Rabbit A professional who tours that must qualify to compete for an opportunity to play in tournaments. An amateur golfer with little achievement. MyGolfRounds.com Golfing Terms Glossary ...
Rabbit An amateur golfer with little success A touring professional who has no tournament exemptions and must compete in qualifying rounds for chances to play in tournaments Rake ...
rabbit: A beginning player. range: Practice area. ringer score: The best-ever score at each hole on the course. run: The roll on the ball after landing. ...
Rabbit: A beginning player. Rake: Device used to smooth the sand after you leave a bunker. Range: Practice area.
Rabbit: An amateur golfer of little accomplishment or a touring professional with no exemptions who must qualify for each tournament.
Chase the Rabbit. Putt one ball away (see "The Core Putt" tip) and then putt a second ball at this "rabbit" so the second ball just barely touches the first.
rabbit 1. a touring professional that is not a regular member of the tour and who, therefore, must play in a qualifying round to "win a spot" in order to enter a tour event 2.
Rabbit - A touring professional with no tournament exemptions and must qualify to play in tournaments. Rake - An obsolete lofted iron club, was used for playing from sand and out of water.- used to rake your foot prints from a sand trap.
Any natural thing which is not by design an obstruction such as an acorn or rabbits droppings. marker An item used to mark the position of your ball, should you wish to clean it.
If your ball is in casual water, ground under repair or a hole or cast made by a burrowing animal e.g. a rabbit, you may drop without penalty within one club-length of the nearest point of relief not nearer the hole. WATER HAZARDS ...
Firstly, a player whose ball has landed in a hole or obstruction caused by burrowing animals, such as a rabbit warren, is permitted to drop his or her ball without penalty.
Burrowing Animal A 'burrowing animal' is an animal that makes a hole for habitation or shelter, such as a rabbit, mole, groundhog, gopher or salamander.
The result will be a low, over-spinning type of trajectory that hits and runs to the green like a rabbit. Page 1 of 2 12 ...
Clubs often have names rather than category numbers for the different levels, ranging from the Gold/silver etc to the Tigers and Rabbits and the like. Stroke Index ...
While the elite were simply playing for yet more dough at the so-called Champions Course in Texas, the Euro-rabbits were scrambling for their survival in Sardinia and the potbellies were playing just for the hell of it in Girona.
See also: Golf, Round, Swing, Hole, Putting
 
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