Golf Outings Guide

Everything you need to know about group golf outing formats β€” Scramble, Shamble, Chapman, Best Ball, and more.

What Is a Golf Outing?

A golf outing is an organized group event β€” typically a company outing, charity tournament, bachelor party, or golf trip β€” where multiple teams compete using a shared format. Unlike individual stroke play, outings are designed to be inclusive and fun for golfers of all skill levels.

The most important characteristic of an outing format is that every player contributes to the team score. Weak players aren't a liability; they still get chances to help.

Scramble

The Scramble is the most popular outing format. Every player on the team hits a shot from the same location, the team chooses the best shot, and everyone plays their next shot from that spot β€” repeating until the hole is complete.

How It Works

Hole 3, Par 4:
Drives: Chris 210 yds (left rough), Mike 245 yds (fairway), Dan 180 yds (rough), Rob 230 yds (right rough)
β†’ Team selects Mike's 245 yd drive.
All four players now hit from Mike's lie in the fairway.

Why Golfers Love It

Common Variations

Scramble is coming to TeeItUp Outings. You'll be able to track team shots and see a live leaderboard across your entire outing group.

Shamble

A Shamble is a hybrid of Scramble and individual stroke play. The team scrambles on the tee shot only β€” then each player completes the hole from the chosen drive with their own ball.

How It Works

Best drive selected: 240 yd fairway position.
From there: Chris makes 4 (par), Mike makes 3 (birdie), Dan makes 5, Rob makes 5.
Team shamble score = 3 (Mike's birdie).

Compared to Scramble

FeatureScrambleShamble
Tee shotTeam selects bestTeam selects best
Remaining shotsAll from same spot (team)Individual from same spot
ScoresOne team scoreIndividual scores (best used)
DifficultyEasiestModerate

Chapman (Pinehurst)

Chapman, also known as Pinehurst, is a two-player format that blends individual play with team collaboration. It's one of the most strategically interesting formats for pairs.

How It Works

Chris drives 220 yds, Mike drives 250 yds.
Chris hits Mike's ball; Mike hits Chris's ball.
Team chooses Chris's approach (from Mike's drive) as the better lie.
Mike and Chris alternate shots until the hole is finished.

Strategy

Chapman rewards partners who communicate and leverage each other's strengths. If Chris is a better iron player, it pays to get him on the better approach lie. Knowing your partner's game is half the battle.

Best Ball (Four-Ball)

Best Ball (also called Four-Ball in match play) is the simplest team format: each player plays their own ball all the way around, and only the best (lowest) score among teammates counts as the team score for each hole.

How It Works

Hole 7, Par 4:
Chris: 5  |  Mike: 4  |  Dan: 6  |  Rob: 5
Team Best Ball score = 4 (Mike's birdie).

Best Ball vs Scramble

Best Ball is more individual than a Scramble β€” poor shots aren't discarded, they just don't count. This makes it a truer measure of team quality and is often preferred by more competitive groups.

Format Comparison

Format Team Size Tee Shot Approach/Putt Difficulty
Scramble 2–4 Best selected Best selected (all hit from same spot) Easiest
Shamble 2–4 Best selected Individual from best drive Easy–Medium
Chapman 2 Individual Swap 2nd shots, then alternate Medium
Best Ball 2–4 Individual Individual Hardest

TeeItUp Outings (coming soon) will support all of the formats above, with real-time team leaderboards and hole-by-hole scoring across your entire group.