PGA Tour-Level Etiquette The Average Golfer Doesn’t Follow
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PGA Tour-Level Etiquette The Average Golfer Doesn’t Follow

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PGA Tour-Level Etiquette The Average Golfer Doesn’t Follow

Here are MyGolfSpy, we support golf being played in any form.

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But it’s also worth acknowledging that when the game is played at a seriously high level—such as on the PGA Tour—the expectations for how you conduct yourself shift. Money and livelihoods are at stake. Naturally, there are unwritten rules that get followed to a higher standard than at your weekly league.

Here is an incomplete list of etiquette a Tour player follows that the average golfer (for the most part) ignores or doesn’t consider. I haven’t included any actual rules here—obviously recreational players tend to make up their own common sense rules—so all of these are in the etiquette category.

1. Not standing directly behind someone who is hitting

It’s common to see recreational golfers stand directly behind golfers. I’ve even seen some older golfers request for someone to stand behind them to help them follow the ball’s flight.

Is it a nuisance to most everyday golfers? Not really. Personally, you can stand wherever you want when I’m hitting (although I don’t recommend anything in the shank zone).

On the Tour or other high-level competition, standing directly behind someone is a no-no. The proper position for someone not hitting is to be just behind and to the right of the tee box for a right-handed player, meaning you can see their face as they are hitting.

The rationale is that the player hitting shouldn’t be able to see you at all during the swing, and being directly behind someone increases that because your vision tends to extend slightly behind on the backswing.

I went to the Players Championship last year and Brian Harman asked for a standard bearer to move—the teenage volunteer was some 10 yards behind him. Some players can be very sensitive about it and others don’t care as much—but it’s an understood rule.

2. Avoiding another player’s “through line”

One of the first rules of etiquette you learn as a golfer is to not step on another player’s line.

As of the past few years, you can fix any imperfections in the green—so this rule doesn’t hold a ton of practical weight anymore. It’s more of a respect thing. Chewing up someone’s line is a little like ripping the Velcro off your glove in the middle of someone’s backswing.

Someone’s line is generally thought of as the path the ball will travel from its start position to the hole but for high-level competition, that line extends past the hole to the possible comeback putt someone could have. It’s referred to as the “through line.”

If someone has a 40-foot putt, you aren’t going to walk on the exact opposite side of the hole within, let’s say, five feet or so. In general, Tour players avoid walking close to the hole while reading a putt. The expectation is to stay out of the way.

Again, this carried more weight back when you couldn’t fix spike marks or other bumps. It’s more about respect than anything tangible.

3. Knowing the different divot rules of a course

A reasonable number of recreational golfers follow divot rules but the majority doesn’t

In different parts of the world, divots are taken care of with a variety of methods. Some courses ask you to fill in divots with sand or some other mixture. Others want the divot to be replaced. I’ve played certain courses that don’t want you to do anything.

This is typically not much of a consideration for the average golfer. Tour caddies consider it an art form.

Some of us also consider playing out of fairway divots an art form (and everyone else is wrong).

4. Enter and exit bunkers from the (same) low point

Taking care of bunkers is a big deal in competitive golf for good reason. You should return the bunker to more or less the ideal condition. Ending up in a random footprint caused by carelessness could unfairly cost someone a stroke.

To avoid this, that means raking backwards—starting from where you hit and going back to where you originally walked into the bunker.

And where you should walk in is important, too. You don’t want to walk in on the high side of the lip because that can create a much larger mess with your footprints. You want to walk in at a low point closest to where your ball is so you can access it without building a sand castle.

5. Tapping sand out of your shoes before walking on a green

If you see any Tour player hit a bunker shot, the first thing they do upon exiting the bunker is tapping out the sand. This is so they don’t track the sand all over the green, making it more difficult to putt.

It’s commonplace to find courses with sand splashed all over the green. Sometimes this is from the bunker shot itself but most of the time it’s because people are walking with sand still lodged between their spikes.

As a side note, the Masters actually has someone remove sand from the greens after bunker shots. Between groups, a volunteer will use a tool that disperses the sand until it can’t be seen anymore.

6. Talking to someone else’s ball

I’m guilty of this one.

If I’m playing with one of my buddies and he hits a drive that is cutting towards the fairway, all of a sudden I’m saying, “Keep moving, come on.”

Rooting for someone else’s ball is sometimes seen as a nice gesture to show you are invested in someone’s round. That doesn’t fly in competitive golf.

