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Stroke play
Stroke play
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Stroke play is a scoring system in the sport of golf. In the regular form of stroke play, also known as medal play, the total number of strokes is counted over one or more rounds of 18 holes.[1] In a regular stroke play competition, the winner is the player who has taken the fewest strokes over the course of the round, or rounds. Other forms of stroke play include Stableford, whereby points are gained based on hole scores, maximum score, in which there is a limit to the number of strokes that may be taken on each hole, and par (or bogey), where holes are won or lost against a target score on each hole.[2]

Although most professional tournaments are played using the regular stroke play scoring system, some notable exceptions exist. In match play, the player, or team, earns a point for each hole in which they have bested their opponents. Match play scoring is used in the WGC Match Play, the Volvo World Match Play Championship, and most team events, for example the Ryder Cup. A few tournaments such as the Barracuda Championship[3] have used a modified Stableford system.[4]

Scoring

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In stroke play scoring, players record the number of strokes taken at each hole and total them up at the end of a given round, or rounds. The player with the lowest total is the winner. In handicap competitions, the players would subtract their handicaps from the total (gross) score to generate their net scores, and the player with the lowest net score is the winner.[5]

Scores may be reported in relation to par for easy comparison with other golfers' scores. For example, a player whose score is three strokes over par after a given hole would appear as "+3" on the scoreboard.

If two or more players have the same number of strokes, it may be desired to determine an outright winner. Two of the more common methods are a playoff and scorecard count back.

Cut

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Multi-round tournaments may enforce a "cut" to reduce the size of the field for later rounds. In a typical 72-hole elite tournament, played over one or two courses, there is a cut after 36 holes; tournaments played over three courses have a cut after 54 holes. The number of players who make the cut depends on the tournament rules – in a typical PGA Tour event, the top 65 (formerly the top 70) professionals (plus ties) after 36 holes. Any player who returns a score higher than the cut mark takes no further part in the tournament.

Tournaments may also employ another cut after 54 holes if a large number of players make the 36-hole cut. Players missing this cut are designated as "made cut, did not finish" (MDF). The PGA Tour employed a secondary cut prior to reducing the cut line to the top 65 for the 2020–21 season.[6]

Playoff

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One of the most common methods for settling ties is by means of a playoff, whereby those players who have tied for the lead replay a set number of holes. If still tied after those holes, then further sudden-death holes may also be played until a winner emerges.

Ties in professional golf are generally settled by means of a playoff. Different tournaments have various formats for their playoffs, ranging from another full round, as employed in the U.S. Open, through to a three- or four-hole playoff as used in the PGA Championship and the Open Championship (British Open), to straightforward sudden death, which is used in most tournaments including the Masters Tournament and all other regular PGA Tour and European Tour events. In a sudden-death playoff with more than two players, any player who fails to at least tie for the best score after each hole is eliminated and (if applicable) the playoff continues with only those players who are still tied for the best score. In the longer playoff formats, if at least two players remain tied after such a playoff then play generally continues in sudden-death format.

Count back

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One method of breaking ties commonly used in amateur competitions, especially when a playoff is not practical, and used in professional tournaments to seed players in knockout rounds (such as the World Super 6 in Perth, Australia) is a scorecard "count back", whereby the player with the lowest cumulative score over the last 18, 9, 6, 3, or 1 hole(s) is declared the winner.[7][8]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Stroke play, also known as medal play, is a form of in which players or sides compete against all others in the field by comparing total scores, calculated as the sum of strokes (including penalties) taken over one or more rounds of 18 holes, with the lowest total determining the winner. In this format, players must hole out on every hole unless a variation like maximum score applies, and a marker—typically a fellow competitor—records and attests to the gross score for each hole on the player's scorecard. The player then certifies the scorecard's accuracy before submission; any failure to correct an incorrectly recorded lower score results in disqualification, while an erroneously higher score stands as played. Unlike , where outcomes are decided hole-by-hole or by matches won, stroke play emphasizes overall performance across the entire course or tournament, allowing for ready golf to maintain pace without strict order of play. This format is the most common in professional and major championships, such as the Masters or U.S. Open, where fields are large and total stroke totals fairly compare diverse playing conditions over multiple days. Ties for the lead are typically resolved through , often sudden-death on predetermined holes, ensuring a single winner. Several variations of stroke play adapt the format for different competitive goals, promoting pace of play or risk-reward balance. Stroke play has roots in golf's early , with formal recognition appearing in the 1759 St. Andrews ruleset, though modern rules distinguishing it from were codified by in 1899 and adopted by the USGA shortly thereafter. Since then, joint USGA-R&A revisions—every four years, with major updates in 2019—have refined stroke play to balance integrity, equity, and enjoyment, introducing expanded relief procedures and pace-of-play improvements like encouragement of ready golf. Today, it remains the backbone of global governance, applicable to both individual and team formats under the unified .

