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Made (Cut) Didn't Finish In a 4-round tournament, after two days a certain number of golfers are disqualified based on score and leave unpaid. The top 70 (and ties) play on over the weekend and are guaranteed at least some money. If the number of ties pushes the number too high, all golfers involved in the tie are given an MDF and are treated as if they made the cut and get paid, but do not play on. Starting in 2008, rather than making them leave, they played on and a second cut was administered after the third round.
Salaries for professional golfers vary widely based on the number of tournaments they enter and win and the number of endorsements/sponsors they have.Tiger Woods, the highest paid athlete in the world, earned $110 million from 2008 to 2009 from both tournament earnings and sponsorships.
It depends on the length of the hole, and the number of golfers in the tournament. If it is a short hole and you have a lot of golfers, the chances are pretty good that someone will hit a hole in one. If they do you'll be glad you have insurance! Nobody's gonna hit a hole in one. Are you crazy? National Hole-In-One Association's website says they've paid out over $50,000,000 to hole in one winners. That's alot of hole-in-ones.
There is no minimum number of games that an Australian rules football player has to play to qualify for finals. It depends on if your team makes it to the finals, then the coach can choose whichever players he thinks are best to play in the finals .
Rankings are subjective. The NCAA Tournament games are about matchups.
522 matches in a minimum of 10 rounds. *The number of rounds required for from 512 to 1023 players is 10 rounds (512 = 29)
There is a minimum number, it is one.
UNC was a number 1 seed in the 2009 NCAA basketball tournament.
According to the New Zealand Golf website, there are 482,000 golfers (aged 18 or over) in New Zealand and of these there are 125,000 golf club members with an official NZ Golf handicap.
from the about.com web site (http://golf.about.com/b/2008/01/12/new-cut-rule-victimizes-18-golfers-at-sony-open.htm) brent kelley explains it this way... So here's how the new cut rule works: * Low-70 plus ties is still the cutline. If 78 or fewer golfers make the cut, then everything continues as in the past. * However, if 79 or more golfers make the cut, the PGA Tour eliminates additional golfers by going one stroke back from the cutline. If the cutline is 4-over and 83 golfers make the cut, the Tour goes back to 3-over, eliminating golfers at that score. * Those golfers who are eliminated in this extra step are credited with making the cut, but do not continue to the weekend rounds. Since they are credited with a made cut, however, they do get their share of the purse and FedEx Cup points. But there is an exception: If the second reduction takes place and results in a field that is farther away from 70 than the full number of golfers who made the cut, the original number stands. For example, 80 golfers make the cut based on the low-70s plus ties formula. The Tour eliminates all the players one stroke below the cutline, which results in 59 golfers remaining. Fifty-nine is farther from 70 than 80 is, so the original 80 continue to the weekend.
Estimation and how hard should they swing and their angle from the hole and ball Answer Golfers have to add up their shots to find the total for a given hole, and then add all those to find the total number of shots for the round.
kenya