Nick Hardy reacts to Kamaiu Johnson scorecard DQ: ‘It looks like there may have been a cheating situation’

Did Kamaiu Johnson commit one of the unforgivable sins in golf and deliberately sign for a lower score?

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Did Kamaiu Johnson commit one of the unforgivable sins in golf and deliberately sign for a lower score than he made on a hole? It depends on who you ask.

Johnson, 29, violated Rule 3.3b for signing an incorrect scorecard after the second round of the 2023 Arnold Palmer Invitational, and was disqualified. Johnson, a multiple-time winner on the APGA Tour, was playing on a sponsor exemption. He would have missed the cut anyway, but that is beside the point to Nick Hardy, who was in the group with Johnson along with Kyle Westmoreland, who kept his scorecard.

In Johnson’s account of things, he made a double-bogey six at the par-4 ninth hole, not a seven, en route to shooting 5-over 77 on Friday at Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill Club & Lodge, missing the cut by six strokes. ShotLink data shows Johnson had a 22½ par putt from the fringe and took four putts, missing putts of three and four feet for bogey and double bogey before tapping in a 20-inch putt for his 7.

“The amount of chances that he had to say he made a six is unfortunate because it looks like there may have been a cheating situation,” Hardy told Golfweek on Wednesday, ahead of his debut in the Players Championship. “I know that especially when I’m in a tournament atmosphere, that whenever I’m playing golf there is never a time where I forget what I shot.”

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Westmoreland told Golfweek on Sunday that he didn’t see Johnson finish the hole because the group had been put on the clock.

“We were on the clock, so I walked off,” Westmoreland said after his third round on Saturday. “I assumed he made the one after he missed.”

Hardy echoed that sentiment.

“We were warned (for slow play) the day before and warned when we came off the tee box on nine (Friday). It was very fresh,” Hardy said. “When you get a warning, you get penalized as a member but there’s no penalty for non-members for pace of play. I have an issue when I get penalized for pace of play and I believe it isn’t me. I’ve been paired with non-members the last three weeks and I’ve gotten five or six warnings. When you get 25 warnings, you get fined $50,000. That’s a lot of money for anybody.”

In short, Hardy, who wasn’t keeping Johnson’s score, had a legitimate reason for walking ahead before Johnson finished in an effort to catch up.

“I’m going to get penalized even though I know I didn’t do anything wrong,” Hardy said. “If we hadn’t been warned, I wouldn’t have walked off the green and the situation would have been different and Kamaiu might have known I’d seen it. There was good reason for me not to be there.”

After the round, the group’s walking scorer confirmed that Johnson made a triple-bogey 7. A ShotLink official used video taken at the hole that showed the four putts, including the first from the fringe.

“I’ll say this, they gave him many opportunities after the round, even after he signed his card, a couple more opportunities to maybe say he made a 7. I think they knew they had video evidence from the running camera on 9. ShotLink said he had a 7, the walking scorer said he had a 7 and he insisted he had a 6. They hinted to him that, hey, we just want to make sure you’ve got this right, and he still said he made a 6. That was the troubling issue I had,” Hardy said. “The Tour gave him multiple chances to come to grips with it. I know this for a fact because I was getting calls from the scoring officials for the next hour after we signed the card inside. I saw Montana [Thompson] and Casey Jones outside the locker room when they were talking to Kamaiu. It’s definitely concerning.”

“It happens, I guess,” Westmoreland told Golfweek. “At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter. He missed the cut. It doesn’t look great, I guess, for some people, but I don’t have much to comment on. It was a non-factor. I think the Tour handled it well.”

But Hardy disagreed with Westmoreland’s assessment that “it doesn’t matter; he missed the cut.”

“That’s unfair because when he played that hole he was right on the cut line. If he had gotten away with a 6, he only needed to shoot 2 under. It mattered, it mattered big time,” Hardy said. “I think you should be responsible. For people who think a player should get away with making a mistake like that because of a caddie’s fault or because the walking scorer should be in charge is wrong. The player should be 100 percent in charge of their score. The game is amazing because it taught me so many things about life. It’s like a true meritocracy in the sense that in life you need to be honest, you need to take responsibility, take ownership, have integrity for others; that’s the name of the game and to violate that is very concerning.”