You can give someone a thumb’s up if they’ve hit one close when you are up at the green. You can say “nice shot”, although even this doesn’t happen much in high-level competition. Players tend to stay in their own bubble when it comes to the actual performance.

Basically, competitive players want to talk to their own ball or have no one else talking to it.

7. Lack of divot pattern on the driving range

The majority of golfers I see hit balls however they want. They find a piece of suitable grass and repeat the process until it’s all over.

The problem with that is the grass has a harder time growing back when divots are scattered. The proper technique is to have divots in a row, creating vertical strips. When you can’t go forward any further, you start on a new strip of divots.

Go to any Tour event and you will see players following this method. I do feel for the rest of us who show up to a scruffy driving range that doesn’t have much grass. Sometimes there isn’t enough grass to make this work.

In general, however, that is the way to manage divots when you hit balls.

Are there any other unwritten rules you see Tour players follow that the average golfer doesn’t?

Let me know below in the comments.

Top Photo Caption: Not stepping across a player’s through line is one of the unwritten rules of etiquette that top golfers follow. (GETTY IMAGES/Tracy Wilcox)

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





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      Jim W.

      2 years ago

      Slow play, slow play and slow play. Here in Arizona slow play during the summers can be dangerous to yourself and others. Hit and git during non-money, recreational play.

      Reply

      Scott

      2 years ago

      Slow play, specifically multiple practice swings. How many times has a group ahead of you had one or more golfers who takes 3 or more practice swings, only to slice it or hit it fat or thin over and over again? The course is not the place to try to practice your swing or think about the 5 swing thoughts you read about in the last golf magazine. One or two is acceptable, if you think you need them, but 3 or more…wasted time and holding up play. The teaching pro I play with and I take at most one practice swing, or beginning of a swing to feel the groove. We’ve shown over and over again that taking more than 1 practice swing does not increase the success of the shot, but instead adds doubt and a less quality outcome.

      Reply

      Pete

      2 years ago

      This might upset some folks, so lets get stuck in.
      I was under the impression that a bunker is considered a hazard, so if you land in one or two (as I have plenty of times), then you shouldn’t get any special treatment with respect to the condition of the bunker. Yeah everyone hates landing in a footprint or paw print, but it’s a hazard and therefore you should suck it up and play your shot.
      I believe the only reason the bunkers are raked are so they look pretty on TV. Does anyone come along fix the divot you’ve taken when you have had to play your shot from trees or replace those pine straw you’ve sprayed everywhere after your shot.
      Don’t get me wrong, I much prefer playing out of a freshly raked bunker, but if I land in a footprint or whatever, I just play it as it lies.

      Reply

      Fuck You Pete

      2 years ago

      You prefer it raked but, apparently, won’t rake after you admittedly would otherwise have to.

      THEREFORE, fuck you Pete.

      Reply

      Scott S

      2 years ago

      Rule #1.2.a Showing consideration to others; Taking good care of the course.
      Sounds like you expect someone else to be considerate to others and take care of the course for you. An old axiom I learned as a leader was not to expect anyone to do something I had not, or would not do myself. If follows that if you cannot clean up after yourself, don’t expect anyone else to clean up after you either. I hope you find apparent that just because someone else is a slob and a miscreant doesn’t mean one should follow that example, but set the example by acting better, with integrity and consideration.

      Reply

      Keene Ferrer

      2 years ago

      Theoretically, a bunker is a groomed hazard. Footprints are usually found in public course bunkers when players are just too lazy to rake them properly

      Reply

      WCS

      2 years ago

      I have only ever seen one dog on a course and it belonged to the head greens keeper. He was there to keep the geese off the course.

      Reply

      Pat Neller

      2 years ago

      Spitting while on the course, there are a couple of US players that are now with Luv (another story) who were really bad. Looks discussing on TV, thank goodness we on the other side of the world no longer have to watch them

      Reply

      BH

      2 years ago

      Them’s fightin’ words, Pat. If a man can’t have a dip on the course, what can he do? My local league is practically sponsored by Phillip Morris and US Smokeless. Common sights for those of us who play muni tracks. There are plenty of ways to be respectful if you’ve got a lip of Copenhagen in. It sure beats those fools that spit sunflower hulls all over the green.

      Reply

      mg

      2 years ago

      All great examples of courtesy. The slow play of tour players is copied by the hack public -5 hour rounds on a beat up public track is torture.

