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Limekiln
Game Five of the 1999 season was played by most people at Limekiln on June 19th.
Honorable mention of the day must go to Steve Margetich, who recorded his
best-ever score of 88 that day.
Limekiln was in good condition (as it usually is in
June) and although the greens were a little on the slow side, putting was
generally fair on them.
Herman Ellzy’s
81 enabled him to take 2.5 points from Ron Jones (85) and Dick Blystone’s 85
took all three from Mike Cwiertniewicz (114). Roy Craig’s 95 took 3 from
Stephen Flynn (108). Bob Welc (98) was given three points as Steve Ellzy
forfeited.
Grant Blair
(97) and Roman Hrycusko (91) shared their points; Max McHenry (96) took 2.5
from Mike Brychy (117). Steve Margetich (88) took 2 from Doug Perks, who also
shot an 88. Kevin Stevenson’s 99 took 2.5 from Dan Stevens (110).
In the A
flight, Dick tallied 21 par/birdie points and in the B’s, Steve Margetich had
an incredible 34.
As far as
putting went, Dick strolled off the last green with 28 for the round, while
Grant escaped with 30.
Dick managed
two birdies, while Herman, Stephen and Ron managed one each. Doug had seven
natural par points and Steve managed 6.
Match Points:
Herman
Ellzy 8
Mike
Cwiertniewicz 7.5
Dick
Blystone 7
Roy
Craig 7
Ron
Jones 7
Par/Birdie Points:
Roy
Craig 93
Ron
Jones 93
Dick
Blystone 92
Bob
Welc 84
Putts:
Dick
Blystone 165
Ron
Jones 168
Roy
Craig 170
Bob
Welc 175
Birdies:
Dick
Blystone 7
Herman
Ellzy 4
Match Points:
Grant
Blair 11.5
Steve
Margetich 11
Kevin
Stevenson 10.5
Doug
Perks 10
Par/Birdie Points:
Grant
Blair 110
Doug
Perks 108
Kevin
Stevenson 101
Steve
Margetich 98
Putts:
Grant
Blair 153
Steve
Margetich 184
Kevin
Stevenson 184
Doug
Perks 187
Naturals:
Doug
Perks 22
Grant
Blair 19
Kevin
Stevenson 14
Roman
Hrycushko 13
Steve Margetich has improved by 27 strokes since the
first game of the season. His putts alone have dropped by 7.
Rule Reminders
If a ball is either lost or deemed unplayable in a
water hazard, a one-stroke penalty applies. For example, if your tee shot lands
in a pond, you can drop a ball on the teeward side of the pond and your next
stroke will be your third.
If a ball is struck out of bounds (or can be
reasonably assumed to be lost out of bounds or lost in thick rough), you have
two options:
1)
Stroke
and distance. Let’s say you lost your tee shot. You could play another ball from the tee and count that as your
THIRD stroke.
2)
Two-stroke
penalty. Drop another ball in a playable position as near as possible to the
spot where the original either crossed the out-of-bounds boundary or is
suspected to be buried in the rough.