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Reasons Juniors Get DQ in tournaments


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I have been looking at results of lots of tournaments and I noticed that sometimes players get DQ. I know Sometimes DQ is just an unfortunate circumstance like starting too soon after a weather delay. But I would think that is an exception rather then rule. My initial thoughts is most them being DQ were caught cheating by shaving strokes. What surprises me is I seen some rather high profile juniors this happens to a lot after they move up.

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Easy to happen. I watch most of the kids standing on the green looking backwards and counting on their fingers. The kids learn to count each shot instead of keeping track where they in relation to par. They get in the cabbage and slash at a few, easy to loose track.

 

These are 13-15 year old kids who have been playing for years and are playing in what I would call higher level state tournaments. I don't buy the lost count on each shot and signed wrong card unless it was intentional.

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Friend of ours was DQ'd for signing an incorrect scorecard in a two day national event after the second day. Parent that was keeping score for him wrote down the wrong number on a hole, he signed off on it, left the scoring table and didn't notice until they posted his score up on the digital scoreboard. Went back to let them know and took the DQ.

 

In a two day national event the parent has no business taking scores that goes on the score card. Just the fact they are doing that to me says they should be DQ. I am assuming that this was an event with no caddies allowed and this was a bigger event? I can see how that happens in a one day event or any event with a caddie but not a bigger event with older kids.

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At our State Championship, there was no DQ for incorrect scorecard. They actually encouraged signing a scorecard without totals and to let them do the math. You could even change after it was signed. Never seen that before.

 

My teammate was DQ’d from an event earlier in the year because he thought his ball was lost, reteed, found the first one, played it, and got a DQ.

 

At State, they cared about language, pace, and composure. The final paring, which contained the eventual champion and an OSU commit, got a warning for slow pace, Spieth style.

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At our State Championship, there was no DQ for incorrect scorecard. They actually encouraged signing a scorecard without totals and to let them do the math. You could even change after it was signed. Never seen that before.

 

 

 

If you see your score is wrong after it is posted, it is the player responsibility to report. Scoring table doesn't care about you adding the final score as they are going to add it again anyway. Scoring table is to make sure each score on each hole is correct. It is the scoring tables job to add the score, not the player.

I am GenX.  If you really think I care about what you have to say, I don't.

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My teammate was DQ'd from an event earlier in the year because he thought his ball was lost, reteed, found the first one, played it, and got a DQ.

 

 

Had he declared the original ball as lost?

 

I am not a rules expert, but is DQ even the right penalty for doing that? I know that once they retee they have to play that ball.

I am GenX.  If you really think I care about what you have to say, I don't.

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My teammate was DQ'd from an event earlier in the year because he thought his ball was lost, reteed, found the first one, played it, and got a DQ.

 

 

Had he declared the original ball as lost?

 

I am not a rules expert, but is DQ even the right penalty for doing that? I know that once they retee they have to play that ball.

 

DQ is the correct penalty.

 

He made a stroke at a wrong ball (two stroke penalty). By not correcting his error before teeing off the next hole, it's a DQ.

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My teammate was DQ'd from an event earlier in the year because he thought his ball was lost, reteed, found the first one, played it, and got a DQ.

 

 

Had he declared the original ball as lost?

 

I believe so. He played the rest of the round, and was not until he beat out his opponent their coach called him on it. Dirty, but correct.

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My teammate was DQ'd from an event earlier in the year because he thought his ball was lost, reteed, found the first one, played it, and got a DQ.

 

 

Had he declared the original ball as lost?

 

I believe so. He played the rest of the round, and was not until he beat out his opponent their coach called him on it. Dirty, but correct.

 

You can't declare a ball "lost" (well, I guess you can declare anything you want to, but it has no bearing on the rules). The first ball was by definition lost as soon as a stroke was made at the re-teed ball.

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My teammate was DQ'd from an event earlier in the year because he thought his ball was lost, reteed, found the first one, played it, and got a DQ.

 

 

Had he declared the original ball as lost?

 

I believe so. He played the rest of the round, and was not until he beat out his opponent their coach called him on it. Dirty, but correct.