      Reply

      Jr

      2 years ago

      The average golfer doesn’t follow?
      How to walk. Competitors walk fast. They walk on pace so they have their time once they get to their ball. They don’t wait to start moving until the last person has his head cover adjusted and club shoved into the bag. I see a lot of golfers dressed like a pro, rarely see one walk like a pro.

      Reply

      JAC

      2 years ago

      1. Not standing directly behind someone who is hitting
      Wrong
      It should read:
      Not standing directly behind THE TARGET LINE of someone who is hitting.

      Reply

      Charles Shelton

      2 years ago

      Dogs should not be allowed on a golf course, unless it is a certified service dog. One Muni that I play has a big sign near the 1st tee and the pro shop saying no dogs. Seems like every time I play this course, I see five or six dogs. Annoying!

      Reply

      Livininparadise

      2 years ago

      Wow. I have never seen a dog on the course in 50 years

      Reply

      Tom54

      2 years ago

      This rule should apply to most other public places in society.

      Reply

      mg

      2 years ago

      In Scotland it is common to see dogs on the course with their master. At Royal Dornoch this dog went right into the gorse to retrieve balls.

      Reply

      Darren Jeffries

      2 years ago

      Do pro’s play tournaments in the winter mornings into a low sun without ball spotters watching for where the ball lands? No…there are times recreational golfers stand directly behind the ball when their playing partners are hitting as a necessity.

      I do give bunker raking some attention. Pros, or morseo their caddies, rake back then lightly in a forwards motion to even out the sand, then move back and repeat until they have exited the bunker.

      Reply

      Leon Amer

      2 years ago

      Unsolicited swing advice!

      Reply

      Duffer1

      2 years ago

      After the Michelle Wie episode, Jack Nicklaus was asked if he cared about the “through line”. Jack said he never considered it, because in his mind every putt ended with the ball dropping into the hole. :)

      Reply

      BHill

      2 years ago

      Fix your ball marks on the greens.
      Don’t spit your sunflowers on the greens.
      Don’t yell obscenities loud enough to be heard three holes over when you screw up a shot.

      Reply

      Will

      2 years ago

      Leaving sunflower seeds on greens should be a lifetime ban. Same with cigarette butts. And stupid pranks like leaving jumbo marshmallows scattered around.

      Reply

      Livininparadise

      2 years ago

      100%

      Paul Samp

      2 years ago

      I mow fairways at a local course. Reel mowers just spit cigarette butts out. Thow them in the rough or better yet bring an ashtray

      Lil dik trumps

      2 years ago

      Also no sunflower seeds on the tee. I have noticed it’s the old white guy who spits seeds everywhere and then the stuff their putter in the hole to retrieve their ball like an inbred step child. Worst is the lazy fg who parks their cart in front of the green so it holds up the group behind you. Never ever drive on the green like lil dik trumps does.

      Kuso

      2 years ago

      “Don’t yell obscenities loud enough to be heard three holes over when you screw up a shot.”

      they learned this from watching Pros do it at events – we might not hear on TV as much, but there’s so much cussing on every hole, it’s ridiculous. Most of it is drowned out by the crowd noise, but if you’re close enough to the players, you will hear it quite loudly. If the crowd wasn’t there, it would be loud enough to hear a couple holes away

      Reply

      D R

      2 years ago

      For divots on the range, start at the front and move back. If you put the ball just behind the last divot on the little bit of grass, you take less turf with each shot and chew up less range. If you go the other way, you take a full-sized pelt each time and eat more turf.

      Reply

      Ken

      2 years ago

      This is ideal… I’ve known this for decades and I love to see others knowing this method as well 👍
      Driving ranges are beat up to where I have a hard time finding anywhere with half ass quality conditions.

      Reply

      SANDBGGR

      2 years ago

      I learned about the through line only by watching the Michelle Wie documentary when she talked about being scolded by a pro when she was a teenager after a round. I have also been careful to keep my divot pattern in a line on the driving range but based on your description, I may be hitting it wrong lol. I usually go back from the first divot in a line. Should I be going forward from the first divot. Please let me know lol!

      Reply

      TMMBPA

      2 years ago

      You are doing it right. Hit shot, then place next ball just behind divot. Working backwards. If you place the ball in front of the divot, you are creating conditions behind the ball that are not normal on course. Range is basically simulating fairway, and there will be earth and grass behind the ball in the fairway, not a divot allowing easier access to the ball. Of course you may end up just in front of a divot, but this is rare and not what your pros practice for.