Overview and History

Definition and Basics

Stroke play is a fundamental scoring format in where competitors, either individually or as teams, vie against one another by accumulating the lowest total number of over a specified number of holes or rounds. In this system, the winner is the player or side with the fewest , including any incurred penalties, at the competition's conclusion. A in constitutes the forward movement of the club intended to strike the , encompassing any deliberate swing that makes contact, while penalty strokes are added for rule infractions such as out-of-bounds shots or unplayable lies. The objective remains to complete each hole in as few strokes as possible, with performance measured relative to par—the expected number of strokes for an expert golfer on that hole, typically three, four, or five depending on distance and difficulty. Scores under par include a birdie (one stroke below) or eagle (two strokes below), while those over par feature a bogey (one above). Standard rounds consist of 18 holes, and major professional tournaments, like the U.S. Open, employ stroke play across four rounds for a total of 72 holes to determine the champion. In casual settings, such as club competitions, individuals often compete in straightforward stroke play to foster skill development and friendly rivalry. Team variations include four-ball stroke play, where partners each play their own ball, and the lower score per hole counts toward the side's total. This contrasts with , which focuses on winning individual holes rather than overall totals.

Historical Development

Stroke play in traces its origins to 18th-century , where informal competitions known as medal play—counting total shots taken—evolved alongside formats. By 1759, the Society of Golfers formally recognized stroke play as a legitimate form of competition in addition to , marking an early step toward its standardization. This development built on the 1744 Articles and Laws in Playing at established by the Gentlemen Golfers of , which laid foundational rules but initially emphasized . A pivotal milestone occurred in 1764 at , when the combined shorter holes to create the first 18-hole round, establishing the standard format for stroke-based scoring that persists today. This reconfiguration from a previous 22-hole layout promoted consistency in measuring total strokes over a full course. The format gained prominence in major tournaments starting with the inaugural in 1860 at , where Willie Park Sr. won via stroke play over three rounds, totaling 174 strokes. Similarly, the first U.S. Open in 1895 at Newport Country Club adopted stroke play, with Horace Rawlins claiming victory after 36 holes on a nine-hole course, totaling 173 strokes. After early uses as "medal play," the term "stroke play" appeared in the R&A's in 1913. By the early , stroke play supplanted match play's dominance, particularly for large-field events, due to its objective total-score determination that better suited growing professional circuits like the , founded in 1916. This shift accelerated post-1920s as professional tours expanded, favoring stroke play's efficiency in identifying overall performance leaders. The Royal and Ancient Golf Club (R&A) and the (USGA) played key roles in codifying stroke play rules throughout the , issuing a joint code in 1952 that was revised in 1954 with clarifications including procedures for ball identification in hazards, enhancing fairness and applicability.

