Notebook
General
Registration Table
Practice Balls
Weather, Bugs, and Weather Delays
Day of Purchases
Pace of Play
Winning & Sandbagging
DO NOT FORGET
Handicapping
Dress Code
Scoring
Bag Storage
Hotel
Golf Course Tips
Directions to Mountain Valley
Mountain Valley Golf Course
Mobile Website
Daily Personalized Agenda
Player Meeting
Shuttle Service
July 14
Event Rules
General Expectations
Money Handling
Cancellation Policy
Late-Entries
Roommate & Playing Partner Policies
Code of Conduct
Rain Guidance
Golf Rules
Red Tee Lottery
Lost Ball
Colored Stakes & Lines
Long Putts
Gimme
Drop Zones
Touching Ball
Updated Rules for Rain
Pace of Play

It takes about one hour to play 18 holes of golf. The other 2.5 to 4.5 hours is "logistical positioning" -- getting to the next shots with the right equipment. Any golf tournament including the PGA Tour played by the rules (no gimmies, no fluffing, etc.) is not going to be completed in under 4 3/4 hours. Add hackers and add time.

The slowest group dictates the pace of play for everyone behind them. Any group that gets out of position -- especially early in the day -- will affect many groups after it.

The pairings are designed with "fun" as top priority and "pace of play" as a close second.

Skilled golfers should educate and lead by example. Everyone needs to enjoy their round, but allow low handicappers to help move things along.

Raking bunkers for others, fixing divots for others, replacing divots for others, and carrying a pocket full of XL Top-Flites is being someone's caddy. It also is speeding up pace of play.

Hitting your own ball first, putting out on occasion, and even putting out of turn while someone is raking a greenside bunker can do wonders for pace of play.

None of the above requires a fellow golfer to play faster between pulling a club from the bag and swinging it. It does imply as a foursome we will work together to play faster.

Your foursome is playing slow if you cannot see the foursome in front of you.