WM Phoenix Open vows ‘operational audit’ to avoid repeat of events at TPC Scottsdale

“There’s some major improvements and operational things that we are looking to make.”

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — The 2024 WM Phoenix had a fantastic finish with a playoff that ended just before dark Sunday but this year’s version of the People’s Open is being remembered for rain, muddy conditions and the social media videos of fans drinking too much and getting into it with players.

Four days after its conclusion, tournament director George Thimsen told Golfweek there have already been long discussions about how to be better next time around, especially for the third round on Saturday, always the most highly attended day of the week.

“With respect to Saturday, I think we have a lot of things to learn from,” Thimsen said. “I think that we understand that it was a challenging set of circumstances that we had to navigate.”

Using the term “operational audit,” Thimsen said the Thunderbirds, the civic group that runs the WMPO at TPC Scottsdale, will look at the entire week.

“Each year as this tournament continues to grow, the Thunderbirds and all of our partners in law enforcement and first responders, we meet and we do a post-mortem of the event,” he said. “What are some of the key learnings that how can we continue to improve? And obviously this year, there’s some major improvements and operational things that we are looking to make and the Thunderbirds are committed to doing that.

“We’re committed to making this an event that the community is proud of. But, yeah, on that Saturday, the weather that morning and just the sheer number of people that still wanted to come out and enjoy the event, it did create a lot of congestion.”

Days of rain made many of the grassy hillsides unusable for fans. Well, mostly unusable except for the fan caught on viral video sliding shirtless face first in the muck, then getting doused in beer from several of his friends.

More: Viral videos of — let’s just say lubricated — fans at the 2024 WM Phoenix Open

Do the Thunderbirds feel like part of the future plan is the discouragement of excessive drinking?

“We’re going to be addressing the distribution channels of alcohol and the alcoholic beverages to our guests and we’re going to make the necessary changes that we need to once we are able to diagnose everything, all elements of it,” Thimsen said.

Other social media videos showed Zach Johnson and Billy Horschel getting into it with fans who crossed the line with comments to the golfers. Johnson in particular, when asked a full day later about the situation

“You’re hitting me at a very emotional point right now, so if I were to say if I’m gonna come back, I’d probably say no,” Johnson told The Arizona Republic. “But at the same time, I have no idea.”

Things may have come to a head around 2 p.m. on Saturday when the tournament gates were closed, even to fans who purchased tickets. That led to social media outrage. To make it up to those fans, Thimsen said they can send an email to orders@wmphoenixopen.com and after providing an order number, a ticket number or an email associated with the original order, get a full refund.

“We own up to it, we take full responsibility and own that Saturday was not perfect and we want to continue to prove that but the stage was not the normal stage that we have,” he said.

2024 WM Phoenix Open
Justin Thomas thanks the crowd after his putt on the 10th green during the second round of the 2024 WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Photo: The Arizona Republic)

Chance Cozby, executive director of the Thunderbirds, was on Golf Channel Monday and called Saturday a “turning point.” On Tuesday, he and next year’s WM Phoenix Open tournament chairman Matt Mooney visited Pacific Palisades, California, ahead of this week’s Genesis Invitational. The Sports Business Journal reported that the duo met with PGA Tour players throughout the day to get feedback, the most common being that fans didn’t seem to get out of line when uniformed police officers were stationed in highly visible areas.

Tournament organizers stopped announcing attendance figures in 2019. In 2018, the tournament reported a weekly attendance of 719,179 and a Saturday attendance of 216,818, the most ever in a single day on record for the event. That Saturday was also the third year in a row the attendance surpassed the 200,000 mark.

I think there’s been a lot of speculative numbers out there and we actually don’t have a number that we have officially communicated internally yet so I don’t have a number,” Thimsen said when asked about a 2024 number.

What is still being tracked are public-safety security issues. The numbers show that arrests went from 18 to 54 from 2023 to 2024 and that ejections went from 102 to 211.

Security issues 2022 2023 2024
Calls for service 440 558 653
Arrests 0 18 54
Ejections 90 102 211
Trespass 14 41 73

Source: Arizona Department of Liquor License and Control

If last Saturday’s attendance was close to the 2018 mark of more than 200,000, then the 211 fans tossed out represents 0.1 percent and the 54 fans arrested is 0.03 percent of all the fans who attended.

