Justin Rose commits the ultimate golf error that was not his fault, costing him two shots.

Justin Rose commits the ultimate golf error that was not his fault, costing him two shots.

At the PGA Tour’s opening round, Justin Rose inadvertently struck playing partner Taylor Moore’s ball instead of his own, earning him the wrath of the rules, but the Englishman was not at fault.

Just a few days into the new PGA Tour season, Ryder Cup hero Justin Rose has already provided a very strange moment.

The 43-year-old is one of 59 competitors in The Sentry in Hawaii, where a $20 million (£15.8 million) purse is up for grabs. However, on the first day of competition, he struck a playing partner’s ball instead of his own, severely hurting his prospects.

Rose, who played for Europe in October’s Ryder Cup victory, was one shot over par going into the 537-yard par-four seventh hole in Kapalua with Taylor Moore and Andrew Putnam in his group. When the three of them teed off and found the short grass, they would have been thrilled with how it seemed from the tee box.

Rose’s ball traveled the farthest, landing in the right half of the fairway at 359 yards, according to data from the PGA Tour website. Moore’s shot followed a similar trajectory but was 37 yards shorter. Putnam struck the middle of the fairway with his 331-yard bomb.

When Rose made his approach shot and the ball landed safely on the dance floor, everything appeared to be as it always had. However, Rose was seen with his hands on his head with Moore staring at him in the Golf Channel coverage.

Soon after, it was evident that Rose had struck the American’s ball rather than his own, as microphones recording the incident caught Moore saying, “Sorry, dude.” Rose had been using a ball with a “2” marked on it for the first six holes of the round, and Moore had also been using a ball with a “2” marking because he hadn’t told his playing partners he had switched balls during the game.

Consequently, the confusion. Considering that most tour players only use a handful different golf ball models, mostly the Titleist Pro V1 and TaylorMade TP5 variations. Considering that MacKenzie Hughes’ penalty at the 2023 Farmers Insurance Open was the most recent infraction on tour, it may come as a surprise that incidents like this don’t happen more frequently.

Rose was fined two strokes for the infraction, which was against Rule 6.3c. The Englishman dealt with the situation like a seasoned veteran would have, bringing it up right away with rules authorities. Rose would have been eliminated if neither he nor his playing partners had discovered the infraction until the hole was finished.

Ultimately, he finished the seventh hole with a double bogey six, and before the penalty was added, he made a par four with his own ball. Moore’s ball was replaced adjacent to where his tee shot landed to ensure he had a near identical lie and he got down in four for the par. He was not penalised.

“Very unfortunate situation,” Golf Channel was informed by rules official Mark Dusbabek. “There was a two-stroke penalty for Justin Rose. The problem is getting the ball back into Taylor’s possession. After he made that shot, the deception changed. Taylor was able to position his ball in the closest, most comparable lie and was thus permitted to have a clean lie as he ordinarily would have had there.

Rose responded skillfully to recover from his missed putts and record a two-under-par round of 71, showing that he did not allow the moment get to him. He is tied for 52nd place at six under going into the third round. At 16-under par, Scottie Scheffler is in the lead, one stroke ahead of Tyrrell Hatton, Brendon Todd, and Sungjae Im.

Sports Base

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *