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{{Short description|Second chance to perform an action}}
{{for|people named Mulligan|Mulligan (surname)}}
A '''mulligan''' is a second chance to perform an action, usually after the first chance went wrong through bad luck or a blunder. Its best-known use is in ], whereby it refers to a player being allowed, only informally, to replay a stroke, although that is against the formal rules of golf. The term has also been applied to other sports, games, and fields generally. The origin of the term is unclear.
A '''''mulligan''''', in a game, happens when a player gets a second chance to perform a certain move or action.


==Mulligan in golf== ==Possible origin==
The earliest known use of the term is in a 1931 issue of the '']'',<ref name="word-origins"/> somewhat predating the earliest citation in the '']'' from 1936.<ref name="OED">{{cite OED|mulligan|id=254610}}</ref> The most common explanation of the term's origin is that it was named after a golfer with ], the main candidates being either David Mulligan or John A. "Buddy" Mulligan; however, no connection with these figures is recorded until several decades after the term entered common use.<ref name="word-origins">{{cite web|url=https://www.wordorigins.org/big-list-entries/mulligan|last=Wilton|first=David|date=25 May 2021|title=mulligan|website=wordorigins.org}}</ref> In 2017, Peter Reitan suggested that the term first arose in baseball sports writing and was associated with a fictional baseball player "Swat Mulligan".<ref name="esnpc">{{cite web|url=https://esnpc.blogspot.com/2017/05/hey-mulligan-man-second-shot-at-history.html|title=Hey Mulligan Man! - a Second Shot at the History of Taking a "Mulligan"|date=8 May 2017|last=Brown|first=Peter Jensen|website=Early Sports and Pop Culture History Blog}}</ref>
In ], a '''mulligan''' is a shot retaken, due to an errant shot. Like ], mulligans are strictly prohibited in the official ] of the game, but are commonplace in social golf. Traditionally, mulligans are only allowed on the tee shot (usually one per round) not to be taken at any time of the golfer's choosing. More permissive mulligans are often identified by the terms '''floating mulligan''' or '''walking shapiro''', can be used on any errant shot except on the putting green. Golf tournaments held for charity may even sell mulligans to collect more money for the charity.


===Eponymous origin theories===
Some social golf games also allow one mulligan per nine holes (thus two for a round of 18).
The ] (USGA) cites three stories espousing that the term derived from the name of a ] golfer, David B. Mulligan (1869–1954). At one time, he was the manager of the ] in ]. He played at the ] golf course, in ] near ] during the 1920s. There are three variations in reports indicating his being the Mulligan associated with the term. One version has it that one day after hitting a poor tee shot, Mulligan immediately re-teed and shot again. He called it a "correction shot", but his companions thought it more fitting to name the unorthodox practice after him, and that David Mulligan then brought the concept from Canada to ], a golf club in the U.S. A second version has the extra shot allowed for Mulligan due to his being jumpy and shaky after a difficult drive over the ] to the course. The final version of the David Mulligan story gives him an extra shot after having overslept and having rushed to get ready to make the tee time.<ref> USGA Museum Golf History</ref>


An alternative, later story credits a different man named Mulligan &ndash; John A. "Buddy" Mulligan, a locker room attendant at ] in ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.caldwell.edu/golf/history-of-the-mulligan|title=History of the "Mulligan"|website=Caldwell University, New Jersey}}</ref> In the 1930s, he would finish cleaning the locker room and, if no other members appeared, play a round with the assistant pro, Dave O'Connell, and a club member, Des Sullivan, who was a reporter and later, golf editor for the '']''. One day his first shot was bad and he beseeched O'Connell and Sullivan to allow another shot since they "had been practicing all morning" and he had not. Once they agreed and the round finished, Mulligan began to exclaim proudly for months to the members in his locker room, how he had gotten an extra shot from the duo. The members loved the device and soon began giving themselves "Mulligans" in his honor. Sullivan began using the term in his golf articles in the ''Newark Evening News''. A television program, the '']'', ran this story around 2005 and have it in their archives. Mulligan was located in the 1970s at the ] ], helping with their golf facility. In his July 22, 1970, column in the '']'', the semi-retired Des Sullivan wrote of finding Mulligan and the history behind the term.{{cn|date=April 2018}}
==Origin==
There are many theories about the origin of the term. The ] (USGA) cites three different stories explaining that the term derived from the name of a ] golfer, David Mulligan, one time manager of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City, who played at St. Lambert in ] during the ]. One version has it that one day after hitting a poor tee shot, Mr. Mulligan re-teed and shot again. He called it a "correction shot," but his friends thought it more fitting to name the practice after him. David Mulligan then brought the concept from Canada to the famous U.S. golf club ]. A second version has the extra shot given to Mulligan due to his being jumpy and shaky after a difficult drive to the course. The final version of the David Mulligan story gives him an extra shot after having overslept, rushing to get ready to make the tee time.


