As a Head Golf Professional at a club that has many tournaments, I’m very actively involved in marking the golf course, making local rules, and refereeing those tournaments. I’ve been asked my opinion on the ruling at the PGA Championship.
First, there’s no doubt that Johnston grounded his club for that shot, and I had no idea that Johnston was standing in a bunker when he hit his approach shot on #18 – it looked like he was hitting from a sandy, trampled down part of the course, along with the fact that spectators were standing in this so-called “bunker” and here-in is where the question really lies. There’s no doubt that he was hitting from sand, what might be considered a “waste bunker”. These areas are usually played as part of the course, not a hazard, and a player is permitted to ground his club. However, in the supplementary rules given to the players stated that “all bunkers” would be played as hazards, a rule that was made due to an incident with Stuart Appleby the last time the event was played at Whistling Straits.
Anyway, and of course in hindsight, this is where I think the PGA erred. Hazards need to be defined very clearly by a clean edge, something that is very easy to see in a “normal” bunker, and with water the boundaries are clearly defined by paint (yellow or red). So the problem I have with the way these bunkers were defined, are not really definable – the edges are part sand and part grass thereby leaving the beginnings and ends of the hazard subjective to whether the player is in or out of the hazard –so I don’t believed they should be marked as such. Of course the responsibility of knowing the rules lies with the player and the PGA did notify the players of this ruling.
However, the part that doesn’t really seem right along with declaring these areas hazards, is that PGA allowed the spectators to walk and stand in these bunkers. On top of it the Marshalls allowed the spectators to be in the bunker that Johnson was hitting from, thereby making this so-called bunker look like a trampled down area that was created by the spectators (Johnson’s ball was way off line and a good distance from the fairway.) Also, if you are going to have such a rule, there is a rules official with each group and just as is the case when any ball is in a hazard the official is close by to notify the player of his options. In this case the official could have notified Johnson that he was in the bunker.
In the end, I think it’s the fault of the PGA for ruling those waste bunkers as regular hazards and in this case, an area surrounded by spectators standing in it, led Johnson to never think he was in a bunker – did you think he was in a bunker? Going forward, when an event returns to Whistling Straits, I believe they will again mark these areas as waste bunkers.
Of course none of this matters to Johnson, who I thought took this punishment like a great sportsman, and who lost his opportunity to win his first major championship. As he said the only thing that could have made it worse was that he made that putt on 18, and thought he won the championship. At times the Rules of Golf, which are supposed to be there “to help a player”, at times, can be very cruel.

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