This content is for subscribers only.
Join our club! Become a subscriber to get access to the latest issue of Australian Golf Digest, plus exclusive content and videos only available with a digital subscription.

Why you can’t get relief when your ball finds divot damage.

Whether you’re new to the game or have been playing it for years, you’ve probably experienced the deflating feeling of hitting a great drive that splits the fairway, only to find your ball sitting in a hole created by someone else’s shot. Although a divot hole is not impossible to play out of, it’s still a frustrating situation. You did everything right, yet it feels like you’re being unjustly penalised.

It’s at these moments when you might wonder why the Rules of Golf doesn’t allow you to take free relief. After all, Rule 16.3 says you can remove an embedded ball anywhere in the general area of the course without penalty. Is this all that different?

Let’s have Craig Winter, senior director of rules of golf and amateur status for the USGA, sum it up:

“It’s fundamental to golf to play the ball as it lies,” he says, “and you don’t always get a good lie.”

Although the R&A and USGA, golf’s rules makers, have considered on various occasions handling divot holes in another manner, there is no “practical solution” other than to just leave it as part of the game, Winter says. If you think about it beyond the moment you’re in one, how often does it happen to you in, say, a year’s worth of golf? Probably not a lot. Furthermore, if the rule book treated divot holes as ground under repair, think of how many spots on the fairway would then fall into that category. They’re all over the place, they take a long time to heal, and they typically are not a focus of normal golf-course maintenance.

 For these reasons, don’t expect the “play it as it lies” fundamental to change anytime soon – if ever. Winter says new members of the rules committee want to discuss it from time to time, but it doesn’t go beyond that.

“Philosophically, it’s hard to think of a different way we’d want to go,” he says.

Also, remember that the next time you’re in one, things could be worse. Just ask Jordan Spieth about his Sunday round at The Sentry tournament in 2024. He found his ball in a divot crater on three consecutive holes down the stretch!

“The [divots] were certainly tough breaks because they were balls that hit in the fairway and funneled into them,” Spieth said. “Out here, balls funnel into the same spots a lot. It’s not uncommon to be in divots. It kind of stunk that it was three holes in a row, but I still played [them] just fine.” 

Photography by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images