Subscribe
Demo

Bryson DeChambeau dominated the headlines on Friday at Royal Birkdale. Unfortunately for him, it was for all the wrong reasons.

Shortly after finishing his second round, DeChambeau entered the scoring tent to put a signature on the card to finalize his four-under 66. Instead, Open Championship officials alerted him that there were questions about if he’d improved his lie when preparing to hit his second shot on the par-4 fifth hole earlier in the day.

Advertisement

Eventually, tournament officials shuttled DeChambeau out to the scene of the incident to tell his side of the events. But despite a spirited debate with R&A officials, DeChambeau was assessed a two-stroke penalty, dropping him from seven under to five under for the championship, leaving him three back of Lucas Herbert’s lead.

The penalty made for a controversial conclusion to the first 36 holes of the year’s final major — even leaving DeChambeau threatening to quit out of protest — and is sure to be debated throughout the remainder of the championship. Check out below for an explainer of the rule in question.

Read the full article here

Leave A Reply

2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.