Jeff, I work with kids through the First Tee program, and one of my primary rules is no pre-shot routine. I don't even allow practice swings. The kids are fine with it, but other instructors who are are teaching pre-shot routines as a given seem to think I'm either a heretic or deranged. Kinda crazy when we're talking about 8-12 year olds.
Gary,
Right on.
We host these same juniors in a month-I'm seriously considering a local rule prohibiting practice swings (at least it saves turf wear), and also a local rule where you may not adjust your ball once you've set it down on the green (easily the most disturbing thing I've seen in years).
They were given a pace of play lecture on the first tee by the starter, but no strategy or plan to acheive it. (which is why they thought I was crazy for attempting to limit their preshot chatter,increase their readiness,reduce their practice swings, and cheater-line nonsense)
Kevin, That occurred three groups in front of me.(there were probably 50 people watching.
At a minimum, I felt the starter should've pulled the kid aside after he hit and gently explained the appropriate procedure(if not an outright intervention)
I quietly spoke to the starter about it and I don't think he got the point.
Jeff-Don't worry about getting so specific. Tell them that the first person to play from the tee, fairway or green has one minute to complete his shot from the time he gets within 10 feet of his ball. Every other person has 40 seconds. I think that is the typical time limit for large tournaments if a group is on the clock. Have a referee/timekeeper with the first group off the tee and inform all other groups they must keep pace with the first group. That would make the pace at least bearable.
Just keep players on the clock, if a player goes to 1:01 or something, let it go, but if he gets to 1:15 give a warning that he was over on time. And if he goes over 1:45, even on a first offense, immediate one stroke penalty. First offense: warning, Second: one stroke, Third: two strokes, Fourth: escort them off the course.
It would not be exceptionally hard, I don't think, to get enough volunteer rules officials/time keepers to make this work.
John.
One minute for the first tee shot+40 seconds+40 seconds
+one minute for first fairway shot +40 seconds+40
+40 +40+40 for the second fairway shot
ditto for the third fairway shot
ditto for the next fairway shot
1 minute for the first putt +40 seconds sec+40 seconds
+40 seconds for second putt +40+40
+40 seconds for third putt +40+40
+ 5 minutes to walk the length of the hole
22 minutes per hole x nine =3 hours 18 minutes for nine holes
You stick with enforcement,I'll handle management.
That's the whole problem,you can't penalize people who play within those guidelines, but it's a ridiculous pace
who needs 40 seconds for a putt?