Trial by television in golf tournaments

Golf is an unusual sport in that television viewers can directly influence the outcome of a game by reporting rules infringements which would otherwise have been missed. Numerous golfers have been penalized at, or disqualified from, televised tournaments after a rules infringement which was not spotted by players or a referee at the time but was later noticed by a member of the public and communicated to tournament officials by phone, tweet or email. If a player has already signed their scorecard by the time such an infringement is discovered, disqualification is frequently the outcome. In April 2011, the USGA and The R&A announced a rule change which would allow players to avoid disqualification if a rules infringement was discovered after they had signed their scorecard.[1] In December 2017, the same bodies announced a local rule change which would greatly limit the number of such incidents from 1 January 2018.[2]

  1. ^ "Rule changed to spare players from being DQ'd in cases of 'trial by TV'". pga.com. Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  2. ^ Ferguson, Doug (11 December 2017). "Golf tours to eliminate 2-shot penalty for TV call-in reviews". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 17 April 2018.