DeChambeau Penalty Upends The Open
The Penalty That Cost Two Strokes
Bryson DeChambeau became the first major qualifier of the season, posting a 66 at Royal Birkdale to briefly sit at -7 and occupy second place. On the fifth hole he inadvertently improved the area around his intended swing while hitting from tall fescue rough on a parâ4. The R&A handed him a twoâstroke penalty after the round, dropping his score to -5 and putting him tied for fifth with SamâŻBurns and SiâŻWooâŻKim.
DeChambeau spent nearly an hour arguing the decision with rules officials after his round. The extended discussion forced the tournamentâs broadcast schedule to shift, keeping viewers glued beyond the planned end time. This delay was evident in the extended airtime on both networks.
USA Networkâs secondâround coverage was scheduled to finish at 3:30âŻp.m. ET but lingered until roughly 4:40âŻp.m. ET to recount the incident. A rerun of âLaw & Orderâ followed golf on the network. Meanwhile, Golf Channelâs âLive From The Open Championshipâ did not start with its normal highlight reel; instead it launched straight into a breakdown of the penalty at about 4:40âŻp.m. ET.
Broadcast Chaos Unfolds
Both outlets are owned by Versant and share the same onâair talent, so the lengthy debate affected the entire golf presentation. This delay was evident in the extended airtime on both networks. The extra programming bought by the network included a âLaw & Orderâ rerun.
Golf Channelâs âLive Fromâ did not start with its normal highlight reel; instead it launched straight into a breakdown of the DeChambeau situation at about 4:40âŻp.m. ET. The networkâs schedule was pushed back to accommodate the unfolding story. Viewers got a rare behindâtheâscenes look at how rules disputes are handled live.
Impact on The Final Round
DeChambeauâs agent said Friday evening that the player was still weighing whether to tee off in Saturdayâs third round because of his disagreement with the ruling. He had originally been scheduled to join leader LucasâŻHerbert in the final grouping, a pairing that would have added extra drama to the weekendâs play. NBC holds the weekend rights, and the controversy could boost ratings if DeChambeau remains near the top heading into Sundayâs finale.
The penalty also erased his chance to compete for the win, moving him out of contention for the top spot he briefly occupied. Should he withdraw, the field would lose one of the more talkedâabout golfers of the week. His withdrawal would also affect fantasy golf points for weekend matchups.
R&A Rules Explained By Grant Moir
Grant Moir, the R&Aâs executive director of governance, clarified the decision late Friday. He stated that âRulingâŻ1 restricts what a player may do to improve any of the protected conditions affecting the stroke, and this includes the area of the playerâs intended swing.â He added that any alteration that gives a player a potential advantage is an improvement, even when accidental, and that the ruling applied to Brysonâs case because the action was unintentional.
Moirâs description underscores that the rule is designed to keep the playing surface fair, regardless of intent. It also shows why officials moved quickly to enforce the twoâstroke penalty. The principle of fairness is central to the Openâs longâstanding traditions.
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