19th Hole
Tour pro misses Farmers cut in brutal fashion after unfortunate mistake

World number 39, Mackenzie Hughes, might have thought he had used up his quota of misfortune at Torrey Pines when his ball became stuck in a tree during the 2021 U.S Open. Contesting the lead at the time, that stroke of bad luck cost him a penalty shot.
A few months later, Torrey cost him dear once again.
After the first round of the Farmers Insurance Open, a regular posting on Twitter seemed fairly innocuous, mentioning that Hughes had ‘ruined a good day….. with a double bogey 7 on his 18th…’ Well, it was innocent until Hughes responded.
”Well I hit my second shot on the par 5 9th short left of the green. I went to where it was marked with a flag and hit my chip to 6 feet. When I marked it I realized it wasn’t my ball. Turns out it was about 8 feet from where the flag was. Went from maybe 4 to 7 pretty quick.”
Well I hit my second shot on the par 5 9th short left of the green. I went to where it was marked with a flag and hit my chip to 6 feet. When I marked it I realized it wasn’t my ball. Turns out it was about 8 feet from where the flag was. Went from maybe 4 to 7 pretty quick. https://t.co/jvQRuu95fh
— Mackenzie Hughes (@MacHughesGolf) January 27, 2022
Having presumed that he had made a birdie on the par-five ninth, his final hole of the day, it turns out that he had played the wrong ball, breached Rule 6-3c and had to return to the correct ball to play the chip again. From four shots behind to seven off the pace.
After the second round finished last night, the 31-year-old missed the cut on the number. By a shot.
Ouch.
Not the result I was looking for this week at one of my favorite places, but that’s golf sometimes. Learned a lot and will be better for it. The wrong ball was unfortunate, but it’s the rule and my responsibility to check, not the marshals. Look forward to being back next year ??
— Mackenzie Hughes (@MacHughesGolf) January 28, 2022
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19th Hole
Multiple PGA champ says ‘Phil was not missed’ at Champions Dinner

The PGA Championship’s past champions’ dinner on Tuesday was a bit different than usual. Phil Mickelson, the tournament’s defending champion was nowhere to be found.
At a typical PGA Championship, Mickelson would have hosted the past champions’ dinner. The duties would include picking the menu and giving gifts to those in attendance. This year, those duties fell to the PGA of America due to Phil’s absence.
Past @PGAChampionship winners gather at @SouthernHillsCC for their annual dinner. pic.twitter.com/Vf3qFNgU9f
— Todd Lewis (@ToddLewisGC) May 18, 2022
According to former champion Dave Stockton, Mickelson was “not missed”.
“It was a fun evening. Phil was not missed,” said Dave Stockton, who won the 1970 and ’76 PGA Championships. “I think Phil would have been a big distraction. The story here this week is the PGA.”
Stockton is partly responsible for having the champions’ dinner at the PGA Championship include only past winners, which is something that started last year at Kiawah Island.
“At Kiawah last year we had I think six or seven people in the room besides just players, and like we did last night, we sat around and they can’t separate us out because there’s so many players, former champions, that it was unbelievable,” Stockton said. “We ended the night, and everybody stayed. I think it blew the PGA officers away.”
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19th Hole
Major champ calls for audio release of bombshell Mickelson interview