Still, seeing those numbers double and triple, respectively, is a trend moving in the wrong direction.

The full operational audit will take time to complete but one distinct possibility is that fewer tickets will be sold on the popular days of Friday and Saturday in future years.

“I think that one thing you can definitely count on is that we’re going to make improvements and diagnose through our operational audit what makes the most sense for our tournament,” Thimsen said. “But if I were a betting man, I would say that likely there will be less people on a Friday and a Saturday at our event and that we would focus on quality over quantity.

“You know, we’re proud of the uniqueness and energy of the WMPOs. It is the People’s Open but we do understand that we need to make changes and not necessarily, you know, always bigger, but definitely always to get better.”

The Phoenix Open donated more than $14 million to charities after the 2023 event, bringing the lifetime total to close to $110 million.

“We’re hoping to be able to get to announce a number very similar because people are out there partying with a purpose,” Thimsen said. “I think that that’s really the main focus, that I hope people can rally around, which is, yes, there are some things out there that are fun to see on video and kind of scroll through when you’re on your social media but at the end of the day, we’re making a really big impact for our community here and that’s why we do what we do.”

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‘Crossed the line’: Fans, players call for change after chaos at WM Phoenix Open

One PGA Tour player admitted he’s unlikely to return to the event in the future.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. —  A volatile mix of huge crowds, mud and alcohol at the WM Phoenix Open had fans and players talking about changes needed to keep the event safe while maintaining its unique atmosphere.

On Saturday, the tournament shut its gates in the early afternoon, leaving ticketed fans unable to gain entry. At the same time, alcohol and food sales were cut off — all in an attempt to ease crowding near the entrance. The issue, organizers believed, was that muddy conditions left much of the course unsuitable for fans, forcing them to crowd into smaller areas.

The Scottsdale Police Department also cited the unusual weather.

“The course conditions were not normal due to the mud and rain,” Allison Sempsis, the department’s public information officer, said. “This resulted in the large crowds only occupying a small portion of the course and caused large buildup of crowds.”

Sempsis also noted that, at one point, fans were being allowed in without having their tickets scanned.

“There was a large group of attendees that were stopped before going through the gate,” Sempsis said. “Attendees were waved through for a short time period in order to keep everyone safe and to create a larger space for people to move around on the course.”

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The tournament stopped announcing daily attendance figures in 2019. The last time attendance was made public, 576,807 fans watched the four days of tournament action, including over 200,000 on Saturday, which is typically the most crowded and chaotic day.

Sempsis said, “Every year after the event, SPD and other partnerships continually assess and evaluate what can be done the following year to ensure everyone attending the event is safe and has a good experience.”

As intoxicated fans reveled in the conditions Saturday, safety came into question.

All over the course, shirtless fans found muddy hills to slide down. A shirtless fan leaped into a bunker on the 16th hole to do sand angels. Videos of fans who were unable to stand straight took hold on various social media sites.

For many tournament regulars, those events and other logistical issues tipped the scales.

One regular attendee, Todd Williams of Phoenix, has gone to the Open for 10 straight years but said the tournament would need to announce “drastic changes such as multiple new entrance points and more concessions” for him to continue attending.

“I’m all for the party and craziness,” Williams said. “The insane and rowdy crowds make the event. This year, Friday felt like a normal Saturday, and Saturday was just complete chaos. It was hard to enjoy the event when it took 30-plus minutes at any concessions and bathrooms were long waits, too.”

More: Viral videos of — let’s just say lubricated — fans at the 2024 WM Phoenix Open

Fans cheer from the stands on the 16th hole during the 2024 Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale on Feb. 8, 2024.

Elizabeth Suchocki, a regular attendee who lives in Tempe, echoed that sentiment.

“I felt cramped and anxious,” Suchocki said. “All of a sudden, there were just so many people in our area. … But people just kept packing in and packing in and there were people all over. And I was like OK, this is a lot of people, this is very uncomfortable.”

