The Stableford Martial Arts Resource Site

How to Play Stableford or Modified Stableford Competitions

Stableford scoring systems are stroke-play formats in which the high total wins, not the low. That's because in Stableford, your final score is not your stroke total, but rather the total points you have earned for your scores on each individual hole.

For example, a par might be worth 1 point, a birdie 2. If you par the first hole and birdie the second, you've accrued 3 points.

As a format for club tournaments, Stableford is popular in the U.K., Europe and South Africa, among other locations; it is much less common in the U.S. On the pro tours, both the U.S. PGA Tour and the European Tour used to have Modified Stableford tournaments - The International on the PGA Tour and the ANZ Championship on the European Tour - but both events are now defunct.

Stableford in the Rule Book
Stableford Competitions are addressed in theRules of Golf under Rule 32. Stableford is a form of stroke play and, with few exceptions, the rules for stroke play apply.

The rulebook also sets forth points totals for a Stableford competition (Stableford tournaments that award points on a different scale than this are known as Modified Stableford):

• More than one over fixed score or no score returned - 0 points
• One over fixed score - 1 point
• Fixed score - 2 points
• One under fixed score - 3 points
• Two under fixed score - 4 points
• Three under fixed score - 5 points
• Four under fixed score - 6 points

The "fixed score" in question is set by the tournament committee. If the fixed score is set as bogey, then a triple bogey is worth 0 points, a double bogey 1 point, a bogey 2 points, a par 3 points, and so on (the committee might also set the fixed score as a numerical value - say, 6 strokes - as opposed to a relative value).

The rules differences for Stableford as compared to normal stroke play have to do with the penalties applied for breaking rules. In some instances (for example, exceeding the 14-club maximum), points are deducted from the competitor, as opposed to a stroke penalty. There are also a number of violations that result in disqualification. The rundown of rules differences in Stableford can be found in the notes to Rule 32-1b and in Rule 32-2.

Modified Stableford on Tour
The International on the PGA Tour and ANZ Championship on the European Tour use a Modified Stableford format (so-called because its points are awarded on a different scale from that described in the rulebook).

Both pro tournaments use the same points scale:

• Double bogey or worse - minus-3 points
• Bogey - minus-1 point
• Par - 0 points
• Birdie - 2 points
• Eagle - 5 points
• Double eagle - 8 points

The difference between a rulebook Stableford and a Modified Stableford is usually reflected in the quality of the players. A traditional Stableford is appropriate for "normal" golfers (e.g., you and me), most of whom aren't going to be racking up birdies left and right. Therefore, the traditional Stableford's points system doesn't penalize players with negative points.

The pros, however, are in a different league. And the Modified Stableford that was used in the old PGA and European tour events harshly penalized a disaster hole, but offerrf even greater rewards for very good holes.


The Stableford Martial Arts Resource Site

Privacy Policy | Copyright/Trademark Notification