===Swat Mulligan baseball origin theory===
An alternate, later etymology credits a different man named Mulligan &mdash; John A. "Buddy" Mulligan, a locker room attendant at Essex Fells, ]. In the ], he was known to replay shots.
In a 2017 blog post, Peter Reitan cast doubt on the eponymous ''mulligan'' etymology theories, pointing out that they conflicted with the (then-recent) 1931 ] in the dictionary. He suggested that the term originated instead with "Swat Mulligan", a fictional baseball player with extraordinary batting skills who appeared in the '']'' during the 1910s. Reitan presents quotations from the 1920s in which Mulligan's name is used as a byword for powerful hits, including use of the phrase ''take a "mulligan"'' to mean taking a powerful swing at the ball. Reitan suggests that the term then arrived at its current meaning by ].<ref name="esnpc"/> The 1931 ''Detroit Free Press'' citation has been suggested to represent a transitional form, in that the usage involves both a do-over and a powerful shot:


<blockquote>All were waiting to see what ] would do on the 290-yard 18th, with a creek in front of the well-elevated green. His first drive barely missed carrying the creek and he was given a “mulligan” just for fun. The second not only was over the creek on the fly, but was within a few inches of the elevated green. That’s some poke!<ref name="word-origins"/></blockquote>
According to the USGA, the term first achieved widespread use in the 1940s.


==Use in golf==
According to the author Henry Beard, Mr. Thomas Mulligan was a minor Anglo-Irish aristocrat and passionate golfer, who was born on May 1, 1793 and who lived near Lough Sclaff, on the Shannon estuary, in a modest manor house called Duffnaught Hall, which was totally destroyed in a mysterious fire one week after his death on April 1, 1879. Here is the "original mulligan":
In ], a mulligan is a stroke that is replayed from the spot of the previous stroke without penalty, due to an errant shot made on the previous stroke. The result is that the hole is played and scored as if the first errant shot had never been made. This practice is disallowed entirely by strict rules in formal play and players who attempt it or agree to let it happen may be disqualified from sanctioned competitions.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://lindamillergolf.blogspot.co.uk/2015_01_01_archive.html|title=Ask Linda: Golf Rules You Can Understand|website=lindamillergolf.blogspot.co.uk}}</ref> However, in casual play, "mulligans" speed play by reducing the time spent searching for a lost ball, reduce frustration, and increase enjoyment of the game because a player can "shake off" a bad shot more easily with their second chance.
Inasmuch as strokes taken after play is concluded on the 18th hole do not count towards the total entered on one's tally card, it seems to me eminently reasonable that any shots struck before play is properly commenced with a satisfactory drive on the first tee, should be of no more consequence to one's score than those swings which one has made by way of practice in the course of hitting balls upon the driving ground.


A "gilligan", the opposite of a "mulligan", is to redo a successful stroke when so requested by an opponent.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.golftoday.co.uk/golf_a_z/articles/glossary.html#g |title=Golf Today's A to Z of Golf |access-date=2015-06-29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150906051942/http://golftoday.co.uk/golf_a_z/articles/glossary.html#g |archive-date=2015-09-06 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
==Other uses==
The term has found a broader acceptance in both general speech and other ]s, meaning any minor blunder which is allowed to pass unnoticed or without consequence. In both senses, it is implied that a mulligan is forgiven because it was either made by a rank beginner, or it is unusual and not indicative of the level of play or conduct expected of the person who made the mulligan.


