On tour, penalties (and fines) can be imposed for breaches of tour slow play directives and policies, but for many observers, they are imposed too infrequently to make much difference. Richard Bland was penalised and fined during LIV Golf’s Chicago even t in September 2024 for a breach of that tour’s pace-of-play policy, which states that “a player has 40 seconds to play each stroke, with an additional ten seconds if they are the first to play any stroke in the group”. In addition to a one-stroke penalty for a bad time, Bland was also fined $10,000 by LIV Golf.
But at club level, it’s a different story, primarily because generally there is no-one there to police such things. The Rules regarding prompt pace of play are generally recommendations rather than set rules and are designed to allow flexibility to committees in charge of a competition to manage pace of play in an appropriate fashion, depending on the resources available. A great deal of guidance and suggestions are available within the Committee Procedures section 5H of the Official Guide to the Rules of Golf.
If you are going to class ‘unreasonably delaying play’ as slow play, either on a hole or between holes, then sanctions are available under Rule 5.6a of one stroke for a first breach, two for a second and disqualification for a third. But at club level, generally, who is going to be there to impose such penalties other than other players in the same group or groups close by? And that can end up being one person’s word against another’s, potentially leading to bad blood that club golf just doesn’t need.
And what is ‘unreasonable’? Well, Clarification 5.6a/1 says:
Examples of actions that, if causing more than a brief delay in play, are likely to be treated as unreasonable delay are:
* Returning to the teeing area from the putting green to retrieve a lost club. * Continuing to search for a lost ball for several minutes after the allowed three-minute search time has expired. * Stopping by the clubhouse or halfway house to get food or drink for more than a few minutes if the Committee has not allowed for it.
Rule 5.6b, reproduced below, then addresses the need for a prompt pace of play, but this Rule doesn’t highlight specific penalties – these would need to come via an event’s ‘pace of play’ policy, typically built around the recommendations in Rule 5.6b…
Rule 5.6b A round of golf is meant to be played at a prompt pace.
Each player should recognise that their pace of play is likely to affect how long it will take other players to play their rounds, including both those in the player’s own group and those in following groups.
Players are encouraged to allow faster groups to play through.
(1) Pace of play recommendations The player should play at a prompt pace throughout the round, including the time taken to: • Prepare for and make each stroke, • Move from one place to another between strokes, and • Move to the next teeing area after completing a hole.
A player should prepare in advance for the next stroke and be ready to play when it is their turn.
When it is the player’s turn to play: • It is recommended that the player make the stroke in no more than 40 seconds after they are (or should be) able to play without interference or distraction, and • The player should usually be able to play more quickly than that and is encouraged to do so.
(2) Playing out of turn to help pace of play Depending on the form of play, there are times when players may play out of turn to help the pace of play: • In match play, the players may agree that one of them will play out of turn to save time (see Rule 6.4a Exception). • In stroke play, players may play “ ready golf ” in a safe and responsible way (see Rule 6.4b(2)).
(3) Committee pace of play policy To encourage and enforce prompt play, the Committee should adopt a Local Rule setting a Pace of Play Policy.
This Policy may set a maximum time to complete a round, a hole or series of holes and a stroke, and it may set penalties for not following the Policy.
See Committee Procedures, Section 5G (recommendations on contents of Pace of Play Policy).
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