TAPPS Golf Test. T F 5. The terms apron and fringe refer to the grass area bordering a putting surface.

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T F 1. A player, taking relief from casual water, may not clean his ball. T F 2. A player s ball lies in a bunker. During the backswing, the player s club brushes the sand lightly. No penalty. T F 3. The margin of a water hazard extends vertically upwards. T F 4. Each player should mark his ball so that he can properly identify it. T F 5. The terms apron and fringe refer to the grass area bordering a putting surface. T F 6. When a player has positioned his feet in preparing to make a stroke, he has taken his stance. T F 7. Through the green, a player brushes away some loose soil where he is about to drop his ball. This is not a breach of the rules. 8. A ball lies in deep grass through the green and has mud clinging to it. The player may: (A) Lift the ball for identification only (B) Lift and clean the ball (C) Lift and clean the ball to the extent necessary for identification T F 9. A player s ball lies in a bunker covered by sand. He may use a club head to search for his ball. T F 10. A player deems his ball unplayable in a bunker. Under penalty of one stroke, he may play a ball as nearly as possible at the spot from which the original ball was last played. T F 11. Regardless of the type of play, if a player s ball at rest is moved by another ball anywhere on the course, the player s ball must be replaced. No penalty. 12. Lateral water hazards must be marked by: (A) Yellow stakes or lines (B) White stakes only (C) Red stakes or lines (D) Yellow stakes only T F 13. A mulligan is never permitted in a competition played strictly by the Rules of Golf. T F 14. Through the green, a player removes a small rock touching his ball, causing his ball to move. His ball is replaced with no penalty. T F 15. Prior to putting from off the green, a player used his hand to brush aside sand which had been splashed onto the fringe by a player in a previous group. This is permissible. T F 16. If a player s ball lies on the green, the putting green may never be touched when pointing out a line of putt to the player. T F 17. A player may use his hand to bend foliage that interferes with his ability to strike the ball fairly. Page 1 of 11

18. A player may, under Rule 22, have another ball lifted if it: (A) Interferes physically with his play (B) Interferes mentally with his play (C) Either A or B T F 19. A cart path interferes with a player s stance. He may determine the nearest point of relief, no nearer the hole and drop within one club-length of that point. T F 20. A player declares his ball unplayable outside a water hazard. His opponent disputes this claim. A referee must decide when the ball is unplayable. T F 21. A dropped ball rolls and comes to rest more than two club-lengths from where it struck the ground but is no nearer the hole. The ball must be re-dropped. T F 22. A player s ball lies on a paved cart path. He may take relief on either side of the path. T F 23. A player removes an out of bounds stake that interferes with his swing. This is permitted. T F 24. From the teeing ground, a player decides to hit a provisional ball. The player should wait until his fellow-competitors have played their first stroke. T F 25. Only the club head may be used to strike the ball. T F 26. In stroke play, a competitor s ball rebounds from a cart path and strikes a fellow-competitor. No penalty. T F 27. When a ball is out of bounds or lost, it is no longer in play. T F 28. Thinking his ball is out of bounds, a player plays a provisional ball from the teeing ground. He searches for five minutes but does not find the original ball. He plays the provisional ball to the hole. The original ball is then found and is not out of bounds. The original ball is in play. T F 29. The line defining ground under repair is not considered ground under repair. T F 30. A ball is embedded within a water hazard. A player may obtain relief without penalty under the embedded ball Rule. 31. A ball is holed when: (A) Any part of it is below the lip of the hole (B) All of it is below the lip of the hole (C) Most of it is below the lip of the hole T F 32. Prior to taking his stance, a player uses his club to break a small seedling, which was immediately behind his ball. He has improved the lie of his ball. 33. A player s ball is covered with mud outside a hazard. He wants to lift and identify the ball. The first thing he must do is: (A) Mark the spot (B) Lift his ball Page 2 of 11