As mulligans are not covered by strict rules &ndash; except to prohibit them &ndash; there are many variations of the practice among groups of players who do allow them in friendly games. If a mulligan is allowed to be used to replay any shot, typically each player is limited to 18 per round, sometimes 9 in the first 9 holes and 9 in the second nine.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120723173736/http://www.bgatour.org/BGA%20Rules.htm |date=2012-07-23 }}</ref> Traditionally, mulligans can only be played on tee shots (which are notoriously difficult to make accurately), and sometimes they may only be played on the first tee shot of the round (known as a "breakfast ball").<ref>{{cite web|last=Easdale|first=Roderick|url=https://www.golfmonthly.com/features/what-is-a-breakfast-ball-in-golf|title=What Is A Breakfast Ball In Golf?|work=]|date=November 7, 2023|accessdate=August 26, 2024}}</ref> In the case of a mulligan used to replay the first tee shot, multiple "mulligans" may be allowed under different names (Finnegan, Branagan, Flanagan, or Craig) until the player has hit a playable tee shot.
Often times though in the realm of a ], especially baseball, certain team owners who drop a player only to regret it several hours later, call on their respective commissioners to ] or grant a mulligan in order to reverse the transaction, even though the player is in the waiver pool. While mulligans are typically reserved to the sound discretion of the league commissioner, they should be used extremely sparingly and only in such instances of legitimate human error, rather than in cases of mistake resulting from carelessness, laziness, or inexcusable neglect.


Although certain players may wish to bank their shots, this is deemed unsportsmanlike and is generally frowned upon. Golf tournaments held for charity may charge for mulligans to collect more money for the charity.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090601203912/http://www.totaltournamentgolf.com/event.html |date=2009-06-01 }}</ref>
The word can also be used in instances outside of sports, in real-life situations. For example, it has been used commonly in relationships to replace the term ']', where a person messes up the relationship the first time around, for various reasons relating to ']', then regrets the screw up, and wishes for a mulligan having realized how ridiculous the initial action was. Much like the pressure of the first tee shot in front of strangers to start a round of golf, the first stab at a serious relationship is similarly pressure-packed; however, as with a golfing mulligan, a relationship mulligan allows the person to be much more relaxed and focused on the second attempt, having understood what went wrong on the first attempt. Another example is in politics, where the losing candidate in a party primary may be able to run again in the general election on another ballot line. In the 2006 Connecticut US Senate race, many ] supporters accused Senator ] of running a mulligan race as an independent, since he had lost the Democratic Party primary.


===Magic: The Gathering=== ==Use in other games==
In '']'', the rules of the 1982 version allow a "First move mulligan" for an unfortunate dice roll.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://wolff.to/titan/oldtitanrules.html|title=Differences between the 1982 Titan rules and older versions|website=wolff.to}}</ref>
In '']'', a player may declare a ''mulligan'' after drawing his initial hand at the beginning of each game. If such a declaration is made, the player puts his cards back into his deck, shuffles, and draws a new hand of the same number of cards minus one. A common reason for declaring a mulligan would be getting a hand with no mana sources, that is, a hand that has no playable cards. The player may repeat this until they are satisfied, or the number of cards in their hand reaches zero.


===Card games===
This mulligan style is known as the Paris mulligan, although it was first used in 1997 at the L.A. Pro Tour tournament as a test for the new system. It was mistakenly left in the Paris Pro Tour player's packet and this is where it finally got its name. Before that, the mulligan functioned differently. If a player had either 0 or 7 lands in his starting hand, that player could show his or her hand to the opponent, shuffle, and draw a new hand of seven cards. This was only allowed once. The new rule removed the requirement of revealing the hand to the opponent and made the mulligan a much more strategic part of the game, creating trade-off and risk where before there was none.
In collectible card games, a mulligan refers to the process of adjusting which cards are in a player's initial hand of cards. Card games have various official rules for how mulligans are performed.


