Backspin Volume 3, Issue 1 | Page 11

rulespin by Paul Kruger check, please During the opening round of the 2015 PGA Championship at Whistling Straits, on the second hole, Zach Johnson found his ball in a fairway bunker. Zach asked for assistance from a Rules Official because he wanted to remove an object near his ball that appeared to be a stone. Normally, there would no issue with a stone in a bunker. In stroke play, if a player touches or moves a loose impediment, such as a stone, in a bunker when his ball is situated in the same bunker, the player is penalized two strokes per Rule 13-4 [Ball in Hazard; Prohibited Actions]. That Rule advises, in part, “Except as provided in the Rules, before making a stroke at a ball that is in a hazard (whether a bunker or a water hazard) … the player must not … c. Touch or move a loose impediment lying in or touching the hazard.” So, why did Zach seek a ruling? Because, the following Local Rule was in effect for this event: “Stones in bunkers are movable obstructions (Rule 24-1 applies).” Rule 24-1 [Movable Obstruction] points out that “A player may take relief, without penalty, from a movable obstruction as follows: a. If the ball does not lie in or on the obstruction, the obstruction may be removed. If the ball moves, it must be replaced, and there is no penalty, provided that the movement of the ball is directly attributable to the removal of the obstruction.” Zach was not sure if the object near his ball was a stone or just a small clump of sand that looked like a stone. That uncertainty put him between the proverbial “rock and a hard place.” If he risked picking up the object and it turned out to be a stone, then he would not be penalized because the stone was, by Local Rule, a movable obstruction. However, if the object turned out to be a clump of sand, then he would incur a two-stroke penalty for touching a loose impediment in a hazard. See Decision 23/12 [Aeration Plugs] which points out that plugs of compacted soil are loose impediments. After the Rules Official clarified the two possible outcomes, Zach elected to play the ball as it lay, rather than taking the chance of picking up the object and watching it crumble in his hands. In that particular situation, Zach risked incurring a penalty if he wanted to check the object to determine if it was a stone or a loose impediment. In many other situations, the Ru \