(C) Advise his opponent T F 34. A player leans on his putter during a round and the shaft breaks. This accidental damage could be considered as occurring during the normal course of play. T F 35. The line for out of bounds extends vertically upwards and downwards. T F 36. A player s ball lies on a movable obstruction. He may lift and drop his ball, but he may not clean his ball. 37. A player plays his second shot to the green and his ball strikes the flagstick, which was left lying on the green by the preceding group. What is the ruling? (A) Two penalty strokes and the ball is played as it lies (B) The player replays the stroke without penalty (C) No penalty and the ball is played as it lies T F 38. After a stroke from the teeing ground, a player s ball lands in a bunker and is unplayable. Under penalty of one stroke he may play his next stroke from the teeing ground. 39. A provisional ball may be played whenever a player thinks his original ball may be: (A) Lost in a water hazard or out of bounds (B) Out of bounds (C) Unplayable or out of bounds T F 40. A flat sprinkler head on the apron of the green intervenes on a player s line of play. Relief is permitted. 41. A player s ball lies in a bunker. He leans on his club in the bunker while waiting his turn to play. What is the ruling? (A) No penalty because he has not taken his stance (B) Two-stroke penalty (C) No penalty because he has not addressed his ball T F 42. Information on the Rules is not advice. 43. A player cleans his ball when determining whether it is unfit for play. (A) Two-stroke penalty (B) One-stroke penalty (C) No penalty T F 44. Part of a player s ball lies within ground under repair. The whole ball is not within such ground. Relief is permitted. 45. A player s ball is in an excellent lie within a water hazard, but his backswing is restricted by an immovable obstruction. He may do which of the following? (A) Declare the ball unplayable (B) Take relief from the obstruction without penalty (C) Neither of the above Page 3 of 11

46. The whole ball rests on a line on the ground defining out of bounds. A player may: (A) Play the ball (B) Not play the ball because it is out of bounds (C) Stand out of bounds and play the ball (D) Play the ball if his stance is within bounds T F 47. A player s ball lies in casual water in long grass through the green. He is entitled to drop from casual water. The dropped ball rolls onto a closely mown area through the green, no nearer the hole. He must re-drop in the long grass. T F 48. Strokes played with a wrong ball do not count in a competitor s score. T F 49. A player s ball lands on the apron of a wrong green. He must drop within one club-length of the apron, no nearer the hole. T F 50. A player s ball rests against a movable bench. He may remove the bench or drop within one club-length of the spot. 51. A player wraps his handkerchief around the grip of his club to make a stroke. (A) The handkerchief must be removed prior to the stroke (B) This is permissible T F 52. In stroke play, if a competitor is doubtful of his rights, he may play a second ball in addition to his original ball. Prior to making a stroke with either, he must announce his intention to play two balls and he must choose which one he will score with if the Rules permit. T F 53. A player s ball lies close to a paved cart path. He is prohibited from standing on the path to make a stroke at his ball and he must take relief. 54. A player s ball lies in a bunker. A fallen tree limb is touching his ball. (A) The player may remove the limb (B) The player may not remove limb, but he may drop another ball (C) None of the above 55. A player s ball lies in a water hazard. A hole made by a burrowing animal interferes with his stance. What is the ruling? (A) Play the ball as it lies (B) Proceed under the water hazard Rule (C) Either of the above 56. Sand may be considered a loose impediment and removed from the line of play when: (A) On the green or apron of the green (B) On the green only (C) On the green or on the apron of the green if the player chooses to putt T F 57. Wind is an outside agency but water is not. T F 58. A bird s nest in a hazard interferes with a player s stance. He may drop a ball, without penalty, within one club-length of and not nearer the hole than the nearest spot that would allow him to Page 4 of 11