In '']'', a player may declare a mulligan after drawing their initial hand at the beginning of each game. If a player chooses to do so, that player shuffles their current hand back into their deck, draws a new hand of seven cards, then puts one card on the bottom of their library for each time they've mulliganed this game. The player may repeat this until satisfied, or until the number of cards in their hand reaches zero. The mulligan process has changed drastically over the history of the game. The current style is known as the ''London mulligan'', as it was first used at a Mythic Championship tournament held in London.<ref name="Vancouver">{{cite web|url=https://magic.wizards.com/en/articles/archive/news/london-mulligan-2019-06-03|title=THE LONDON MULLIGAN|last1=Duke|first1=Ian|date=3 June 2019|website=Magic the Gathering|publisher=Wizards of the Coast LLC|accessdate=9 November 2019}}</ref>
A recent expansion to the rule in an online play allows a player in a multiplayer game to show his hand to the other players and replace it with a new hand if an opening hand has 0, 1 or 7 lands. If a player choses to mulligan, any other player may chose to replace his hand as well without revealing the cards.


'']'' allows players to mulligan at the start of the game by placing any number of cards in their opening ] back into their deck, each to be replaced with a random different card. Mulliganing one's entire hand in hopes of getting a specific card is referred to as a ''hard mulligan''.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Opening Moves: Mulligans|url=https://playhearthstone.com/en-us/blog/21363040/|access-date=2021-10-07|website=playhearthstone.com|language=en-us}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|date=2020-01-17|title=Hearthstone terminology you'll need to know to win|url=https://blizzardwatch.com/2020/01/17/hearthstone-terminology/|access-date=2021-10-07|website=Blizzard Watch|language=en|author-first=Ted|author-last=Atchley}}</ref>
Unlike golf, mulligans in ''Magic'' are legal under game and tournament rules, and are more frequently associated with poor luck than lack of skill.


In the '']'', each player needs at least one Basic Pokémon card in their opening hand to start the game. If there is no Basic Pokémon card in hand, the player must reveal their hand, shuffle it into their deck and draw a new hand of seven cards. If both players must mulligan, each of them reveals their hand, shuffles it into their deck and draws seven cards. If only one player must mulligan, their opponent may draw a number of cards up to the number of mulligans they took. (Before EX Ruby & Sapphire, that player may draw up to 2 cards per mulligan.) Mulligans are repeated until each player has at least one Basic Pokémon card in hand.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/42852304|title=Pokémon Trainer's Guide|date=1999|publisher=Sandwich Islands Pub. Co|author1-first=Mark|author1-last=MacDonald|author2-first=Brian|author2-last=Brokaw|author3-first=J. Douglas|author3-last=Arnold|author4-first=Mark|author4-last=Elies|isbn=1-884364-25-X|location=Lahaina, Maui|oclc=42852304|page=167}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.pokemon.com/us/play-pokemon/about/tournaments-rules-and-resources/|title=Play! Pokémon Rules & Resources &#124; Pokemon.com|website=www.pokemon.com}}</ref>
===Pokemon TCG===


In '']'', the player is given one opportunity to mulligan. They may return any number of cards into their deck and shuffle it, then draw the same number of cards.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2020-12-11|title=How to play Dragon Ball Super Card Game|url=https://www.gamepur.com/guides/how-to-play-dragon-ball-super-card-game|access-date=2021-10-07|website=Gamepur|language=en-US}}</ref>
In the Pokemon TCG a player may declare a mulligan when during their draw they have no Basic Pokemon in their hand. At this point they must show the hand to their opponent, shuffle the cards back in to the deck and draw 7 new cards. The opponent has the choice of drawing two cards from their deck and adding it to their hand as well.


