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Teeing Ground Most courses
offer a range of Tee boxes to play from depending on a player's skill or
handicap, making the hole longer or shorter depending on which Tees the
player starts at. Often, the different Tee boxes have names associated with
degree of competence (e.g., Professional and Amateur Tees), or by sex and
age (Men's, Ladies', Senior, etc.). In addition to a difference in distance,
the different Tees may also eliminate or reduce the danger of some hazards
for the "Forward" tees, such as water hazards. Teeing grounds on most golf
courses are relatively flat, in order for the golfer to have a perfect lie
for the first shot on a hole. Playing the ball from the fairway is an advantage because the fairway grass is kept very short and even, allowing the player to cleanly strike the ball, while playing from the rough is a disadvantage because the grass in the rough is generally much longer and the player doesn't have as good of an idea as how the ball will fly out of the rough. While many holes are designed in a straight line from the tee-off point to
the green, some of the holes may bend somewhat to the left or right. This is
called a "dogleg," referencing the partial bend at the knee of a dog's leg.
The hole is called a "dogleg left" if the hole angles to the left, and vice
versa. On rare occasions, a hole's direction can bend twice. This is called
a "double dogleg."
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