make his stroke without damaging the nest. If possible the ball must be dropped in the same hazard and, if not possible, in a similar nearby hazard, no closer to the hole. T F 59. A player may not declare his ball unplayable in a bunker. 60. A player s ball lies within a water hazard. He may: (A) Play the ball as it lies (B) Drop a ball behind the water hazard, keeping the point at which the original ball last crossed the margin of the water hazard directly between the hole and the spot on which the ball is dropped, with no limit to how far behind the water hazard the ball may be dropped (C) Play a ball as nearly as possible at the spot from which the original ball was last played (D) Do any of the above 61. A player with more than 14 clubs may incur a maximum penalty of: (A) One stroke for each hole played (B) Two strokes (C) Two strokes for each hole played (D) Four strokes T F 62. A player s ball lies on a movable obstruction within a hazard. He gets no relief without a penalty. T F 63. A player asks his opponent if a bunker exists beyond a dogleg of the hole being played. This is permitted because it is public information. T F 64. An empty potato chip bag lying in a bunker is a loose impediment and may not be moved. T F 65. After a putting stroke, a player s ball stops an inch from the hole. The player then taps the ball with the grip end of the putter and holes out. This is prohibited. T F 66. The outside of a stake determines the out of bounds line. T F 67. A player s ball lies through the green but he must stand with both feet out of bounds in order to make a stroke at his ball. This is prohibited. T F 68. A player s ball is touching a water hazard stake and the ball is in the hazard. The stake may be removed. T F 69. A ball is out of bounds when any part of it is out of bounds. 70. A player has not begun a search for his ball, but his opponent has spent 3 minutes searching for the player s ball. The player has minutes left to search for his ball. (A) 2 minutes (B) 5 minutes (C) 7 minutes T F 71. Equipment includes anything used, worn, or carried by or for the player. T F 72. There is no penalty when a player plays a wrong ball from any hazard. Page 5 of 11

T F 73. A player s ball lies within an area marked ground under repair. He may play the ball as it lies. T F 74. A player declares his ball to be lost without searching for it. This is a breach of the Rules. T F 75. A drainage ditch on the course is marked as a water hazard but does not contain any water. A player finds his ball in the ditch in a bad lie. He declares his ball unplayable. This is permitted. T F 76. A player s ball lands on a wrong putting green. He gets no relief without penalty. T F 77. A competitor in stroke play is disqualified if he fails to hole out before playing from the next tee. T F 78. The teeing ground is two club-lengths in width. T F 79. Loose impediments on the putting green may be brushed aside with a player s hand or club only. T F 80. The margin of a water hazard extends vertically upwards, but the margin of a bunker does not. T F 81. A player s ball lies near a flat sprinkler head. The sprinkler head interferes with his stance. The player may take relief without penalty. T F 82. A player s ball lies through the green where a tall weed interferes with his backswing. Prior to making a stroke, the player bends the weed out of his way. This is permissible. T F 83. A player s ball lies on a replaced divot. To preserve the course, he presses down on the area with his foot. This is prohibited. T F 84. A rain shelter intervenes on a player s line of play to the hole. It does not interfere with his stance or the area of his intended swing. He must play the ball as it lies. 85. Relief from a movable obstruction is: (A) One club-length (B) Two club-lengths (C) None of the above T F 86. The flagstick is removed and placed on the putting green. A competitor putts and the ball rolls beyond the hole and strikes the flagstick. The ball must be played as it lies and two penalty strokes added to the competitor s score for that hole. T F 87. Inadvertently, the scores for two holes were transposed on a competitor s scorecard. The total is correct, but one of the scores on a hole was lower than actually taken. He is disqualified. T F 88. On the putting green, a player is deemed to have addressed the ball when he has taken his stance. T F 89. A stroke is the forward movement of the club with the intention of striking at and moving the ball. Page 6 of 11