 

Out of curiosity, what did he shoot for the day?

 

It isn't dirty. It is the rules.

I am GenX.  If you really think I care about what you have to say, I don't.

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My teammate was DQ'd from an event earlier in the year because he thought his ball was lost, reteed, found the first one, played it, and got a DQ.

 

 

Had he declared the original ball as lost?

 

I believe so. He played the rest of the round, and was not until he beat out his opponent their coach called him on it. Dirty, but correct.

 

Out of curiosity, what did he shoot for the day?

 

It isn't dirty. It is the rules.

 

It's sort of an interesting question with respect to sportsmanship; if you, as the fellow competitor, are aware of the situation and understand the penalties, when and how should you bring it up?

 

When the player "finds" the original "lost" ball?

After they've made a stroke (hence 2 stroke penalty) but before they tee off the next hole, so they have an opportunity to correct it?

After they tee off the next hole, so they're DQ'd immediately?

Wait until the end of the round to break the DQ out?

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My teammate was DQ'd from an event earlier in the year because he thought his ball was lost, reteed, found the first one, played it, and got a DQ.

 

 

Had he declared the original ball as lost?

 

I believe so. He played the rest of the round, and was not until he beat out his opponent their coach called him on it. Dirty, but correct.

 

Out of curiosity, what did he shoot for the day?

 

It isn't dirty. It is the rules.

 

It's sort of an interesting question with respect to sportsmanship; if you, as the fellow competitor, are aware of the situation and understand the penalties, when and how should you bring it up?

 

When the player "finds" the original "lost" ball?

After they've made a stroke (hence 2 stroke penalty) but before they tee off the next hole, so they have an opportunity to correct it?

After they tee off the next hole, so they're DQ'd immediately?

Wait until the end of the round to break the DQ out?

 

Was the coach made aware before the round was over is the question I have. I also believe we are talking about High School Golf. I think it is safe to say that most high school coaches do not know that the penalty was a DQ. I didn't know it and would have to look it up. High School coaches aren't even close to rules officials. I don't think it was dirty for that reason. It is just being unaware.

I am GenX.  If you really think I care about what you have to say, I don't.

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Was the coach made aware before the round was over is the question I have. I also believe we are talking about High School Golf. I think it is safe to say that most high school coaches do not know that the penalty was a DQ. I didn't know it and would have to look it up. High School coaches aren't even close to rules officials. I don't think it was dirty for that reason. It is just being unaware.

 

I can totally understand how you play out the round, then when you're finalizing your scorecard, everybody's honest about what happened, nobody knows what the correct rule was, and it turns out to be a DQ. Nothing underhanded there.

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In high school golf I would expect a lot mistakes. What bothers me is a lot kids who won when they were under 12 are the ones getting DQ. Don’t know the reason for it but in some cases I wonder if they are just getting caught and have been doing it for years.

 

I’ve seen some parents do blatant cheating with their kids in the past. Got to think that they eventually get caught.

 

 

 

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In high school golf I would expect a lot mistakes. What bothers me is a lot kids who won when they were under 12 are the ones getting DQ. Don't know the reason for it but in some cases I wonder if they are just getting caught and have been doing it for years.

 

I've seen some parents do blatant cheating with their kids in the past. Got to think that they eventually get caught.

 

Good Lord, why even start the thread?

 

You get a lot of good input and repeatedly just basically say you've made up your mind and it's mostly because of cheating.

 

Guess that's it then.

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In high school golf I would expect a lot mistakes. What bothers me is a lot kids who won when they were under 12 are the ones getting DQ. Don't know the reason for it but in some cases I wonder if they are just getting caught and have been doing it for years.

 

I've seen some parents do blatant cheating with their kids in the past. Got to think that they eventually get caught.

 

Good Lord, why even start the thread?

 

You get a lot of good input and repeatedly just basically say you've made up your mind and it's mostly because of cheating.

 

Guess that's it then.