'']'' bypasses mulligan rules common to other card games, and instead has a "First Five" rule, allowing players to pick the specific five cards which will comprise their opening hand.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2015-11-11|title=Ashes: Rise of Phoenixborn Review|url=http://www.nonsensicalgamers.com/ashes-rise-phoenixborn-review/|access-date=2021-10-07|website=The League of Nonsensical Gamers|language=en-US}}</ref>
There is no limit to the number of mulligans that can be declared.

In '']'', a player who is dissatisfied with their starting hand may discard it and draw a new hand with one fewer card.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Learn how to play Keyforge - Easy to read Keyforge rules|url=https://daroolz.com/howtoplay/keyforge/|access-date=2021-10-07|language=en-US}}</ref>

In '']'', a player who is dissatisfied with their hand may shuffle any number of cards back into their deck, and draw the same number of cards.{{citation needed|date=October 2021}}

In '']'', players can mulligan up to two cards at the start of each round, replacing it with a random card from their deck. The player who goes first in Round 1 gets an additional mulligan. Also, as players draw three cards at the beginning of a round, but cannot have more than ten cards in hand, each drawn card that would increase their hand size over ten becomes a bonus mulligan instead.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Gwent Academy {{!}} Aretuza|url=https://teamaretuza.com/gwent/academy/course?courseId=4|access-date=2021-10-07|website=teamaretuza.com|language=en}}</ref>

In '']'' an eliminated player may ask for a "dog's chance" in the next round. That player is then dealt a single card (regardless of how may cards would normally be in that hand). If the player succeeds in winning a trick with that card, they stay in for the next round, otherwise they are eliminated again.<ref>{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MZzvvhReRj8C&pg=PT53 | title=Chambers Card Games for Families | publisher=] | author=Arnold, Peter | year=2011 | isbn=978-0550101983 | page=53}}</ref>

==Use outside games==

===Politics===

In ], the term ''mulligan race'' or ''mulligan candidate'' is used to describe a losing or disqualified candidate in a party primary or nomination, who, nevertheless, runs in the general election on another ballot line, either as an ] or as the nominee for a ]. In the 2006 Connecticut U.S. Senate race, many ] supporters accused ] of running a mulligan race as an independent, since he had lost the Democratic Party primary. Several U.S. states have so-called '']s'' specifically designed to prevent such failed candidates from appearing on the ballot in the general election in such a manner.

As a general rule, in ] outside the ] there are few (if any) laws that would prevent failed or disqualified nomination candidates from contesting the general election, although mounting such a challenge often results in expulsion or permanent ostracization from the candidate's former party. In jurisdictions using the ] or ]s, mulligan candidates are a fairly common occurrence, especially in cases where the mulligan candidate alleges a nomination contest was lost due to unfair electoral practices or was disqualified by a former party without reasonable cause.

Related terms include ''mulligan leader'' and ''mulligan party'', the latter of which is used to describe a party founded or taken over by a failed leadership candidate (or deposed former leader) from another party. A recent example of such a party is the ], founded by failed ] leadership candidate, ], while a notable historical party from the same country was the provincial ], founded and led by former ] Premier ]. Although such parties rarely become serious contenders to form a government in general elections, if popular enough, they can cause ] that especially in ] voting systems, may severely damage the electoral prospects of the mulligan leader's former party.

In the 2008 ], the term mulligan was used to describe a proposed redo of elections in ] and ], after their results were declared invalid due to the early scheduling of the contests, against Democratic party rules.<ref>{{dead link|date=February 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}; ]; 19 February 2008; Retrieved on 24 March 2008</ref>

The term also is coming into use to describe situations (that are becoming increasingly common in the age of ]) where a political party's candidate or delegate is suddenly replaced by the party leadership on the eve of an election or convention, usually either because the person's loyalty to the party or its leaders have come into question or because unsavory details regarding his past or character surface that warrant drastic measures to mitigate damage to the reputation or electoral prospects of the party or its leadership. Electoral rules and laws mostly drafted prior to the advent of social media, often severely restrict or prohibit the replacement of candidates after the nomination period has closed, which might be weeks or even months prior to the final vote. Proposals to relax such rules to allow parties to deal with to the increased likelihood of a candidate's dodgy past coming to light at an inopportune moment have been mocked as ''mulligan rules'' by critics.