90. If a player s club strikes the ball more than once in the course of a stroke, what is the ruling? (A) The stroke counts (B) The stroke counts and add one penalty stroke (C) The stroke counts and add two penalty strokes T F 91. A player s ball overhangs the edge of the hole. The player walks up to the hole and waits 8 seconds, after which the ball falls into the hole. The ball must be replaced. 92. After determining the nearest point of relief from ground under repair, the player s relief is limited to from the point. (A) Two club-lengths (B) One club-length (C) Not more than two club-lengths Y N 93. Should I stand directly behind a player when he is addressing his ball or making a stroke? Y N 94. If my opponent and I decide not to count whiffs, will I be disqualified? Y N 95. In stroke play, do I need to finish putting if my fellow-competitor gives me the putt? Y N 96. May I ask my opponent for information on the Rules or Local Rules? Y N 97. If my ball falls off or is knocked off the tee when I am addressing it, may I re-tee my ball without penalty? Y N 98. May I move my ball without penalty if my ball is behind a clump of grass? Y N 99. Through the green, may I step on the ground behind my ball or press it down with my club head? Y N 100. Through the green, may I move a loose impediment such as a twig, leaf, or stone away from my ball without penalty if my ball doesn t move? Y N 101. Through the green, if I play the wrong ball, may I replace it and then play my own ball without penalty? Y N 102. Must I re-drop my ball if it rolls more than two club-lengths from the point where it first struck the ground? Y N 103. Through the green, should I count one penalty stroke and replace my ball if it rolls into a new position after I have addressed it and before I have taken my stroke? Y N 104. If my ball is lost, must I play my next stroke as nearly as possible from the spot where I last played it and add one penalty stroke? Y N 105. If my ball is in an unplayable lie next to a tree, is my only choice to drop within two clublengths of the tree and add one penalty stroke? Page 7 of 11

Y N 106. If my ball goes out of bounds, do I play my next stroke from where it went out and add one penalty stroke? Y N 107. If my ball has landed against a drinking fountain, may I play it as it lies or obtain relief at the nearest point (not nearer the hole) for my stance and swing and then drop the ball within one clublength with no penalty? Y N 108. Do I always have to play my ball out of a puddle of rain water? Y N 109. May I place my club head down on the ground before making a stroke in a hazard? Y N 110. If my ball lies in or is lost in a water hazard, is my only choice to drop a ball behind the hazard, keeping that point between myself and the hole? Y N 111. I am playing my ball from off the green and my ball hits an unattended flagstick. Do I incur one penalty stroke? Y N 112. In stroke play, will I be penalized if my ball hits my fellow-competitor s ball at rest on the putting green after I make a stroke from the putting green? Y N 113. Will I be penalized if I stop playing and come in when I see lightning? Y N 114. Are tee-markers deemed to be fixed when playing the first stroke of the hole being played? 115. Which of the following would be considered advice? Asking (A) Direction and yardage of the hole (B) Hole location on a blind green (C) Which club a fellow-competitor just used to make a stroke 116. Your ball lands on a paved cart path. You may (A) Drop within one club-length after obtaining relief for stance and swing not nearer the hole. (B) Drop within two club-lengths after obtaining relief for stance and swing not nearer the hole. (C) Play it as it lies (D) A and C above (E) B and C above 117. You incur a one stroke penalty if your ball in motion after a stroke hits (A) Your opponent or his bag (B) You or your golf bag (C) A dog running across the course (D) The ball washer behind the green 118. A ball is lost after you have searched for it (A) 10 minutes (B) 7 minutes (C) 5 minutes (D) 3 minutes Page 8 of 11

119. A ball is out of bounds when (A) Most of it is out of bounds (B) All of it lies out of bounds (C) You have to stand out of bounds to play the stroke 120. A player addresses his ball and starts his backswing. During his backswing his ball moves. The player continues his swing and hits his ball. What is the ruling? (A) No penalty - play ball as it lies (B) One-stroke penalty - play ball as it lies (C) Two-stroke penalty - play ball as it lies (D) One-stroke penalty - replace ball (E) Two-stroke penalty - replace ball 121. On the teeing ground, how far behind the tee markers may a player tee up the ball? (A) Up to one club-length (B) Six feet (C) Up to two club-lengths 122. When his ball lies on the putting green, a player may: (A) Repair ball marks (B) Repair spike marks (C) Remove loose impediments (D) Both A & B (E) Both A & C 123. Arrange the following in order from the lowest score to the highest score: Par, Double Eagle, Birdie, Double bogey, Bogey, Eagle. 124. Water hazards (other than lateral water hazards) must be marked by: (A) Yellow stakes or lines (B) White stakes only (C) Red stakes or lines (D) Yellow stakes only Y N 125. In stroke play, if a player is uncertain as to his rights or procedure, may he complete the hole with two balls and then ask the Committee after the round which ball was played in accordance with the Rules of Golf? 126. What is the maximum number of clubs a player may have when he begins a round of golf? Y N 127. Should a player put an identification mark on his golf ball? 128. A player will be disqualified from a stroke play competition if he: (A) Returns his scorecard which he has signed and but his marker has not. (B) Completes the play of two more holes after play has been suspended by the Committee (C) Practices putting on the fairway while waiting to hit his approach shot to the green. (D) Does any of the above (E) Does either (A) or (B) Page 9 of 11

