5 things Lee Hodges had time for while waiting for this putt to drop at the PGA Championship

We promise this ball drops into the cup eventually

Update: The PGA wasn’t playing the waiting game with Hodges and assessed him a one-stroke penalty.

Original: Technically speaking, a pro golfer on the PGA Tour can only let his ball sit on the lip of the cup for 10 seconds before they are forced to use an extra stroke to knock it in.

But there is a bit of wiggle room in Rule 13.3a of the Tour handbook. A player, and their playing partner, are allowed to determine a “reasonable” amount of time before starting the 10-second clock.

Lee Hodges should be thankful he was paired up with Jordan Spieth on Saturday at the PGA Championship as that reasonable threshold was met and then some during a wild putt for par on the 17th green.

Hodges completely nailed the line on his putt only for the ball to sit on the lip. And sit. And sit. And sit. For 35 seconds total. Then, and only then, did it decide to give into gravity and fall into the cup.

It got us thinking about all the things Hodges could’ve while waiting to collect his par and we came up with quite a few options.

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