===Finance===

In ], the term is used to refer to provisions in syndicated loan documentation where lenders only get the right to accelerate their loans after two financial covenants are breached. This practice is rare today, but was popular with sponsors at the height of the credit boom in 2006-07, allowing them to postpone the date at which they needed to start negotiating a restructuring with lenders. The loan "mulligan" is to be contrasted with a "deemed cure" clause that would allow a covenant breach to be disregarded in the event the next covenant tests were met. In addition, it typically remains possible with loans carrying financial covenants for a borrower to "cure" covenant breaches after the event by injecting new cash equity.{{citation needed|date=January 2015}}


==See also== ==See also==
*] *]

*]
==References==
*]
{{reflist|40em}}
*]


] ]
]


] ]
]

Latest revision as of 07:29, 26 August 2024

Second chance to perform an action

A mulligan is a second chance to perform an action, usually after the first chance went wrong through bad luck or a blunder. Its best-known use is in golf, whereby it refers to a player being allowed, only informally, to replay a stroke, although that is against the formal rules of golf. The term has also been applied to other sports, games, and fields generally. The origin of the term is unclear.

Possible origin

The earliest known use of the term is in a 1931 issue of the Detroit Free Press, somewhat predating the earliest citation in the Oxford English Dictionary from 1936. The most common explanation of the term's origin is that it was named after a golfer with the surname Mulligan, the main candidates being either David Mulligan or John A. "Buddy" Mulligan; however, no connection with these figures is recorded until several decades after the term entered common use. In 2017, Peter Reitan suggested that the term first arose in baseball sports writing and was associated with a fictional baseball player "Swat Mulligan".

Eponymous origin theories

The United States Golf Association (USGA) cites three stories espousing that the term derived from the name of a Canadian golfer, David B. Mulligan (1869–1954). At one time, he was the manager of the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City. He played at the Country Club of Montreal golf course, in Saint-Lambert near Montreal during the 1920s. There are three variations in reports indicating his being the Mulligan associated with the term. One version has it that one day after hitting a poor tee shot, Mulligan immediately re-teed and shot again. He called it a "correction shot", but his companions thought it more fitting to name the unorthodox practice after him, and that David Mulligan then brought the concept from Canada to Winged Foot, a golf club in the U.S. A second version has the extra shot allowed for Mulligan due to his being jumpy and shaky after a difficult drive over the Victoria Bridge to the course. The final version of the David Mulligan story gives him an extra shot after having overslept and having rushed to get ready to make the tee time.

An alternative, later story credits a different man named Mulligan – John A. "Buddy" Mulligan, a locker room attendant at Essex Fells Country Club in New Jersey. In the 1930s, he would finish cleaning the locker room and, if no other members appeared, play a round with the assistant pro, Dave O'Connell, and a club member, Des Sullivan, who was a reporter and later, golf editor for the Newark Evening News. One day his first shot was bad and he beseeched O'Connell and Sullivan to allow another shot since they "had been practicing all morning" and he had not. Once they agreed and the round finished, Mulligan began to exclaim proudly for months to the members in his locker room, how he had gotten an extra shot from the duo. The members loved the device and soon began giving themselves "Mulligans" in his honor. Sullivan began using the term in his golf articles in the Newark Evening News. A television program, the Today Show, ran this story around 2005 and have it in their archives. Mulligan was located in the 1970s at the Lyons, New Jersey veterans administration hospital, helping with their golf facility. In his July 22, 1970, column in the Myrtle Beach Sun News, the semi-retired Des Sullivan wrote of finding Mulligan and the history behind the term.

