"“But, if you plan to have a competition and purposefully leave out the one ball rule, will the USGA assist with rules ? If the answer is 'yes', they should do the 'rules' if OGA requests assistance.
I think a last minute decision to support the OGA would promote 'fair and pleasant play' as they say.
Your logic is step by step understandable, and in their position, I might do the same.
Still the USGA seems practical almost all the time (please no laughter as my sound card is ka-put, video of coffee out the nostrils will be accepted) but why they cannot support this OGA event, with rules officials, at the last minute is beyond me.”
John:
Yes of course the USGA with assist with the Rules or a Rules question if a tournament's committee decided not to use the one ball condition. They would assist with the Rules or answer Rules questions if a tournament committee decided not to use the "List of Conforming Ball" condition too.
Those are simply "conditions" of competition the USGA provides that a committee can use or decide not to use.
But the USGA and most all tournament committees understand what those two conditions of competiton are meant for and they understand neither is meant to ALLOW a tournament committee to REQUIRE that competitors use a SINGLE SPECIFIED golf ball. It's as simple as that.
If all competitors showed up and happened to use the very same ball and stuck with it in the stipulated round the USGA would have no problem with that either and would assist in Rules questions. But that is not what is potentially happening here. Potentially the OGA or some committee like it will attempt to REQUIRE all competitors to use a ball of their designation whether it be one of the committee's choice or a number that have limited distance specs on them.
Essentially this is violating the player's CHOICE of using any ball he wants to on the USGA List of Conforming Golf Balls which is provided for in App 1, Part C, 1b. That is the ONLY restriction on the player that particular "Condition of Competition" contemplates or intends under the Rules despite how Pat Mucci wants to interpret it.
That is what the OGA is attempting to do----eg restrict the player's CHOICE of playing any ball on the List of Conforming Golf Balls and it has never been done before and the Rules of Golf or its "Conditions of Competition" simply do not provide for such a thing.
I hope you can see the distinction here in their minds between assisting on Rules with a committee that merely decides not to use a Condition of Competition that is supplied for their choice in the Appendix and doing something like this that has never been done before or contemplated in the Rules.
In my opinion, it would not matter to the USGA if the OGA required players to use a single specified golf ball or one of many golf balls that have purposely reduced distance specs. The USGA is apparently not for either "condition" and they are certainly not now for the concept of a "competition" golf ball.
The USGA is simply not condoning of such a "competition" golf ball (reduced distance specs) because they view such a thing as a departure from their intention to maintain one set of standards for balls and implements for all golfers regardless of expertise.
Of course the R&A and USGA can interpret their own Rules of Golf any way they want to but for the reasons I've given I don't think they want to interpret them the way Pat Mucci thinks they should.
I believe, as I've said before, that what this OGA situation will probably precipitate is a much more defined set of decisions or Rules wording that makes it far more clear what autonomy any "committee" has under the R&A/USGA Rules of Golf to make or use their own "Conditions of Competition" or what autonomy they have to interpret those "conditions" without input from the USGA Rules of Golf Committee.
This type of action from a "committee" has just not happened before and so the Rules of Golf don't really contemplate it.
But I can guarantee you that it won't be long now before they WILL contemplate it.
Because of wording in their Joint Statement of Principles I don't see them condoning a "Condition of Competition" that allows a "committee" to require that all competitors use a single specified ball or a so-called "competition" ball.