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In golf, a hole in one or hole-in-one occurs when a ball hit from a tee to start a hole finishes in the cup. The feat is also known as an ace, mostly in American English.As the feat needs to occur on the stroke that starts a hole, a ball hit from a tee following a lost ball, out-of-bounds, or water hazard is not a hole-in-one, due to the application of a stroke penalty.
References External links 0–9 19th hole The clubhouse bar. A ace When a player hits the ball directly from the tee into the hole with one stroke. Also called a hole in one. address The act of taking a stance and placing the club-head behind the golf ball. If the ball moves once a player has addressed the ball, there is a one-stroke penalty, unless it is clear that the actions of the player ...
Hole (golf), a segment of a golf course; Hole in one (also known as a hole-in-one or an ace, mostly in American English), occurs when a ball hit from a tee to start a hole finishes in the cup Hole-in-one Register (or United States Golf Register), the United States' official historical registry of holes-in-one; Hole set, a position in water polo
The first was at the 2015 Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship on the 177-yard 15th hole. McIlroy made his ace on one bounce with that shot. More recently, he nailed a hole-in-one at the 2022 ...
As someone who doesn't golf much and has never hit a hole-in-one, no matter how good the odds, I don't expect I'll ever need hole-in-one insurance. But some people must, because there's a market ...
Imagine hitting two holes-in-one in four holes. That's what Steve Marks did. Steve Marks got his first hole-in-one – and his second – within 20 minutes of each other
A hole in one is a golf shot where a player hits the ball directly from the tee into the cup with one shot. Hole in one may also refer to: A Hole in One, a 2004 film with Michelle Williams and Meat Loaf, set in the 1950s with lobotomy in the plot; Hole in One, a 2010 comedy film with golf in the plot "Hole in One" (Only Fools and Horses), an ...
The golf stories of author P. G. Wodehouse, which are narrated by his character, the Oldest Member, discuss the nineteenth hole. [6]At the beginning and again towards the end of the Lars von Trier movie Melancholia, the main character Claire is shown passing the nineteenth hole, which in reality did not exist, on the golf course belonging to the mansion where the movie takes place.