4 golfers, walking toward the 18th green.
We apologized, gave them back their balls (of course) and after they dropped their balls and putted out, we bought them a couple of pitchers of beer.
They were nice guys, they had a good laugh about it.Now thats good golf ediquette!!!!! Nothing like the 19nth hole.:coolsmiley::a040:
jtdraig
05-04-2012, 10:36 AM
:bigbow:Thanks to all who quoted the rules book. Of course, you are all correct. BUT, since no one I play with is getting paid and we are out there for fun and practice, we played on. A provisional was somewhat out of the question..something about keeping the game moving along not to jam up the course. I might have hit one if the drama didn't start to unfold....you gotta love this place.
You are all awesome!
vBulletin® v3.8.11, Copyright ©2000-2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.