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Dear Molly

Do I have to share yardages if I don’t want to?

Dear Molly: How do I decline to share the distance measurements I get with my rangefinder when a fellow golfer asks? I feel like it’s a tool I’ve chosen to purchase and, especially in a tournament, a tool and knowledge I don’t want to share. I did share distance once on a mountain course only to watch the other player overshoot the green and then blame me!

There’s an easy answer to your question: Just be nice and share yardages. Players aren’t breaking any rules by asking, “What did you get?” after you shoot your target, and you’re not breaking any rules by answering truthfully. As you seem to understand by your use of the term “fellow golfer,” the golf course is your shared opponent. When I shoot a par-3 from the tee, I routinely announce my number “to the flag.” I think that shows good sportsmanship and helps move play along. In the fairway, I also will announce a number if I shoot the flag and someone is nearby, or if I happen to reach their ball first and can save them time. Would you really rather not share and instead wait for fellow golfers to look for sprinkler heads and double-check pin positions for a number that you can easily offer?

As with every question, though, there are nuances:

For the final say, I emailed Colorado Golf Hall of Famer Christie Austin, a respected standout both in officiating and playing the game fresh off a stint as head rules official for the Division I Women’s Regional at Cole Elum, Wash. “Rule 1 of the Rules of Golf introduces several principles of the game, including ‘playing in the spirit of the game,’ ” she writes, and then goes on to quote Rule 1:

“All players are expected to play in the spirit of the game by:

Christie concludes, “While there is nothing in the Rules requiring a player to share public knowledge, such as distances measured using their personal device, I would argue that refusing to share this public information is not acting in the spirit of the game. If a player really does not want to give another player this information, they might offer their device to the other player so they can measure the distance on their own.

“The Rules make it clear that distance on the golf course is public information. By sharing their device, they are not only being courteous but they are helping with pace of play!”

Do you have a question about golf etiquette, golf relationships or the culture of golf in Colorado? Email it to Molly McMulligan, the CGA’s on-the-course advisor on how to have more fun on the golf course. Her creator, researcher and writer is golf journalist and CGA member Susan Fornoff.

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