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No lifting of the obstructing ball
- Since the 18th century, if another player’s ball lied between your ball and the hole, and the two balls were more than six inches apart, you were required to play your ball with no lifting of the obstructing ball. This was called a stymie. If you found yourself in this situation, you were said to have been”stymied”.
medium.com/on-golf/bring-back-the-stymie-7846a48e3f05Bring back the Stymie. Seven decades ago, a change in the ...
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May 4, 2019 · The "stymie" is an archaic part of golf, no longer in use, in match play in which one golfer's ball sat on the putting green between the hole and the opponent's golf ball. In other words, Golfer A's ball blocked the hole for Golfer B's putt.
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Jan 1, 2010 · What is a stymie in golf? Don't know your dormies from your doglegs? Or your stymies from your shanks? NCG's Glossary of Golf Terms is here to help.
Jul 27, 2016 · The stymie is one of the most famous, now-extinct Rules in the Rules of Golf. It was eliminated worldwide with the release of the first joint USGA and R&A Rules that went into effect in 1952. Prior to this, if one player’s ball on the putting green interfered with another player’s line of putt, the interfering ball could only be marked if ...
- July 27, 2016
Apr 7, 2022 · A stymie occurred when your opponent's ball came to rest directly between your ball and the hole. It was a dead stymie if there was no path to the hole without bumping into your opponent. Under modern rules, the ball would be removed and its place marked on the green.
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In golf, a stymie refers to a situation where one player’s ball on the green obstructs the path of another player’s ball. Traditionally, when a stymie occurred, the player whose ball was furthest from the hole had to try to play around or over the ball of their opponent.
Mar 4, 2021 · A Stymie is an incredibly old golf rule that allowed players to putt intentionally into another players line so that he or she has to putt around your ball. Nowadays golfers will mark their ball if it is in the line of another players putt.
Want to have some fun — and put some money on the line — before or after your round of golf? The putting game called Stymies, played on the practice putting green, might fit the bill. Before we explain how to play the game, let's remind everyone what "stymies" were in golf.