      Reply

      JRM

      2 years ago

      How about people stop playing music loud enough for anyone 10 feet away from their cart to hear. No music at all would be best, or put in 1 ear bud so no one could hear it but you. I still can’t believe courses allow speakers on the courses.

      Reply

      Chris Kilmer

      2 years ago

      So agree with this. I love music but I have 20 other hours in the day to listen to it

      Reply

      League Golfer

      2 years ago

      I agree. Can we have 4 hours away from media and music and try to just enjoy the golf course and its environment, please? I play at munis with traffic noise on some holes, but let’s try to have a peaceful outdoor experience as much as possible. If you want music, please listen to it during your other 20 hours of the day. I feel like these music listeners must always be listening to music 24/7. That seems kind of sad. Take a break from your music once in a while for four hours, and enjoy a different experience.

      5XChamp

      2 years ago

      I hate confrontation, especially on the golf course. 1st tee announcement: 1) shut up when I’m playing a shot, 2) don’t step in my line, 3) if you have music, I don’t want to hear it, 4) play when you’re away.

      Reply

      David Jordan

      2 years ago

      my biggest peeve is when my golfing partner stands directly behind me on a put to tell me what I did wrong before the ball gets halfway to the hole. “pushed it!!” We all know what we did wrong, we without the commentary.

      Reply

      KR

      2 years ago

      No way I play with that person again

      Reply

      Kuso

      2 years ago

      Nevermind going in and out of the bunker at the same spot – how about just RAKING their destruction of 5 shots that they took to get out
      lol

      Reply

      Anthony Savastano

      2 years ago

      But where should one leave the rake after exiting the bunker? I’m guessing there’s a protocol for this, but never came across it.

      Reply

      Joe S.

      2 years ago

      My understanding is that courses handle this differently (some put the rakes in the sand, others in the grass), and we are simply supposed to follow their lead – or basically put it back where you found it.

      But some courses have no pattern, and some of our fellow golfers just toss them wherever. If there isn’t a known protocol, I leave a rake where it’s least likely to change the result of a hard running approach shot – in the sand on the fairway side or in the grass on the green side.

      Reply

      Kevin Coombs

      2 years ago

      On tour there is one take per bunker placed on the side of the bunker away from play, away from the fairway or green, and outside the bunker on flat ground.

      Reply

      SANDBGGR

      2 years ago

      My course wants the rakes left out of the bunker(some want left in) and paint a red T where the rake should be left. Not many take the time to put it back there though.

      Reply

      Yaaqob

      2 years ago

      I can’t believe the other replies got this so wrong as well. Outside of the bunker not in line with most common line of incoming shots and it should be laid parallel to most shot lines coming in. So outside of the bunker, mostly other side opposite the green and fairway, and lay it so the handle points towards the green so it doesn’t have as much chance to stop and trap a ball.

      Reply

      Greg

      2 years ago

      The profile of the rake hast changed it still has the same amount of area that the ball can hit and stop or be trapped

      JBR

      2 years ago

      I put the rake in the bunker so the guy in the next group who doesn’t understand (or is just that lazy) the importance of keeping his cart 5-10 yards from the bunker (and greens and tees) doesn’t run it over and trash it.

      Reply

      Jim Thomson

      2 years ago

      In Australia I’ve played a few courses where a length of ABS pipe is buried into the ground like a fence post right next to the bunker. The handle of the rake is slid down into the pipe.

      Reply

      Scott Dean

      2 years ago

      When I was a kid my muni course that I grew up on had a spike like a nail coming out of the head of the rake and you just stuck it upright into the ground, head side down, handle side pointing straight up towards the sky. It seemed a good way to keep the rake visible and out of the way of most rolling or bouncing shots. I haven’t seen rakes like that on any course in decades. Probably because the spike on the end of the rake was pretty sharp and made the rake like a bayonet. Insurance companies probably hated those rakes, but I bet lawyers liked them.

      Ed Supinski

      2 years ago

      Even if they follow the straight line rule they do not fill in their divots. Every time I go to the range I fill in my own plus several other rows. I guess if you have a “ good swing” you are “entitled”.

      Reply

      JLS

      2 years ago

      One observation I’ve made is that tour professionals actually don’t follow the vertical line divot pattern range etiquette. My suspicion is that this is predominantly the result of the use of launch monitors on the range and that the vertical line divot pattern would move the ball out of the area where the launch monitors are reading the flight more quickly. In that scenario they would then have to reposition the launch monitor.

      Reply

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