 

I started the thread because when I look at results and Look at JGS rankings I see DQ beside some names I been looking at. I am curious what causes this. In some cases I am sure it simple mistake and there are good examples here. In some cases it good to know the rules that anyone could make a mistake and get disqualified.

 

It also seems like if you see a pattern of DQ for in tournaments someone in JGS rankings or elsewhere you need to be extra vigilant with them. The great thing is what I am seeing blatant cheating will not get you far in golf and is a minority of players.

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In high school golf I would expect a lot mistakes. What bothers me is a lot kids who won when they were under 12 are the ones getting DQ. Don't know the reason for it but in some cases I wonder if they are just getting caught and have been doing it for years.

 

I've seen some parents do blatant cheating with their kids in the past. Got to think that they eventually get caught.

 

Good Lord, why even start the thread?

 

You get a lot of good input and repeatedly just basically say you've made up your mind and it's mostly because of cheating.

 

Guess that's it then.

 

I started the thread because when I look at results and Look at JGS rankings I see DQ beside some names I been looking at. I am curious what causes this. In some cases I am sure it simple mistake and there are good examples here. In some cases it good to know the rules that anyone could make a mistake and get disqualified.

 

It also seems like if you see a pattern of DQ for in tournaments someone in JGS rankings or elsewhere you need to be extra vigilant with them. The great thing is what I am seeing blatant cheating will not get you far in golf and is a minority of players.

I don't know JGS works but is it possible that kids would be posting a high score so they find a way to get DQ'd and then the high score is not posted? Would that be to their advantage?
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In high school golf I would expect a lot mistakes. What bothers me is a lot kids who won when they were under 12 are the ones getting DQ. Don't know the reason for it but in some cases I wonder if they are just getting caught and have been doing it for years.

 

I've seen some parents do blatant cheating with their kids in the past. Got to think that they eventually get caught.

 

Good Lord, why even start the thread?

 

You get a lot of good input and repeatedly just basically say you've made up your mind and it's mostly because of cheating.

 

Guess that's it then.

 

I started the thread because when I look at results and Look at JGS rankings I see DQ beside some names I been looking at. I am curious what causes this. In some cases I am sure it simple mistake and there are good examples here. In some cases it good to know the rules that anyone could make a mistake and get disqualified.

 

It also seems like if you see a pattern of DQ for in tournaments someone in JGS rankings or elsewhere you need to be extra vigilant with them. The great thing is what I am seeing blatant cheating will not get you far in golf and is a minority of players.

 

Plenty do it on purpose to not post a high score. They miss their tee time/no show so it doesn’t count. It’s not cheating

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My teammate was DQ'd from an event earlier in the year because he thought his ball was lost, reteed, found the first one, played it, and got a DQ.

 

 

Had he declared the original ball as lost?

 

I believe so. He played the rest of the round, and was not until he beat out his opponent their coach called him on it. Dirty, but correct.

 

Out of curiosity, what did he shoot for the day?

 

It isn't dirty. It is the rules.

 

75 or something. I found it low how he waited to post a final score to be called out, though right. Because it was a play-four-take-three tournament it wasn’t the end of the world for us, but still wasn’t fun.

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Was the coach made aware before the round was over is the question I have. I also believe we are talking about High School Golf. I think it is safe to say that most high school coaches do not know that the penalty was a DQ. I didn't know it and would have to look it up. High School coaches aren't even close to rules officials. I don't think it was dirty for that reason. It is just being unaware.

 

I don’t know as I was not the coach. I’d say HS coaches are pretty adequate on their rules knowledge, at least the few I’ve been around. Some are even sticklers about it. Just the other day in the state tournament, I was loged under a pine tree (yes, that’s how the round went), and was informed by my playing partners coach that if I were to cause one needle to fall whilst testing my backswing he would call me for a penalty, before I even stepped up to my ball. Anything to gain a stroke or two I guess, even if it goes to lengths of ruining a kids tournament by some unknown rule.

 

And no, I did not cause any needles to fall, and did not incure a penalty.

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Was the coach made aware before the round was over is the question I have. I also believe we are talking about High School Golf. I think it is safe to say that most high school coaches do not know that the penalty was a DQ. I didn't know it and would have to look it up. High School coaches aren't even close to rules officials. I don't think it was dirty for that reason. It is just being unaware.