Suchocki was frustrated by the lack of communication from the tournament. At 2:05 p.m. Saturday, the Phoenix Open’s X account posted a message notifying fans that gates were closed but made no mention of food or alcohol sales being impacted. And with overcrowding on the course, many fans were unable to get cell service.

“If you’re going to shut down alcohol, if you’re going to shut down food, you need to communicate that over the speakers,” Suchocki said, “because it created more chaos.”

When the tournament’s account posted a video on X on Sunday morning celebrating the party atmosphere on the 16th hole, it received 50 replies, almost all of which were critical.

“Your event has become an embarrassment,” one reply read. “It’s out of control.”

“Embarrassing the game,” read another. “PGA players need to boycott next year.”

2024 WM Phoenix Open
Fans pack the walkway near the 10th hole during the third round of the 2024 WM Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Photo: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports)

Tour pros debate where to draw the line

Billy Horschel likes the WM Phoenix Open. Loves it, even. Every year, playing in the event is a priority for him. Partly because he believes TPC Scottsdale suits his game, but for more than that, too.

“I love the energy, I love the crowds,” Horschel said. “I love some of the funny things they say.”

Typically, the players who choose to participate in the Phoenix Open revel in the event’s unique role on tour. With a handful of notable exceptions, like Chris DiMarco’s famous comments in 2004, they celebrate the atmosphere.

After his win in Sunday’s playoff, champion Nick Taylor said, “The atmosphere has been incredible all week.”

But that sentiment began to shift for some. By Sunday afternoon, Horschel had seen enough. That’s when he was shown on video yelling at a fan for heckling during Nicolo Galletti’s backswing. “Buddy, when he’s over a shot, shut the hell up, dude,” Horschel told the fan. “He’s trying to hit a damn golf shot here. It’s our (expletive) job.”

Outside the clubhouse after his round, Horschel explained to The Republic where he draws the line.

“When you’re impacting the golf tournament, that’s where it gets a little bit too much,” Horschel said. “And when you’re saying personal things. The last couple of years, the guys I’ve played with, I’ve heard some personal stuff yelled at them. And I think that’s just not right.”

Whether players decide not to return to the tournament remains to be seen, but Horschel said it became a discussion point this week.

“It’s been talked about amongst players about, if this would continue to escalate over the next few years, you could see players not want to come here,” Horschel said. “And that’s an unfortunate situation.”

Horschel said he would be back, but Zach Johnson — another player who was shown in a viral video over the weekend arguing with fans — was not so committed.

“You’re hitting me at a very emotional point right now, so if I were to say if I’m gonna come back, I’d probably say no,” Johnson told The Republic. “But at the same time, I have no idea.”

Johnson added, “This tournament has been inappropriate and crossed the line since I’ve been on tour and this is my 21st year.”

He plays in it, he said, because he likes the course. But this week, his frustrations mounted.

“I don’t know what the line is, but you have people falling out of the rafters, you have fights in the stands,” Johnson said. “It’s to the point where now, how do you reel it in? Because it’s taken on a life of its own. I think the Thunderbirds probably need to do something about it. I’m assuming they’re ashamed. Because at some point, somebody’s either gonna really, really get hurt or worse.”

2024 WM Phoenix Open
Fans cheer from the stands on the 16th hole during the 2024 Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale.

Like Johnson, Horschel worries about a tragedy occurring with the number of intoxicated fans on the course.

“We all know alcohol plays a massive factor in all of this,” Horschel said. “And I think limiting the alcohol sales, limiting what time alcohol starts, limiting how many drinks someone can buy. I think there’s a couple different (solutions) that can happen.”

Horschel said he spoke with the Thunderbirds — the group that runs the tournament — to voice his complaints.

“I think they understand the situation and they want to do right for everyone involved with this tournament,” Horschel said. “So we’ll see what happens.”

Photos: Most spirited and colorful American, European fans at the 2023 Solheim Cup in Spain

If you’re traveling to Spain for the Ryder Cup, you might as well be decked out in your team’s colors.

CASARES, Spain — There’s just something special about team golf, and that’s been evident this week in Spain for the 2023 Solheim Cup.