On Wednesday, GolfWRX reported on an excerpt of 2002 PGA Champion Rich Beem’s interview with Golf Magic and Boylesports Latest Golf Betting, in which he doesn’t hold back his view on Alan Shipnuck, author of the recently published biography of Phil Mickelson.
Put simply, Beem said, “I don’t trust Alan. It’s nothing personal, I just don’t trust what he writes,” and the theme has continued today with more details of the interview that he had with the bookmaker’s blog.
- Related: ‘You have to earn it’ – Tiger shows no sympathy for Mickelson while firmly backing PGA Tour
Whilst accepting the subject of the book, Phil Mickelson, has made errors and will need to ask for a deal of forgiveness to be allowed back on the PGA Tour, Beem has doubts about the context of the controversial comments that have turned the golf world upside down over the last couple of months.
Mickelson has become a (self?) exiled player since calling LIV Golf’s Saudi backers “scary…to deal with” and advising that they were a way of leveraging with the PGA Tour and their “obnoxious greed.”
Having been unhappy with the way Shipnuck handled the coverage of his rookie year in his 2003 publication, ‘Bud, Sweat & Tees’ – “I think that he tries to sensationalist everything,” – Beem wants some clearance on the circumstances of the controversial comments that appeared in the latest tome.
“What was printed by Alan Shipnuk, I want to be clear on this, I want to hear the audio,” Beem told the bookmaker site. “I want to hear exactly what Phil said and I want to hear the context of what he said because the written word is so different than the spoken word that you can take it in any context you want.”
“If you write me a letter, I can read that letter in so many different ways trying to figure out the way you wrote it. I want to hear what he said and how he said it before I really determine how I feel because I look at the source with a little disdain – I’m not a fan. ”
“Once I hear the context, I could probably make a better determination, but it’s hard for me to comment much more on Phil. He’s always been a unique character on the PGA Tour, and there’s a thousand stories out there as we all probably know.”
With nobody knowing for sure where we will see Mickelson next tee it up, Beemer has some advice for the 2021 PGA Champion should he wish to come back to the main tour.
“To go out and to try and redeem yourself, then what you need to do is become a model citizen. You need to come back, hat in hand at the PGA Tour if that’s where your allegiance is, and you need to apologise to every single player on the range.”
“You know, ‘Hey, listen, sorry for having this controversy, didn’t mean it to distract from you and this great tour that we’re part of’, because there are a lot more things to the PGA Tour that, besides the money they play for, are funnelled in.”
“You can give me a cheque for $5 million for winning a tournament, but the things that I get from the PGA Tour are so much more valuable in some respects. And there’s a laundry list of them.”
The current PGA champion is the first non-injured player of the modern era to miss the defence of his title, and with just three weeks to go before the first LIV event in London, we are still in the dark as to where he next tees it up.
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- ‘Absolutely disgusting’ – LPGA pro blasts Augusta National for its role in major venue change
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19th Hole
‘This is why some people hate golf’ – Golfer suffers incredibly cruel disqualification

A golfer has been disqualified from the USGA 4-ball this morning after having two grips on his putter that were a quarter of an inch too close together.
Popular Twitter account “Monday Q Info” shared the news of the equipment violation today with the following tweet:
to be clear the guy in the pic is NOT the guy who called the rule. I learned it was an official who pointed it out.
— Monday Q Info (@acaseofthegolf1) May 18, 2022
“If you have two grips on the putter, they have to be a minimum of 1.5 inches apart. His were 1.25 inches apart…One of the USGA officials saw it yesterday afternoon…Went back to the hotel to confirm the rule…Measured this AM in parking lot and DQ’d him.”
Former professional golfer, Will Strickler weighed in on the disqualification.
Guy in the pic is who got unfairly (IMO) DQ’d
— Will Strickler (@wstrick17) May 18, 2022
It’s been a year that continues to throw up the unlikeliest of rules violations, but this one may just be about the harshest so far of 2022.
One golf fan on Twitter probably summed up the feelings of many frustrated people reacting to the reason for the DQ, saying: “And this is why some people hate golf.”
And this is why some people hate golf.
— Tim_Schnor (@tschnor) May 18, 2022
More from the 19th Hole
- 86-year-old Gary Player shows off remarkable club head and ball speed numbers
- ‘Absolutely disgusting’ – LPGA pro blasts Augusta National for its role in major venue change
- ‘Get it out of my face, man!’ – Brooks Koepka snatches phone from fan during tense exchange
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Miles
Feb 3, 2022 at 2:02 am
I watched Peter Uhlein do the exact same thing on the same hole to miss the cut. Hughes probably hit the ball Peter lost lol…
Mower
Jan 28, 2022 at 12:58 pm
Sabotage! Those sneaky ball spotters and their evil little flags-of-doom!
Gianni burner accnt
Jan 28, 2022 at 6:25 pm
More like whoever was playing that brand of ball during various practice rounds didn’t care about the money or points at stake for everybody else later in the week. He has nobody but fellow professionals who fail to act like professionals to blame
Hulieo Aeglesis
Feb 2, 2022 at 11:47 am
Pro’s NEED to LOOK for THEIR ball after making a offline/poor shot and stuff like this wouldn’t happen. The PGA using this concept makes it even EASIER for these players and
they don’t get the “full effect” and the anxiety of FINDING an errant shot. I WISH I had someone MARKING my poor strikes with “little flags” when I’m playing….