Scoring Mechanics

Stroke Counting

In stroke play, the fundamental unit of scoring is the stroke, defined as the forward movement of the club made with the intent to strike the . Every such swing that contacts the counts as one , regardless of whether the ball moves or achieves the desired result. Additional strokes are incurred for penalties arising from rule violations, such as when a is hit , requiring -and-distance relief under which the player adds one penalty and replays the shot from the original position, effectively adding two strokes to the total for that hole. Scores are recorded hole by hole as the gross score, which is the total number of strokes taken to complete the , including any penalties. This gross score is then related to the hole's par, the expected score for an expert player under normal conditions; for instance, a score of 4 on a par-3 constitutes a bogey, meaning one stroke over par. After each , the marker—a fellow competitor responsible for attesting the score—confirms the number of strokes with the player and enters it on the scorecard before proceeding. The gross scores from all holes in a round are summed to produce the round total, with the player who completes the competition in the fewest total strokes declared the winner. In cases of incomplete rounds, particularly in amateur play, scores may carry over with adjustments to maintain fairness; for example, under the maximum score form of stroke play, a may cap the score for any unfinished hole at a predetermined maximum, such as net double bogey, allowing the player to pick up without further play while assigning that limit to the hole total. This prevents excessive penalties from derailing a round and promotes pace of play, differing from regular stroke play where holing out is mandatory on every hole. Penalty specifics in stroke play often emphasize aggregate impact, with general penalties assessed as two strokes rather than loss of hole as in , ensuring the total score reflects cumulative performance. Players and markers typically use official scorecards provided by the to record , with the player certifying the total upon completion and returning it for verification. In professional events, dedicated official scorers accompany groups to independently track and confirm in real time. Electronic applications, such as the USGA's GHIN , also facilitate digital score entry and calculation for and casual play, syncing hole-by-hole data to generate totals automatically. These tools ensure accuracy, though the player remains ultimately responsible for the scorecard's correctness. Handicaps may briefly adjust these totals for scoring in certain competitions, but raw counts form the basis.

Handicap Application

A handicap in is a numerical measure of a golfer's potential playing , typically expressed to one decimal place, which allows players of varying skill levels to compete equitably. It is subtracted from a player's gross score—the total number of strokes taken during a round—to determine the net score. The World Handicap System (WHS), introduced on January 1, 2020, by the (USGA) and , standardizes handicap calculation globally using the Handicap Index as its core metric. Under the WHS, the Handicap Index is derived from a player's best eight score differentials from their most recent 20 rounds, adjusted for course difficulty via course rating and . For a specific course and set of tees, this converts to a Course Handicap using the : Course Handicap=(Handicap Index×Slope Rating113)+(Course RatingPar)\text{Course Handicap} = (\text{Handicap Index} \times \frac{\text{Slope Rating}}{113}) + (\text{Course Rating} - \text{Par}) where the slope rating measures relative playing difficulty (standardized at 113 for a course of average challenge), and the course rating reflects the expected score for a scratch golfer. This adjustment ensures the handicap is portable across different courses and tees. In stroke play, handicaps are applied primarily through net score competitions, where each player's Course Handicap (or a thereof, known as the Playing Handicap, depending on the format's allowance) is subtracted from their gross score to yield the net score, with the lowest net score declared the winner. For instance, a player with a Course Handicap of 20 would subtract 20 strokes from their total gross score to compute their net score, effectively allowing them one extra stroke on 20 of the course's most difficult holes as determined by the allocation. The , assigned by the course or committee based on hole difficulty, dictates the order in which these strokes are allocated—strokes are given first on the hardest holes (lowest ) to promote strategic equity without altering the overall total subtraction in individual stroke play. While the total net score governs outcomes in pure stroke play, per-hole stroke allocations become relevant in handicap-integrated variants like team stroke play or when calculating maximum allowable scores per hole (e.g., net double bogey limit under WHS Rule 3.1). In formats such as —a stroke play variant that awards points per hole based on performance relative to par—the Playing Handicap adjusts the scoring thresholds, but applications remain tied to the Course Handicap for overall fairness.

