Monday, January 5, 2009

What Do 'Out' and 'In' Mean When They Appear on the Scorecard?

The words "out" and "in" appear on most golf scorecards, alongside the par for the front nine and back nine. Why are these terms used, and what do they mean?

What they mean is fairly self-evident. "Out" and "in" on the scorecard refer to the golfer's front and back nines, respectively.

Why those terms are used dates back to the beginnings of golf. Back in the mists of Scotland, golf courses weren't so much built as they were found. Golfers would begin playing their game on the linksland alongside the Scottish coast. Patterns of play formed, and a well-worn golf course would emerge.

Such early links all took the same form. From the starting point (eventually, the clubhouse), golfers would play out in a straight line, the holes strung together one after the other. When they reached the midway point of the golf course, they turned around and started playing in the opposite direction until making it back to the starting point.

In other words, they played out, then they played back in. The first set of holes came to be called the "outward" holes; the second set, the "inward" holes. Eventually, golf courses settled on 18 holes in length; hence, the "outward nine" and "inward nine" came to comprise the 18-hole course.

Few golf courses are constructed these days in the out-and-in pattern of early links courses. But the terms "out" and "in" have stuck for the front and back nines.

Source: http://golf.about.com





How Long Does It Take to Play a Round of Golf?

Four hours is the estimate most people give for 18 holes.

The actual time depends on how busy the course is, how many people you are playing with and how many strokes everyone takes (a round of 72 will obviously be faster than a round of 112).

A golfer playing alone on a course that is not crowded should be able to finish in 2 and a half hours or less.

A foursome playing a very crowded course might wind up spending 5 or even 6 hours on the golf course.

Source: http://golf.about.com