On Saturday, Johnson took to social media to issue an apology, tweeting, “I take the integrity of the game very seriously and I’m sorry this happened. I got a little overwhelmed in the moment with the group on the clock and lost count of my missed putts from 3 feet. I’ll do better.”

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Rough day at Masters: Matthew Wolff gets DQ’d for signing card with lower score

Things went from bad to worse for Matthew Wolff on Friday at Augusta National.

Things went from bad to worse for Matthew Wolff on Friday at Augusta National.

Wolff, who already has five top-10 PGA Tour finishes at the age of 21, started his second round at the 2021 Masters by pushing his drive to the right into the pine straw.

He compounded the problem by missing a chip and things escalated from there—Wolff took a quadruple-bogey snowman on the opening hole.

But at the round’s conclusion, Wolff made an even bigger mistake, signing a card that had a lower score than he shot.

Wolff would not have made the cut, as he struggled mightily, but it’s also part of a greater trend that has seen him play inconsistently from week to week.

For example, Wolff withdrew from the World Golf Championships-Workday Championship at The Concession after an opening-round 83, and a few weeks prior had done the same after shooting a 78 in the first round of the Farmers Insurance Open.

Masters: Leaderboard | Photos | TV, streaming info

It’s not the first time this year that Wolff has found trouble. Back in January at the American Express, Wolff was assessed a one-stroke penalty for violation of Rule 9.4b (Ball Lifted or Moved by You – Penalty for Lifting or Deliberately Touching Your Ball or Causing it to Move).

On the first hole at the Stadium Course at PGA West, Wolff drove his ball into the left rough, but the ball moved during his backswing and Rules official Slugger White discussed the situation with Wolff.

It was originally addressed by Wolff with the PGA Tour’s Rules Committee on Thursday, with the decision subsequently reversed on Friday after the Rules Committee gained access to video evidence not available at the time of the ruling that showed Wolff was responsible for the movement of his ball.

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Eddie Pepperell DQ’d from Qatar Masters, explains how on Twitter

Eddie Pepperell was disqualified from Qatar Masters after signing an incorrect scorecard. He then explained what happened on Twitter.

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Eddie Pepperell certainly knows how to make a disqualification interesting.

The 29-year-old Englishman was DQ’d from the European Tour’s Qatar Masters on Thursday and this time, it wasn’t because he ran out of golf balls.

Pepperell was disqualified after the first round because he signed an incorrect scorecard. But it wasn’t that simple.

Pepperell explained the mishap on Twitter, writing his score of 71 was correct, but his partner put down a 5 on the par-4 11, when Pepperell actually double-bogeyed the hole. He said his partner also marked a 3 on the par-4 16, opposed to a 4.

Pepperell said he changed both errors, but made another mistake in the process. He accidentally changed the score on the par-4 17th, which he birdied, instead of the 16th.

MORE: Leaderboard at Qatar Masters

“Quite disappointing as I actually took the time to change the original error, only to make a costlier one myself,” Pepperell wrote. “I asked the referee if this had any bearing on my disqualification but it didn’t.

“The rules are the rules and I 100% accept that, but I can’t help feeling that this particular way of disqualification is a fair distance away from common sense, and that’s also disappointing. I enjoyed the course however and hopefully next time I’ll do a better job.”

Pepperell’s score of even-par 71 would have given him a share of 61st headed into the event’s second round.

This isn’t the first weird disqualification Pepperell has experienced. During last season’s Turkish Airlines Open, Pepperell was disqualified during the final round for running out of golf balls after the contents of his ball pocket spilled out into a pond beside the fourth green.

Nicolai Højgaard holds the first-round lead at the Qatar Masters by one shot at 7 under. Joost Uiten sits in second ahead of a six-way tie for third at 5 under.

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