Golf Course Areas and Formats

Course Areas and Formats explained in plain English for parents learning Golf.

Tee Box

The starting area for each hole and the first course area beginners need to understand.

Responsibilities: Start from the assigned markers, check that the landing area is clear, tee the ball if allowed, and choose a safe target.

Key skills: Safety check, setup, target selection, club choice, and calm routine.

Watch for: Watch whether the player waits for the fairway to clear and aims at a realistic area.

Common confusion: A closer tee is not a shortcut or penalty. Modified tees are a normal youth format.

Fairway

The shorter grass path toward the green and often the best place to play from.

Responsibilities: Move the ball forward with controlled shots, choose clubs that fit the distance, and stay aware of other groups.

Key skills: Contact, aim, course management, and steady walking pace.

Watch for: Watch whether players value a fairway target instead of only trying to hit far.

Common confusion: A long shot into trouble may be worse than a shorter shot that stays in play.

Rough

Longer grass beside the fairway where shots can be harder to control.

Responsibilities: Choose a club that can get the ball out safely, accept shorter progress, and avoid risky hero shots.

Key skills: Judgment, balance, patience, and clean contact.

Watch for: Watch whether the child can choose a simple recovery instead of swinging as hard as possible.

Common confusion: Rough is part of the course, not an automatic penalty.

Bunker

A sand area that requires extra care, safety, and sometimes different technique.

Responsibilities: Enter safely, avoid distracting others, get the ball back in play, and care for the bunker as the course or event expects.

Key skills: Balance, patience, safe entry and exit, and basic sand contact.

Watch for: Watch whether the player focuses on escaping safely rather than making a perfect highlight shot.

Common confusion: Beginners may have local relief or teaching rules in clinics, so check the format.

Green

The putting surface around the hole where pace, quiet, and course care matter most.

Responsibilities: Putt toward the cup, avoid stepping on lines, mark balls if instructed, and stay still while others putt.

Key skills: Touch, reading slope, distance control, etiquette, and patience.

Watch for: Watch whether the player slows down, respects others, and uses a simple putting routine.

Common confusion: The green is not a place for practice swings that scrape or damage the surface.

Short Game Area

The area around the green where players chip, pitch, and putt to finish the hole.

Responsibilities: Choose simple shots, land the ball safely on the green, and control distance instead of swinging for power.

Key skills: Club selection, touch, target choice, and emotional control.

Watch for: Watch whether the player uses a safer chip or putt when the ball is close to the green.

Common confusion: Short game mistakes count too, but they are also where beginners can save many strokes.

Scramble Format

A beginner-friendly team format where players pick one shot and continue together from that spot.

Responsibilities: Encourage teammates, move efficiently, and learn from different shot results without every player finishing every ball alone.

Key skills: Teamwork, pace, communication, and shared decision-making.

Watch for: Watch whether teammates celebrate useful shots instead of only the longest shot.

Common confusion: A scramble is still golf; it is a format that makes early rounds faster and more social.

Clinic Format

A teaching format with stations, coach-fed tasks, shortened holes, or skill games instead of a full round.

Responsibilities: Listen to coaches, rotate safely, try each skill, and build habits before formal scoring.

Key skills: Listening, repetition, safety, and confidence.

Watch for: Watch for learning goals like grip, stance, putting distance, and etiquette rather than score alone.

Common confusion: A clinic may not look like a tournament, and that is intentional for beginners.

Parent Caddie

A parent or adult helper may be allowed to carry clubs, help with safety, and offer limited guidance depending on the event.

Responsibilities: Follow the event's caddie rules, support pace, encourage good choices, and avoid taking over decisions.

Key skills: Calm communication, rules awareness, pace support, and emotional steadiness.

Watch for: Watch whether the adult is helping the child think, not playing the hole for them.

Common confusion: Some events allow parent caddies and some do not. Always check before the round.