How to Use Sprinklers to Improve Your Lie (Legally)
2026-02-16Lazar AI

How to Use Sprinklers to Improve Your Lie (Legally)

Don't play from a divot if there's a sprinkler nearby. Learn how to use Rule 16.1 as a strategic weapon to get free relief and a perfect lie.

You're in the fairway. You've hit a decent drive, but when you get to the ball... drama. It's resting on a bare patch of dirt, or worse, inside an old, poorly replaced divot.

Your instinct says: "Bad luck, play it as it lies."

Your playing partner says: "That's golf."

Lazar says: Look around.

See that sprinkler head six feet away? See that patch of cart path? They aren't in your direct line of play, and at first glance, they don't interfere with your normal stance. But... what if I told you they could be your ticket out of that bad lie and onto perfect grass?

Welcome to Advanced Rules Strategy. Today, we're not avoiding a penalty; we're manufacturing an advantage.

The Rule: Immovable Obstructions (16.1)

Rule 16.1 allows specific free relief if an Immovable Obstruction (sprinkler, path, control box) interferes with:

  1. Your ball's lie.
  2. Your area of intended swing.
  3. Your area of intended stance (where you place your feet).

The key here is point 3: The Stance.

The Master Move: "Creating" the Interference

Imagine your ball is on hardpan dirt. Five feet to your right is a sprinkler head. If you set up with your normal 7-iron, your feet don't touch the sprinkler. No relief.

But golf doesn't force you to hit a 7-iron.

If the situation reasonably justifies using a different club or type of shot, and that change causes your feet to touch the sprinkler... Bingo! You have interference.

Practical Example

  1. The Situation: 150 yards to the pin. Headwind. Terrible lie.
  2. The "Lazar" Thought: "If I hit an 8-iron, it balloons. But if I decide to play a 4-iron punch shot to cheating the wind, I need to widen my stance significantly."
  3. The Execution: When you widen your stance for that shot (totally reasonable given the conditions), your right heel steps on the sprinkler cover.
  4. The Result: You are entitled to free relief.
  5. The Benefit: You find the Nearest Point of Complete Relief (which is no longer the hardpan, but likely the nice fairway cut next to it) and drop. Now you have a perfect lie.

You went from playing off mud to playing off a carpet, just by knowing how to choose the shot that triggered the rule.

⚠️ The Red Line: Don't Be "That" Guy

Rule 16.1a(3) is the R&A's firewall against cheaters. It states there is no relief if interference exists only because you adopt a stance, swing, or direction of play that is "clearly unreasonable".

  • Legal: Taking a 4-iron to hit a low runner into the wind (even if rare, it's a real golf shot).
  • Illegal (And ridiculous): Saying you're going to putt from 150 yards or doing the splits just to touch the sprinkler.

If a referee (or your partner) asks, you must be able to justify the shot: "I have wind, I need to keep it low and run it up, hence this club and this stance." If the logic holds, the relief is yours.

Strategy Summary

  1. Analyze the Lie: Is it bad? Is it worth hunting for an exit?
  2. Scan the Area: Look for sprinklers, drains, nearby paths.
  3. Simulate Alternative Shots: Is there a reasonable shot (fade, hook, punch) that requires a different stance touching the obstruction?
  4. Claim Your Right: Mark, lift, drop in the fluff.

Golf is hard enough. Don't gift the course half a stroke by not watching where you step.

Pro Tip: In tournaments, tour pros hunt for sprinklers like bloodhounds when they have a bad lie. It's not luck, it's knowledge. You should do the same.