T F 129. On the day of a tournament, if the practice green is too full to practice on then a player may practice on one of the greens on the course. T F 130. After a player has holed out, he may practice chipping or putting on or near the green provided it does not delay play. T F 131. A player may change balls on the putting green, so that he may putt with a better ball. T F 132. A player is not necessarily entitled to see his ball when making a stroke. 133. In stroke play, a player plays from the white tee markers but should have played from the blue tee markers. He should (A) Play the ball as it lies and add 2 penalty strokes (B) Play the ball from within the correct teeing ground and add 2 penalty strokes (C) Play the ball from the correct teeing ground and add 1 penalty stroke Y N 134. A player whiffed his tee shot and then nervously nudged the ball off the tee before trying again. Is a penalty stroke added? 135. If a player grounds his club in a hazard there is (A) A two-stroke penalty (B) A one-stroke penalty (C) No penalty T F 136. A player must always find and indentify his ball in order to deem it unplayable. Y N 137. My fellow-competitor and I accidently exchange balls on a hole. I hit the wrong ball 3 times before we go back to correct the mistake. Do I include those 3 strokes in my score? 138. My fellow-competitor and I accidently exchange balls on a hole and finish the hole. We discover the mistake on the next tee. Before we tee off we must (A) Agree that the scores stand and each return the other s ball (B) Add a two-stroke penalty to each of our scores (C) Go back to where the exchange was made, add a two-stroke penalty to each of our scores on that hole and continue play with the correct ball. T F 139. The penalty for fixing a spike mark on my line of putt is one stroke. 140. If a ball is overhanging the lip of the hole, a player is allowed enough time to reach the hole without unreasonable delay and an additional (A) 5 seconds (B) 10 seconds (C) 15 seconds T F 141. A player is on the putting green and holes a putt without taking the flagstick out of the hole. The player incurs a two-stroke penalty. T F 142. A player hits his ball and his ball hits his bag. He plays the ball where it lies and adds a onestroke penalty. Page 10 of 11

143. In match play, a player hits his ball and his ball hits his opponent s bag. He (A) May replay the stroke with no penalty (B) Adds a two-stroke penalty and plays his ball as it lies (C) May play his ball as it lies (D) A and C 144. If you drop a ball in a correct place and in a correct manner and it rolls out of bounds, and you re-drop and the same thing happens, how do you proceed? (A) Place the ball at the spot where it hit the ground when it was re-dropped (B) Keep dropping the ball until it doesn t roll out of bounds (C) Neither of the above T F 145. Loose impediments are natural objects provided they are not fixed or growing, are not solidly embedded and do not adhere to the ball. T F 146. If electing to take relief from an immovable obstruction, a player must drop the ball within two club-lengths of the nearest point of relief that is no nearer the hole. Y N 147. Is a player entitled to relief from an immovable obstruction in a water hazard? Y N 148. Is a player entitled to relief if his ball that lies through the green is on a runway made by a burrowing animal? Y N 149. If a player s ball is embedded in its own pitch mark in any closely mown area through the green, is the player entitled to relief without penalty? T F 150. If a player s ball is on the wrong putting green, he must obtain relief by proceeding to the point that is not nearer the hole and is not in a hazard or on a putting green and drop within two clublengths without penalty. Page 11 of 11