Players and captains relish the opportunity to represent their country (or continent) on a global stage, and every other year fans flock to join in on the fun. The best players from the United States take on the best from Europe in some must-see matches that highlight the best of golf, and there’s always a handful of spectators that stand out among the crowds with wild outfits and costumes.

Check out the best photos of both American and European fans at the 2023 Solheim Cup.

MORE: Best (and worst) Solheim Cup team uniforms over the years

What would you change about golf? We asked U.S. Open fans at The Country Club

What would you like to change about golf?

Golf is arguably one of the most toxic relationships of all time. You love it one hour and hate it the next. Small mistakes can send you over the edge, and small wins have you bragging to your friends.

Golf can put a damper on your bank account, but is worth it when you stripe that shiny new 4-iron for the first time on the course… and then hit a high cut into the houses out of bounds.

We asked some fans at the 122nd U.S. Open at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts what they would change about golf. Take a look at what they had to say.

Jordan Spieth keeps promise to sign autographs for young fans after winning 2022 RBC Heritage

Jordan Spieth made good on his word to take some time for the young fans at the RBC Heritage.

Jordan Spieth’s latest victory was a thrilling one, a playoff win over Patrick Cantlay at the2022 RBC Heritage in Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head, South Carolina. It’s the second year in a row that Spieth won a trophy on Easter Sunday.

That win also showed how classy the star golfer is, thanks to two videos posted on the PGA Tour’s Twitter feed.

After Spieth finished his round, he went out to a slew of young fans waiting for his autograph and told them he had to wait to see if he’d be involved in a playoff, so he promised he’d come back, whether he won the tournament or not.

During his post-round Q&A with media, he was asked about the fans.

Q. Jordan, first there’s a horde of rabid youth out there.

JORDAN SPIETH: Yeah, I’m heading that way.

Sure enough, after the victory, Spieth marched right out to fans and began signing right away and snapping photos.

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Honda Classic: Four popular fan bets at PGA National’s 17th hole

A true fan favorite: Caddie racing!

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. — Cash wagers are a part of the party in the Honda Classic’s stadium seating surrounding the 17th hole at PGA National’s Champion Course.

Whether between groups of friends or complete strangers, fans attending Sunday’s final round are sure to see cash trading hands when viewing play on the final hole of the world-famous Bear Trap.

Here’s a look at four of the gallery’s most humorous and popular wagers from the first three rounds of the Honda Classic 2022:

Caddie racing

And they’re off!

Rowdy fans at No. 17 have pulled some caddies into the off-course competition, placing wagers on which caddie will walk from the tee box and step on the green first.

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With caddies wearing red, blue or white bibs, don’t be surprised to hear patrons calling out the colors of their wagered caddie as they pass in front of public grandstands that are pulsing with club music.

Helen Storey, the caddie and wife of Lee Westwood, said some caddies are well aware that fans have money riding on their walking pace and aren’t shy to influence the outcome of wagers.

“So we try to get there together and mess with them,” said Storey, who paused with her foot in the air just short of the No. 17 green on Thursday. “…We try and have fun all the time. When it stops being fun it’s not worth it.”

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Left or right of the hole?

This wager is as simple as it gets: Will the golfer’s tee shot land left or right of the hole?

The direction is based on the golfer’s perspective from the tee box. Astute wagers will consider hole placement and the shot trajectory of recent golfers to make this bet more of an educated guess.

Who pulls the pin?

The caddies are again the target of wagers as fans bet which caddie will be the first to pull the pin from the hole on No. 17. These rules can vary from first to touch the pin to which caddie returns the pin to the cup.

Honda: Sunday tee times

Bingo, Bango, Bongo

Though not necessarily using this name, fans have placed wagers according to the rules of this classic golf gambling game.

Which player will be first on the green? Bingo.

Closest to the hole with all balls on the green? Bango.

First in the cup? Bongo.

Three points are available with each group that comes through No. 18, meaning players can assign values to each wager and carry wins from group to group.

With the difficulty of hitting the No. 17 green, it’s not as simple as picking the first golfer in a group while the rules of “Bango” allow opportunities for wins even if the initial tee shot finds the water.