Swat Mulligan baseball origin theory

In a 2017 blog post, Peter Reitan cast doubt on the eponymous mulligan etymology theories, pointing out that they conflicted with the (then-recent) 1931 antedating in the dictionary. He suggested that the term originated instead with "Swat Mulligan", a fictional baseball player with extraordinary batting skills who appeared in the New York Evening World during the 1910s. Reitan presents quotations from the 1920s in which Mulligan's name is used as a byword for powerful hits, including use of the phrase take a "mulligan" to mean taking a powerful swing at the ball. Reitan suggests that the term then arrived at its current meaning by semantic drift. The 1931 Detroit Free Press citation has been suggested to represent a transitional form, in that the usage involves both a do-over and a powerful shot:

All were waiting to see what Byrd would do on the 290-yard 18th, with a creek in front of the well-elevated green. His first drive barely missed carrying the creek and he was given a “mulligan” just for fun. The second not only was over the creek on the fly, but was within a few inches of the elevated green. That’s some poke!

Use in golf

In golf, a mulligan is a stroke that is replayed from the spot of the previous stroke without penalty, due to an errant shot made on the previous stroke. The result is that the hole is played and scored as if the first errant shot had never been made. This practice is disallowed entirely by strict rules in formal play and players who attempt it or agree to let it happen may be disqualified from sanctioned competitions. However, in casual play, "mulligans" speed play by reducing the time spent searching for a lost ball, reduce frustration, and increase enjoyment of the game because a player can "shake off" a bad shot more easily with their second chance.

A "gilligan", the opposite of a "mulligan", is to redo a successful stroke when so requested by an opponent.

As mulligans are not covered by strict rules – except to prohibit them – there are many variations of the practice among groups of players who do allow them in friendly games. If a mulligan is allowed to be used to replay any shot, typically each player is limited to 18 per round, sometimes 9 in the first 9 holes and 9 in the second nine. Traditionally, mulligans can only be played on tee shots (which are notoriously difficult to make accurately), and sometimes they may only be played on the first tee shot of the round (known as a "breakfast ball"). In the case of a mulligan used to replay the first tee shot, multiple "mulligans" may be allowed under different names (Finnegan, Branagan, Flanagan, or Craig) until the player has hit a playable tee shot.

Although certain players may wish to bank their shots, this is deemed unsportsmanlike and is generally frowned upon. Golf tournaments held for charity may charge for mulligans to collect more money for the charity.

Use in other games

In Titan, the rules of the 1982 version allow a "First move mulligan" for an unfortunate dice roll.

Card games

In collectible card games, a mulligan refers to the process of adjusting which cards are in a player's initial hand of cards. Card games have various official rules for how mulligans are performed.

In Magic: The Gathering, a player may declare a mulligan after drawing their initial hand at the beginning of each game. If a player chooses to do so, that player shuffles their current hand back into their deck, draws a new hand of seven cards, then puts one card on the bottom of their library for each time they've mulliganed this game. The player may repeat this until satisfied, or until the number of cards in their hand reaches zero. The mulligan process has changed drastically over the history of the game. The current style is known as the London mulligan, as it was first used at a Mythic Championship tournament held in London.

Hearthstone allows players to mulligan at the start of the game by placing any number of cards in their opening hand back into their deck, each to be replaced with a random different card. Mulliganing one's entire hand in hopes of getting a specific card is referred to as a hard mulligan.

In the Pokémon Trading Card Game, each player needs at least one Basic Pokémon card in their opening hand to start the game. If there is no Basic Pokémon card in hand, the player must reveal their hand, shuffle it into their deck and draw a new hand of seven cards. If both players must mulligan, each of them reveals their hand, shuffles it into their deck and draws seven cards. If only one player must mulligan, their opponent may draw a number of cards up to the number of mulligans they took. (Before EX Ruby & Sapphire, that player may draw up to 2 cards per mulligan.) Mulligans are repeated until each player has at least one Basic Pokémon card in hand.

In Dragon Ball Super Card Game, the player is given one opportunity to mulligan. They may return any number of cards into their deck and shuffle it, then draw the same number of cards.

