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Golf Etiquette Mistakes That Instantly Make You Look Like A Rookie
You arrive at the first tee at 7:58 a.m. for your 8 o’clock slot. The group ahead has cleared the tee box and now is out of range. The starter’s staring at you. You’re technically on time, so why is he?
Etiquette breakdowns on the course usually stem from not understanding the unwritten timing and positioning rules that keep play moving. A relaxed four-hour round morphs into a tense five-and-a-half-hour ordeal. The group behind keeps hitting into you. The marshal’s driven past three times now.
The pace problem nobody talks about
Most beginners equate pace of play with walking faster between shots. That’s incomplete. The actual issue: not preparing for your shot while others hit theirs.
Ready golf (hitting when ready rather than strictly by who’s away) is standard in casual play. Wait for your playing partner to complete their pre-shot routine, walk to their ball, assess the shot, take two practice swings, and finally hit before you even consider your own shot? You’ve added 90 seconds per hole.
A foursome should complete nine holes in about two hours. Everyone taking turns sequentially instead of preparing simultaneously? You’re pushing 2:45. The group ahead makes the turn in two hours flat because they grasp “parallel preparation.”
Same course. Same conditions. Different understanding of flow.
What actually causes it
Grabbing your club while someone else is hitting feels rude to new players, so beginners stand motionless and watch every shot before starting their own preparation.
Waiting until it’s “your turn” to begin your routine creates gaps that the entire course will feel. Know your yardage, select your club and visualize your shot while others are playing. The etiquette violation isn’t preparing early. It’s making everyone wait while you start from scratch.
Distance from the green amplifies this problem. A foursome that walks to their drives together, then takes turns going through full routines? That’s eight minutes per hole just standing around. A group that arrives at their balls ready to hit as soon as it’s safe? Half that.
Three etiquette fixes that work
Fix 1: The cart positioning rule
Always park your cart ahead of your ball, on the side of the fairway closest to the next tee. Then walk back to your ball with two or three clubs.
This keeps you moving forward. After you hit, you walk back to the cart and you’re already pointed toward the green. No backtracking.
Most rookies drive straight to wherever their ball landed. If it’s on the wrong side of the fairway, they park next to it. Now, after they hit, they have to drive all the way across to get back on track toward the next hole. The group behind waits on the tee while you make a full loop across the fairway just to get back into position.
Fix 2: Proper green-reading time
Read your putt while others are putting, not after everyone else has finished and it’s finally your turn.
Walk directly to your ball once you reach the green, mark it and then read your line while staying out of other players’ sight lines. By the time it’s your turn, you should be ready to set your ball down and putt within 15 seconds.
This eliminates the excruciating wait where one player finishes and then the next player starts their entire green-reading process from scratch. Your playing partners don’t want to watch you circle your ball from four different angles while they stand there holding the flagstick.
Fix 3: Understand when to tend the flag
Once everyone in your group is on the green, the person closest to the hole should pull the flag and set it off the green, not stand there holding it for every putt.
The exception is when someone has a long putt and requests it be tended. Otherwise, pull it immediately and eliminate the awkward dance of who’s holding what and when.
The rake job everyone skips
After hitting from a bunker, rake your footprints and the area you disturbed and then exit from the low side of the bunker to avoid damaging the steep face.
Most beginners either skip raking entirely or rake only their swing divot while leaving deep footprints behind them. The next player finds your mess and now faces an unplayable lie that shouldn’t exist.
The simple awareness check
Play a round where you consciously track one thing: how often you’re ready when it’s your turn versus how often people are waiting on you.
You should be ready immediately at least eight out of 10 times. Anything less means you’re not preparing during others’ shots. That’s your diagnosis. The fixes above are your prescription.
Good etiquette doesn’t happen by accident. It doesn’t mean rushing your routine, either. Many golfers think being courteous means waiting for absolute silence. Wrong. You need to keep moving to keep pace.
Stop waiting. Start preparing. Your playing partners will notice.
The post Golf Etiquette Mistakes That Instantly Make You Look Like A Rookie appeared first on MyGolfSpy.