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Honda Classic beefing up security around 17th hole: ‘Fans throwing beers is just not something we can do’

In the wake of two incidents at the WM Phoenix Open, Honda officials want to avoid another episode.

PGA Tour and Honda Classic officials spoke this week about beefing up security around the par-3 17th hole and reinforcing their plan to attempt to prevent the chaos we saw last weekend on the 16th hole at the WM Phoenix Open.

Fans became unhinged on Saturday and Sunday after Sam Ryder and Carlos Ortiz, respectively, each had a hole-in-one. The hole – notorious for its party atmosphere – had not seen an ace since Francesco Molinari’s in 2015.

Both days, fans reacted by tossing beer cans and cups onto the course, many of those landing on the green. With the hole completely enclosed by stadium seating that holds about 17,000 fans, the course, especially the green, was covered, causing not only a safety issue but forcing at least a 15-minute delay for volunteers to clean the course.

Honda Classic tournament director Andrew George said his event annually meets with the PGA Tour to discuss the plan on No. 17 at PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. The hole is the closest thing to No. 16 at the TPC Scottsdale because of its stadium seating from behind the tee box, all along the left side and to the back of the green. The right is bordered by water.

“The difference now is coming off (the Phoenix Open) is making sure we’re doubling down on the safety piece,” George said. “That’s more marshals, more security, more signage. Those things coupled together can help. It’s just reminding everyone that this is still a PGA Tour golf tournament. They’re [fans are] right on top of the tee. It’s great viewing but we’ve got to respect those guys.”

Another deck has been added to the Bear Trap – the hospitality area surrounding the tee box at No. 17 – this year.

2020 hole-in-one at Honda quiet by comparison

The last hole-in-one on No. 17 at Honda was in 2020 by Grayson Murray. But compared to what happened at the Phoenix Open, that scene resembled a church service. Fans kept their celebration to loud cheers as Murray pumped his fist, tossed his hat into the air and threw his ball into the grandstand.

Honda Classic
The 17th hole at the Honda Classic at PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. (Photo: Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports)

“We want a raucous crowd,” George said. “That amphitheater at 17 is incredible and we don’t want them to sit on their hands and be quiet. Just educating them on what the proper behavior is. There are certain things that are OK and there are certain things that are kind of crossing the line from a safety perspective.

“Fans throwing beers is just not something we can do at (17th hole).”

Honda will increase the number of marshals and law enforcement around the hole by about 10 percent from 2020 and more than double the presence from last year, when the crowds were greatly reduced because of COVID-19 protocols. About 35,000 fans attended the Honda Classic in 2021. Officials are expecting to once again break the 200,000 mark for the week this year.

Additionally, signs reminding fans of proper behavior will be prominent and messaging will pop up on phones when fans enter certain areas for those who subscribe to the PGA Tour app.

Not much can be done if even a small percentage of fans spontaneously throw cans and cups if a tee shot rolls into the cup. Identifying so many fans would be difficult. The next best thing is being prepared with enough people to quickly clean up the mess.

Players are expressing their concern, which, mostly for the Phoenix Open, could result in some major changes. Players spoke about how the hole is so atypical and can be fun to play, but it’s not something they want to deal with very often.

And it’s not just No. 16 at the Phoenix Open. The atmosphere is similar on the 17th and 18th, minus the can and cup tossing.

SI.com reported that one player asked what happens if a can hits a player or caddie and they lose hearing, sight or are injured to a point they cannot return to play golf?

After Ryder’s hole-in-one, a bottle came close to hitting both Ryder and Brian Harman, who was in Ryder’s group. Ryder was second off the tee and Harman had to wait about 15 minutes to hit his shot while volunteers removed the debris. After his ace Sunday, Ortiz said he got “nailed pretty hard in the back with a beer can.”

“It was a good awakening to. … alright we got to reset, take a step back,” George said. “We want people to come out and enjoy themselves and you want the fan experience to be more than just the golf. But it’s just making sure we get that right, now.”

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Lynch: European Tour ‘security’ around Rory McIlroy was a joke, but no laughing matter

Whatever the cause, this man clearly has issues, but there won’t be many constituencies in golf who will find the humor in this.