Ashes: Rise of the Phoenixborn bypasses mulligan rules common to other card games, and instead has a "First Five" rule, allowing players to pick the specific five cards which will comprise their opening hand.

In KeyForge, a player who is dissatisfied with their starting hand may discard it and draw a new hand with one fewer card.

In Legends of Runeterra, a player who is dissatisfied with their hand may shuffle any number of cards back into their deck, and draw the same number of cards.

In Gwent: The Witcher Card Game, players can mulligan up to two cards at the start of each round, replacing it with a random card from their deck. The player who goes first in Round 1 gets an additional mulligan. Also, as players draw three cards at the beginning of a round, but cannot have more than ten cards in hand, each drawn card that would increase their hand size over ten becomes a bonus mulligan instead.

In knock-out whist an eliminated player may ask for a "dog's chance" in the next round. That player is then dealt a single card (regardless of how may cards would normally be in that hand). If the player succeeds in winning a trick with that card, they stay in for the next round, otherwise they are eliminated again.

Use outside games

Politics

In politics, the term mulligan race or mulligan candidate is used to describe a losing or disqualified candidate in a party primary or nomination, who, nevertheless, runs in the general election on another ballot line, either as an independent or as the nominee for a third party. In the 2006 Connecticut U.S. Senate race, many Ned Lamont supporters accused Senator Joseph Lieberman of running a mulligan race as an independent, since he had lost the Democratic Party primary. Several U.S. states have so-called sore-loser laws specifically designed to prevent such failed candidates from appearing on the ballot in the general election in such a manner.

As a general rule, in liberal democracies outside the United States there are few (if any) laws that would prevent failed or disqualified nomination candidates from contesting the general election, although mounting such a challenge often results in expulsion or permanent ostracization from the candidate's former party. In jurisdictions using the Westminster system or single-member districts, mulligan candidates are a fairly common occurrence, especially in cases where the mulligan candidate alleges a nomination contest was lost due to unfair electoral practices or was disqualified by a former party without reasonable cause.

Related terms include mulligan leader and mulligan party, the latter of which is used to describe a party founded or taken over by a failed leadership candidate (or deposed former leader) from another party. A recent example of such a party is the People's Party of Canada, founded by failed Conservative Party of Canada leadership candidate, Maxime Bernier, while a notable historical party from the same country was the provincial Newfoundland Reform Liberal Party, founded and led by former Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Joey Smallwood. Although such parties rarely become serious contenders to form a government in general elections, if popular enough, they can cause vote splitting that especially in first past the post voting systems, may severely damage the electoral prospects of the mulligan leader's former party.

In the 2008 American Democratic primary elections, the term mulligan was used to describe a proposed redo of elections in Michigan and Florida, after their results were declared invalid due to the early scheduling of the contests, against Democratic party rules.

The term also is coming into use to describe situations (that are becoming increasingly common in the age of social media) where a political party's candidate or delegate is suddenly replaced by the party leadership on the eve of an election or convention, usually either because the person's loyalty to the party or its leaders have come into question or because unsavory details regarding his past or character surface that warrant drastic measures to mitigate damage to the reputation or electoral prospects of the party or its leadership. Electoral rules and laws mostly drafted prior to the advent of social media, often severely restrict or prohibit the replacement of candidates after the nomination period has closed, which might be weeks or even months prior to the final vote. Proposals to relax such rules to allow parties to deal with to the increased likelihood of a candidate's dodgy past coming to light at an inopportune moment have been mocked as mulligan rules by critics.

Finance

In finance, the term is used to refer to provisions in syndicated loan documentation where lenders only get the right to accelerate their loans after two financial covenants are breached. This practice is rare today, but was popular with sponsors at the height of the credit boom in 2006-07, allowing them to postpone the date at which they needed to start negotiating a restructuring with lenders. The loan "mulligan" is to be contrasted with a "deemed cure" clause that would allow a covenant breach to be disregarded in the event the next covenant tests were met. In addition, it typically remains possible with loans carrying financial covenants for a borrower to "cure" covenant breaches after the event by injecting new cash equity.

See also

References

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