Explaining Plugged Lie In The Rules Of Golf

  • 7 months ago
In this video Neil Tappin and Jeremy Ellwood explain your options when you are faced with a plugged lie, or an embedded ball.
Transcript
00:00 [Music]
00:04 Okay, so 16th hole here at West Hill, incredibly wet recently, very muddy underfoot.
00:10 I've pulled my drive slightly and my ball, Jez, I think is plugged.
00:15 Well, the rules call it embedded, we call it plugged.
00:18 That is definitely embedded.
00:20 And there's a helpful diagram on page 100 of the Players' Edition of the rulebook
00:25 to allow you to determine when it's embedded.
00:27 It actually says when part of your ball is below the level of the ground,
00:30 so the soil has to be impacted in some way.
00:33 It can't just be sitting down in the grass, but at this time of year that we're shooting this,
00:38 there is a lot of soil that the ball would embed in.
00:41 And we both agree that this is a plug.
00:43 This is definitely embedded.
00:44 So in that scenario then, what are my options, what can I do?
00:48 Well, the relief now is available anywhere in what is called the general area,
00:52 so it doesn't just have to be on the fairway.
00:54 Before, in this scenario, it would just be bad luck, wouldn't it?
00:57 If you were playing it friendly, I'd definitely take a drop.
00:59 But if you weren't playing it friendly, I'd have to pay it like.
01:01 In the rough, it was tough luck, I'm afraid.
01:02 But now it's not the case, which is probably a good thing in fairness,
01:05 because you're going to gouge a massive chunk out trying to take a penalty drop.
01:10 And I'm only probably a metre and a half off the fairway.
01:13 A metre and a half off the fairway.
01:14 So now you get relief.
01:16 And the first thing to decide, well, the first thing to point out is that
01:20 the best point for taking relief is to be the spot directly behind where the ball is lying.
01:25 So about there.
01:26 About there.
01:27 And then you get a one club length arc, not nearer the hole from there,
01:31 using your longest club that you're carrying that day, other than the putter.
01:36 So typically the driver.
01:38 So you get an arc that shape, so you've just got to remember that when you're dropping,
01:43 have you dropped it within the arc.
01:45 Within the arc.
01:46 So obviously, the best thing to do is mark it out, isn't it?
01:48 Well, you can do, but you're going to be dropping in a variety, you might choose to drop in a variety.
01:52 So mark it out in the area where you're thinking you're going to drop it.
01:54 Exactly, so in this scenario, I think the driest, best spot is probably over here somewhere.
02:00 So I'd put a second tee in there, get rid of a couple of loose impediments,
02:04 just to make sure they're not in the way.
02:06 You don't have to put these tees in, but it's obviously a very good idea to do so.
02:08 It's a good idea to do it, it just makes it, it just covers you, doesn't it?
02:11 And you'd also want to remove those twigs probably at this point, just to minimise the risk.
02:16 So you'd probably drop it around about there.
02:18 Yeah, look, maybe slightly below knee height, but I'm going to let it go on this occasion.
02:22 Oh, skinny.
02:25 That's going to work.
02:26 You're always going to hit it a bit clean on soft ground, aren't you?
02:30 I wasn't wanting to take a massive divot there.
02:32 Hopefully that gives you an idea about what to do if your ball is embedded,
02:36 especially if it's embedded off the fairway, in an area like this,
02:39 where there's lots of loose impediments, very wet underfoot, as it is at the moment.
02:43 That should give you everything you need to know.
02:46 www.fieggen.com
02:49 [BLANK_AUDIO]