Tournament Procedures

The Cut

In stroke play tournaments, the cut serves to reduce the field size after the initial rounds, typically following 36 holes, thereby concentrating the competition on top performers and facilitating smoother weekend play by limiting the number of participants. This mechanism ensures that only competitive players advance, enhancing the event's intensity and logistical efficiency for organizers and spectators. The cut is calculated based on players' cumulative stroke totals after the designated rounds, with those meeting or exceeding the predetermined threshold proceeding to the final rounds while others are eliminated from contention. Cut lines vary by tournament: on the , it is commonly the top 65 players and ties, though previously influenced by a 10-shot rule allowing advancement within 10 strokes of the leader, which has been largely phased out in favor of fixed positional criteria for greater consistency. In major championships, standards differ, such as the top 50 and ties at the , top 60 and ties at the U.S. Open, and top 70 and ties at both the and . Historically, the cut mechanism evolved to promote fairness and manage growing fields in stroke play events; for instance, the Masters introduced a cut in 1957 to streamline its format, while the adopted one in 1958 upon transitioning from to stroke play, initially featuring a double cut after both 36 and 54 holes. The Open Championship similarly employed a double cut from 1968 to 1985, as seen in the 1970 edition where players faced elimination after 36 holes at +5 and after 54 holes at +7, sparking debates over its rigor and impact on contender retention. Over time, tournaments shifted to the "top X and ties" model to balance inclusivity with competitiveness, eliminating variable stroke-based rules like the 10-shot provision by the early in most majors. The cut exerts significant psychological pressure on participants, as players must balance aggressive play with consistency to avoid early elimination, often leading to tense finishes in the second round. This tension can amplify performance variability, with historical instances like the 1970 Open's double cut underscoring how such rules test resilience under scrutiny.

Playoffs and Tiebreakers

In stroke play tournaments, serve to resolve ties for the lead after the completion of all regulation rounds, ensuring a single winner by extending competition under specified formats. These procedures are outlined in advance by the organizing committee, often varying by event level and sanctioning body, with professional tournaments prioritizing formats that balance fairness, drama, and logistical efficiency. Playoff holes are selected by the organizing committee based on the venue to ensure fairness and excitement, with variations possible across editions. Common playoff formats include sudden-death, where tied players compete hole-by-hole until one records a lower score on a hole, and aggregate-score playoffs over a fixed number of holes, with the lowest total score prevailing; if still tied, sudden-death typically follows. Sudden-death play usually begins on predetermined holes, such as the 18th to leverage course difficulty, and rotates through a sequence (e.g., 18th, then 10th, repeating) to avoid predictability. For instance, at the Masters Tournament, sudden-death starts on the par-4 18th hole and moves to the par-4 10th if necessary, a format adopted in 1976 to replace full-round playoffs. Aggregate formats are prevalent in majors: the PGA Championship uses a three-hole aggregate (e.g., holes 16, 17, and 18 at the 2025 venue) since 2000, followed by sudden-death; the U.S. Open employs a two-hole aggregate (holes 17 and 18) since 2018, then sudden-death starting on the 15th; and The Open Championship typically features a four-hole aggregate since 1989 (e.g., holes 1, 2, 17, 18), transitioning to sudden-death if needed, though for the 2025 edition at Royal Portrush it was a three-hole aggregate (holes 1, 13, 18), followed by sudden-death. For ties not involving the outright victory—such as positions for prizes or seeding—the countback method, also known as matching scorecards, retroactively compares scores from the final round backward: first the last nine holes, then the last six, last three, and finally the 18th hole alone, proceeding to earlier holes if unresolved. This USGA-recommended approach ensures ties are broken without additional play, promoting efficiency in larger fields. The shift to sudden-death and shorter aggregate formats in the marked a significant , driven by television demands for quicker resolutions; the fully adopted sudden-death in 1976, ending the era of 18- or 36-hole playoffs that could extend into the next day. A notable example is the 2018 Masters, where defeated on the second sudden-death hole (the 10th) after both parred the 18th, securing Reed's first major title.

