Marking a Card
The idea of the game of golf is to send the ball from
a starting place (the tee) swinging as many times as it takes you until
you get it to the green and into the hole or cup. The object of the
game is to do this in as few strokes as possible. You count every
swing, including penalty strokes and air shots.
Each hole has a
number, or score listed for it, which is called Par. This is the
standard of excellence golfers shoot for when they begin to play golf.
Your scores may be much higher than par when you first start, but will
go down as you practice and improve your skills. Depending on the
length of a hole, a hole may be rated as Par 3, Par 4 or Par 5 and
although you may not be shooting for par, you can use the Par standard
to help measure your own skill on different holes.
Stableford points
is a type of scoring where points are awarded at each hole as follows:
Nett bogey (one over par) – 1 point, Nett par – 2 points, Nett birdie
(one under par) – 3 points, Nett eagle (two under par) – 4 points, Nett
albatross (three under par) – 5 points. The winner is the competitor
who scores the highest number of points
Remember if you don't no
how to work out Nett or Stableford points, it does not matter, as long
as you record the Gross (number of shots) it can be worked out by the
card markers.

The hole number is self explanatory.
The column marked 'yards' represents the
length of the hole.
The 'index' indicates the relative
difficulty of each hole, with 1 generally being the hardest, (a player
with a handicap of 18 will receive shots on 1-18, a handicap of 9 on 1-9
and so on).
The 'Par' column is the number of shots
an expert aims to have for each hole and is usually determined by
length.
When marking a scorecard, players swap
scorecards, placing their own scores in the 'markers' column and the
players scores for who they are marking in Column A.