bo*gey
What Is The Definition Of Bogey In Golf?
1. A bogey is a score that is one stroke over par on a hole (+1). If someone were to score a six on a par-five hole, for example, it would be called a bogey. A bogey is a relatively common score, even for pro golfers. Scores that are more than one shot over par are called a double bogey (+2) or triple bogey (+3). Beyond that, players typically refer to a shot by the number of strokes. For example, if it took eight strokes to complete a par-four hole, it would be referred to as “eight” or “four over par” rather than a quadruple-bogey.
The term bogey was originally used in the UK as an alternative to “ground score” to describe the number of strokes a good golfer would take to complete a hole, similar to how par is used today. Bogey was first used at England’s Great Yarmouth Golf Club in 1890 and is based on the idea that golfers were competing against a Mister Bogey (or a “bogeyman”) in order to get a good score. As skills improved, golf scores started to come down and par scores were standardized in the United States. Americans began to refer to a bogey to mean one-over-par, and it spread to other countries from there.
Examples Of How Bogey Is Used In Commentary
1. Koepka nearly had a historic bogey-free round until he scored six on a par-five, earning him a bogey on the 16th hole.
Sport The Term Is Used:
1. Golf