 

I dont know as I was not the coach. Id say HS coaches are pretty adequate on their rules knowledge, at least the few Ive been around. Some are even sticklers about it. Just the other day in the state tournament, I was loged under a pine tree (yes, thats how the round went), and was informed by my playing partners coach that if I were to cause one needle to fall whilst testing my backswing he would call me for a penalty, before I even stepped up to my ball. Anything to gain a stroke or two I guess, even if it goes to lengths of ruining a kids tournament by some unknown rule.

 

And no, I did not cause any needles to fall, and did not incure a penalty.

 

Why would needles falling cause you to have a penalty?

I am GenX.  If you really think I care about what you have to say, I don't.

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In high school golf I would expect a lot mistakes. What bothers me is a lot kids who won when they were under 12 are the ones getting DQ. Don't know the reason for it but in some cases I wonder if they are just getting caught and have been doing it for years.

 

I've seen some parents do blatant cheating with their kids in the past. Got to think that they eventually get caught.

 

Good Lord, why even start the thread?

 

You get a lot of good input and repeatedly just basically say you've made up your mind and it's mostly because of cheating.

 

Guess that's it then.

 

I started the thread because when I look at results and Look at JGS rankings I see DQ beside some names I been looking at. I am curious what causes this. In some cases I am sure it simple mistake and there are good examples here. In some cases it good to know the rules that anyone could make a mistake and get disqualified.

 

It also seems like if you see a pattern of DQ for in tournaments someone in JGS rankings or elsewhere you need to be extra vigilant with them. The great thing is what I am seeing blatant cheating will not get you far in golf and is a minority of players.

 

Plenty do it on purpose to not post a high score. They miss their tee time/no show so it doesnt count. Its not cheating

 

JGS changed that rule. If you shoot a 95 day 1 and no show they still post the 95. That is why you see a lot of No Cards now. Kid will score high and just not show up to the scorers table with their card.

I am GenX.  If you really think I care about what you have to say, I don't.

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I witnessed a high school kid get DQ'd about 5 years ago for signing an incorrect scorecard after not declaring a provisional, playing a provisional and then choosing to play the provisional even after the original was found. It was the final round of the state tournament at my home club. The kids team finished second by a couple of shots. Whole team got punished by his mistake. In Virginia, 6 play for 4 scores. The 5th and 6th player on his team were both in the 100's. His score, even with penalties, would have been more than enough to secure a state title.

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Was the coach made aware before the round was over is the question I have. I also believe we are talking about High School Golf. I think it is safe to say that most high school coaches do not know that the penalty was a DQ. I didn't know it and would have to look it up. High School coaches aren't even close to rules officials. I don't think it was dirty for that reason. It is just being unaware.

 

I don't know as I was not the coach. I'd say HS coaches are pretty adequate on their rules knowledge, at least the few I've been around. Some are even sticklers about it. Just the other day in the state tournament, I was loged under a pine tree (yes, that's how the round went), and was informed by my playing partners coach that if I were to cause one needle to fall whilst testing my backswing he would call me for a penalty, before I even stepped up to my ball. Anything to gain a stroke or two I guess, even if it goes to lengths of ruining a kids tournament by some unknown rule.

 

And no, I did not cause any needles to fall, and did not incure a penalty.

This is the appropriate way for the coach to handle it. By telling you ahead of time, he prevented you from breaking a rule.
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I witnessed a high school kid get DQ'd about 5 years ago for signing an incorrect scorecard after not declaring a provisional, playing a provisional and then choosing to play the provisional even after the original was found. It was the final round of the state tournament at my home club. The kids team finished second by a couple of shots. Whole team got punished by his mistake. In Virginia, 6 play for 4 scores. The 5th and 6th player on his team were both in the 100's. His score, even with penalties, would have been more than enough to secure a state title.

This confuses me. If he didn't say that it was a provisional, then by rule that ball is in play. He played the ball that was in play. What was the infraction?
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