⌂ Home News Bryson DeChambeau Hit with Two-Stroke Penalty at Open Championship

Bryson DeChambeau Hit with Two-Stroke Penalty at Open Championship

Bryson DeChambeau Hit with Two-Stroke Penalty at Open Championship
Bryson DeChambeau at the Open Championship
A A Text Size16px

American golfer Bryson DeChambeau received a two-stroke penalty for improving his line of swing during the second round of the Open Championship at Royal Birkdale on Friday.

The penalty dropped him from second to fifth place on the leaderboard.

>>> Telemundo Outpaces Fox Sports in US World Cup Viewership

Tournament officials reviewed an incident on the fifth hole where DeChambeau reportedly trampled down grass behind his ball in the thick rough before taking his shot.

His score on that hole was adjusted from a five to a seven, changing his aggregate from seven under par to five under par.

DeChambeau expressed his disappointment via social media early Saturday morning.

“Obviously disappointed with the ruling. I don’t agree with it, but it is what it is.

This fires me up. Onto the weekend.

Let’s get it,” he wrote.

The 32-year-old later practiced late into the evening on the Birkdale driving range, briefly interacting with media.

“I’m going to practise, guys,” he said.

R&A Clarifies the Ruling

Grant Moir, executive director of the R&A, issued a statement explaining the infraction and emphasizing that intent does not matter.

“Bryson has been penalised two strokes for inadvertently improving the area of his intended swing on the 5th hole when he was playing his second shot,” Moir said.

He detailed that Rule 8.1 restricts players from improving protected conditions affecting the stroke, including the area of the intended swing.

>>> World Cup Conspiracy Theories: Rigged or Reflective of Society?

“An improvement means to alter one or more of the conditions affecting the stroke so that the player gains a potential advantage,” Moir said.

A
Editors Team
Author: Angkasa Pura
📰 Latest Updates