Absolutely, according to the USGA's Handicap Manual, all rounds played in accordance to the Rules of Golf must be posted. Decision 5-1a/2 states the rounds played alone must be posted.
2007-03-22 04:10:57
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answer #1
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answered by kimglf 3
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If you play only for recreational reasons and not to enter tournaments or play in leagues and only with friends and you all play by the same rules or if you only play a practice round, who are you going to post a score with? A public course you only play at once in a while? The only time in my life I have ever posted scores for handicap reasons was when I played in my company league and we played at the same course the whole season. That is the only time in my life a handicap meant anything.
2007-03-22 07:28:21
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answer #2
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answered by brainstorm 6
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If your playing by yourself then forget about handicap and enjoy the round. Posting or not is secondary to actually playing. Have fun, shoot low, walk away to play another day.
2007-03-22 08:36:31
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answer #3
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answered by valdez715 2
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There are two main factors concerning this question-
1. Do you play by the rules, or "practice" while you play (mulligans)? If so, I would not post. It is not a fair representation of your score.
2. Are you a sandbagger (intentionally keep you handicap higher than you can actually play)?
Follow the rules, if you play by the rules.
2007-03-22 07:19:25
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answer #4
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answered by vdrive_60 4
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Yes, all rounds shoud be posted. This means you must keep score accurately.
2007-03-22 04:52:18
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answer #5
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answered by wfm100 2
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Yep
2007-03-22 12:17:27
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answer #6
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answered by Rip 5
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Yes, that if you want to play by the rules.
2007-03-22 04:13:37
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answer #7
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answered by Thomas 6
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Good question, but you don't have a witness do you???? I wouldn't, but that's me and I don't play anymore.
2007-03-22 03:35:30
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answer #8
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answered by Fordman 7
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What a boring game is this.
2007-03-22 05:05:30
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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