The Borneo Post

Golf rulemakers limit size, scale of green-reading aid

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NEW YORK: The scale of puttinggre­en maps, including those on electronic devices, will be limited under rules announced Monday by golf’s governing bodies, the Royal and Ancient Golf Club and the US Golf Associatio­n.

The new interpreta­tion of Rule 4.3 will come into force on January 1, 2019, and follows a six- week feedback period on plans to make the change.

“It’s important that we take steps to ensure that skill and judgment are the main determinan­ts of success in reading the greens,” R& A executive director for governance David Rickman said.

“We received some extremely useful feedback over the last six weeks that helped us finalise the limits.”

The rule will limit detailed green maps used by gol fers during a round, including those on electronic or digital devices, to a scale of 3/8 of an inch to five yards (1:480) or smaller while a notebook or paper map image must not be larger than 4.25x7 inches.

A hole location sheet displaying nine or more holes on a single sheet of paper can be larger provided images of individual putting greens meet the scale limit.

The move is meant to reaffirm the USGA and R& A view that reading greens is a crucial golf skill.

“These latest modificati­ons provide very practical changes that make the interpreta­tion easier to understand and apply in the field,” said Thomas Pagel, USGA senior managing director for governance.

No magnificat­ion of putting green informatio­n is allowed other than normal prescripti­on glasses or lenses.

Hand- drawn or wr i t ten informatio­n about a putting green is only allowed if contained in a book, or on paper, that meets the size limit and was written by the player or the player’s caddie.

Digital or electronic putting green maps will violate the rules if they fail to comply with the size and scale rules or if the device produces a recommende­d line of play based on the ball location.

“The new interpreta­tion is a first step in the process and we will keep green-reading materials under review in 2019 to assess whether any further action is required,” Rickman said. — AFP

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