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Chip Over A Sprinkler Head If It’s In The Way Of A Putt

Avoidable rules mistakes sprinkler head on line

The question of “do you have to chip over a sprinkler head if it’s in the way of a putt from off the green?” is more complicated than it might look at first glance. The simple answer is no. Of course you don’t have to chip over it. You can putt round it, even putt through it. You might, but won’t necessarily, be entitled to a free drop away from it, and this is why:

Sprinkler heads are “Immovable Obstructions” and these are covered by Rule 16 in the Rules of Golf. In the definitions of the Rules, an Immovable Obstruction is described as an obstruction that: “cannot be moved without unreasonable effort or without damaging the obstruction or the course, and otherwise does not meet the definition of a movable obstruction.”

You are entitled to relief from an immovable obstruction if your ball touches or is on the immovable obstruction (in this case the sprinkler head.) You will also get relief if the sprinkler head interferes with the area of your intended stance or area of intended swing. So, if your foot is on a sprinkler head or the follow through of your putt would clip the sprinkler head, you will get a free drop.

If it’s not interfering with lie, stance or swing, you must play as it lies.

(Image credit: Tom Miles)

If either of those things are the case, then you should establish the nearest point of complete relief (the nearest point, no closer to the hole, where the sprinkler head no longer interferes with lie, intended stance or intended swing.) You then have one club length from that point to create a Relief Area in which to drop the ball, no closer to the hole.

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