Birdie: one under par for that hole e.g. 3 on a par 4
Bogey: one over the par for that hole e.g. 5 on a par 4
eagle: two under the par for that hole e.g 3 on a par 5 or 2 on a par 4
a "birdie" is 1 under par. Par = 0. So 1 under 0 = -1. same for eagle, albatross, and a hole-in-one. for a par 4 hole: Hole-in-one = -3. Eagle = -2. Birdie = -1. Par = 0. Bogey = +1. Double bogey = +2. and so on
It is STABLEFORD and it is a scoring system, whereby you get 1 point for a bogey, 2 for a par, and 3 for a Birdie, 4 for an Eagle.
A birdie - a bogey is one shot over par on a given hole, and a birdie is one shot under par on a given hole - so, a bogey is two shots worse than a birdie.
16 points. 1 point for bogey 2 points for par 4 points for birdie 8 points for eagle 16 points for double eagle/ albatross
An eagle is scored when you get 2 under par. EX: Par 4 hole you score a 2. Par 4: 1- Hole in One 2- Eagle 3- Birdie 4- Par 5- Bogey
Catfight is a golf game played widely across the world. In a catfight game 1 point is awarded for a double bogey, 2 points for bogey, 3 for a par, 4 for a birdie and 8 for eagle.
double eagle, that's correct for the USA but here in the UK 3 under is classed as an AlbatrossScoring terms summarised+1 = Bogey (then this goes up - ie. double bogey, triple bogey etc etc)+/-0 = Par-1 = Birdie-2 = Eagle-3 = Albatross (Double Eagle)-4 = Condor-5 = Ostrich (almost impossible as this would require a hole-in-one on a par 6 which on their own are very rare)
Stableford and British Stableford Stableford is played between 2-4 players. Players earn or lose points based on their net score on each hole according to the following system: 8 points for a double eagle, 5 for an eagle, 2 for a birdie, 0 for a par, -1 for a bogey, and -3 for a double bogey or worse. The winner is the player with the most points for the round. British Stableford is also played between 2-4 players. Players earn points based on their net score on each hole according to the following system: 1 point for a bogey, 2 points for a par, 3 points for a birdie, and 4 points for an eagle. The player with the most points wins. Stableford and British Stableford Stableford Players earn or lose points based on their net score on each hole according to the following system: 8 points for a double eagle, 5 for an eagle, 2 for a birdie, 0 for a par, -1 for a bogey, and -3 for a double bogey or worse. The winner is the player with the most points for the round. British Stableford Players earn points based on their net score on each hole according to the following system: 1 point for a bogey, 2 points for a par, 3 points for a birdie, and 4 points for an eagle. The player with the most points wins.
For any hole, you have a limited number of shots, assigned hole by hole. If you need as many shots as the fixed ones, you realize a par. If you need 1 shot less you do birdie, 2 shot less: eagle, 1 shot more: bogey, 2 shot more double bogey, 3 shot more: triple bogey
An eagle is two strokes under par, a birdie is one stroke under. An eagle is a better score.
No, a triple bogey is terrible. A bogey is one above par (anything above par is bad; below par is good, i.e. -1, -3, etc.), so a triple bogey is terrible. A good score would be a par or a birdie.
I think you are referring to when you see on golf TV broadcasts the word "other". It is anything but a birdie, par, or bogey. Basically anything over a bogey is an "other".