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.
16 points. 1 point for bogey 2 points for par 4 points for birdie 8 points for eagle 16 points for double eagle/ albatross
It's called an Albatross or also double eagle From Wikipedia
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.
For one hole? A birdie. For a round? One under.
A bogey is what you get when you complete a hole in one more stroke than what is par for that hole. Par is the number of strokes you are supposed to take on a given hole and there are par 3's,4's, and 5's on a golf course
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".
pretty much average, just kidding, if a triple bogey is three over, I'd guess 4 over would be a quadruple bogey
An eagle is two strokes under par, a birdie is one stroke under. An eagle is a better score.
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)