Variations and Comparisons

Common Variations

One common variation of stroke play is the system, where players earn points for each hole based on their score relative to a fixed target score, typically par, rather than accumulating total strokes. Under this format, a player receives 0 points for a score more than one over the target or if the ball is not holed out, 1 point for one over, 2 points for the target score, 3 points for one under, 4 points for two under, and additional points for rarer achievements like 5 for three under or 6 for four under. The player with the highest total points at the end of the round wins, which encourages aggressive play on some holes while allowing players to concede poor performances without excessive penalty. This system, governed by USGA Rule 21, is popular in club competitions and amateur events for its faster pace and reduced impact from blow-up holes. Another adaptation is Par/Bogey scoring, a form of stroke play that applies principles on a hole-by-hole basis against the course par. In this system, a player earns 1 point for winning a (scoring better than par), ½ point for tying par, and 0 points for losing to par (worse than par), with the overall winner determined by the highest total points across all holes. Unlike traditional stroke play, it treats each hole independently for scoring purposes but aggregates results for the final outcome, making it suitable for competitions emphasizing consistency relative to course standards. The USGA recommends a 95% handicap allowance for individual Par/Bogey events to ensure equitable play. In team stroke play, best-ball formats—often called four-ball stroke play—allow the lowest score from members to count toward the 's total on each . For a two-player , each participant plays their own throughout the round, and the better score per is recorded as the 's stroke total, which is summed over the course for the final result. This variation, outlined in USGA Rule 23, promotes individual performance within a collaborative setting and is commonly used in competitions such as the USGA Four-Ball Championship or club matches, where the USGA suggests an 85% handicap allowance per player. Scramble variations adapt stroke play for teams by emphasizing collective shot selection, typically in non-competitive or charity settings. In a standard scramble, teams of two to four players each hit a tee shot, select the best one, and all members then play their next shots from that location, repeating the process until the ball is holed, with the team's total strokes determining the score. Common tweaks include the Texas Scramble, requiring each player to contribute a minimum number of drives, or the Florida Scramble, where the player whose shot is chosen sits out the next stroke; these are scored by aggregate team strokes like standard stroke play but foster inclusivity for mixed-skill groups. The USGA provides guidelines for such formats in committee procedures, often with reduced handicap allowances like 35% of the low handicapper's plus 15% of the high for two-player scrambles. Net stroke play modifies pure stroke play by subtracting a player's full course handicap from their gross score to determine the winning net total, enabling fair competition across varying skill levels. This format, integral to many club championships and amateur tournaments, applies the handicap on a stroke-by-stroke basis per based on the course's , with the USGA mandating a 95% allowance for medium-sized net events to post scores for handicap purposes. For example, a player receiving strokes on specific holes deducts them from their score there before totaling, ensuring that higher-handicap participants remain competitive without altering the core stroke accumulation.

Comparison to Match Play

Stroke play and match play represent two fundamental formats in golf, differing primarily in their scoring mechanisms. In stroke play, a player's total number of strokes over the entire round or tournament is tallied, with the lowest aggregate score determining the winner. In contrast, is contested head-to-head between two players or teams, where the outcome of each hole is decided by the player or team completing it in fewer strokes; the match is won by the side that secures more holes overall, typically ending when one side leads by more holes than remain to be played. This hole-by-hole competition in allows for concessions, such as granting an opponent a short putt, which are not applicable in stroke play due to its cumulative nature. Strategic approaches diverge significantly between the formats. Stroke play demands consistency and , as a single poor —such as a high-score blow-up—can severely impact the overall total, penalizing mistakes more harshly than in . , however, permits greater aggression and recovery, enabling players to treat each independently and employ tactics like pressuring opponents or capitalizing on their errors without the cumulative burden of earlier miscues. Penalties also reflect this: in , most rule breaches result in loss of the , while in stroke play, they typically incur a two-stroke penalty added to the total score. Stroke play predominates in large-field professional tournaments for its objectivity and ability to rank all competitors on a single metric, as seen in majors like the Masters and U.S. Open. , by comparison, suits head-to-head rivalries and team events, such as the , where its format heightens drama through direct confrontations. While stroke play offers fairness across uneven fields by emphasizing overall performance, it can be mentally taxing due to the unforgiving nature of totals; fosters excitement and psychological elements like but may not fully reflect a player's complete set in prolonged play. In stroke play tournaments, ties are often resolved via sudden-death playoffs, underscoring its focus on precise scoring resolution.

References

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