This is an important question and one I find myself going back and forth on. On one hand, I can see that for many, golf’s rulebook can feel somewhat impenetrable. Given its inherent difficulty, most would agree that golf is a hard sport to get into and a 160-page tome with a wide variety of rules definitions and procedures doesn’t exactly help. Whilst the rules have been simplified over time, they remain complex to the extent that many experienced golfers never truly get to know them.
I’ve always wondered what percentage of experienced golfers truly understand the difference between red and yellow penalty staked areas. In this instance, how many golfers drop in an area that feels roughly equitable to the other players in the group versus dropping in the exact correct spot? This sort of lack of widely held understanding is what often creates an unfair playing field. And if this is as widespread as I suspect, then it’s only right to question whether the rules book is fit for purpose.
On the other hand, golf is one of the few self-policing sports (at least at club level which accounts for most of us). The rules have to provide a very clear set of procedures for everything a golfer might encounter. Given that we play on vast natural landscapes that range from windswept links courses to treelined parkland layouts, the number of likely scenarios is huge. And, of course, the main purpose of the rules is to ensure the game is fair. It follows that inequity would thrive within the grey areas created by an oversimplified set of rules.
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About 20 years ago, I went through the process of getting an R&A certified golf rules qualification. At the end of the rules school, I took an exam and, despite being the least knowledgeable pupil in the class, I somehow managed to pass. However, before anyone asks me for a ruling on what to do if your ball comes to rest next to a bunker rake, I need to emphasise that most of this knowledge is long forgotten.
My abiding memory of that experience is how the complexity of the rules, whilst unhelpful in a number of ways, is unavoidable if fairness is your main priority. What do you think? There is a comments box below and I’d love to hear from anyone with a smart idea on how we can reduce complexity and retain fairness.
