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Adding some Wolf to your golf game can enhance those competitive elements while keeping it fun and alive.

Step 1: Choose the order of play
Choose the order of play by spinning a tee. Player one goes first on the first hole, player two on the second, and so on. The rotation stays the same — you tee off after the same person on every hole.

Step 2: Wolf tees off
Tee off first and you’re the wolf. Announce whether you want a partner or are going “lone wolf.”

Step 3: Wolf chooses partner
Watch each of the other players shoot. Decide after each shot whether you want that player as a partner for the hole.

Tip
You must decide if you want a player to be your partner before the next player drives.

Step 4: Play the best shot
Play the best shot between partners for each hole.

Step 5: Award points
Award points for the lowest score. If the wolf has a partner, they get one point each. If the wolf is playing alone, he gets both points. If the wolf loses the hole, the other team gets one point each.

Tip
In the case of a tie, no points are awarded.

Step 6: Play the next hole
Play the next hole — the next golfer in the rotation becomes the wolf.

Did You Know?
In 1971, Ian Colston played 22 rounds and five holes — the greatest number of rounds played on foot in 24 hours.