To the extent that we think at all about security issues at golf tournaments, it’s typically in the context of spectators being ejected—justifiably so in instances of unruly behavior, questionably so if it’s because a rabbit-eared player heard a comment he didn’t like.

Security is conspicuous at most PGA Tour events, whether local police departments or companies hired to manage crowds. There’s another layer of security that passes largely unnoticed. High-profile players are assigned a uniformed police officer who does not stray from his side throughout the day. The Tour’s own security personnel also moves between groups.

Compare those protocols to what we witnessed Friday at Scottish Open, when a fan strode onto the 10th tee, snatched a club from Rory McIlroy’s bag, then proceeded to waggle it around for a time as though preparing to hit a shot as McIlroy, Jon Rahm and their caddies stared in disbelief. Eventually an official (one well-stricken in years, based on the video) approached and ushered the trespasser aside. Then two laggardly security officers showed up and frogmarched the man away, making a game attempt at appearing to do a job they had manifestly failed at.

McIlroy was unfazed. “It was a surprise, yes, but it was handled efficiently and everything’s okay,” he said after his round. “I had no idea who he was. Again, it was handled quickly and that was the end of it.”

But McIlroy pays others to be fazed for him, and we can assume his management team left the European Tour in no doubt what they thought of how the incident was handled. They won’t be alone in registering concern. Among other high-profile players and their managers, Friday’s Keystone Cops farce will have gone down about as well as a pint of cold vomit.

By its nature, golf allows fans closer to the action than most any other major sport. It’s the very charm of spectating. That proximity between athlete and admirer comes with an accepted amount of risk, of course, and we’re accustomed to occasional halfwitted horseplay. Like the tutu-clad chap who scampered onto a fairway in the final round of the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines last month, or the streakers who periodically enliven the Open Championship by showing their shortcomings.

The meddler at the Scottish Open seemed more creepy than his counterpart at Torrey Pines, but since there wasn’t a direct physical threat to a player or caddie the episode provided plenty of amusement for social media scrollers. If the man involved was suffering mental health issues, there was empathy. If he was over-served, there was mockery. Whatever the underlying cause, he clearly has issues. But there won’t be many constituencies in the golf world who will find the humor in this.

Despite what a few keyboard warriors were hollering, the onus was not on a caddie or player to wrestle this fan to the ground and retrieve the golf club. Anyone who has dipped a toe into the Twitterverse can testify to the worrying number of people out there who are clearly unwell, consumed with grievances, rage and conspiracy theories. Prominent athletes regularly receive threats from that quarter, and McIlroy is no exception. That’s why players expect both tournament organizers and Tours to protect them to whatever extent is possible. Like, for example, preventing a disturbed man from having unfettered access to the tee to do whatever he pleases while competitors are waiting to play.

It’s possible the personnel hired for security duty at the Scottish Open had little or no experience working a golf tournament. It’s also possible their understanding of what is required of them was deficient. But neither of those excuses holds true for the European Tour, which was made to look amateurish at best, negligent at worst. If there was one group on the course who might have expected competent security, this was it: McIlroy, Rahm, Justin Thomas. That the European Tour failed to provide adequate protection even on their first hole early on a Friday morning betrays an approach so casual it would be laughable, if it wasn’t so troublesome.

This incident comes at a time when the R&A is stressing how players must adhere to government rules around COVID and remain in a bubble during next week’s Open Championship. That task won’t have been made easier by every player and caddie being rudely made aware that their “bubble” can be burst by a random fan.

It’s easy to overreact to the misadventures of one troubled fan a world away who inspired a day’s worth of viral videos on social media. After all, no one was hurt and he was eventually taken to the hospital for assistance. But the ease with which he was able to act on his impulses—and the delay before security intervened—should not go unremarked upon.

It’s all funny, until the day it’s not. Because if these things were just a laughing matter, no one would have ever heard of Günther Parche.

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Watch: Fan runs onto fairway at U.S. Open, hits two golf balls, gets tackled by security

An unruly fan ran on the field of play, dropped two golf balls and hit them before attempting to run from security. You gotta see this.

A star-studded leaderboard, Sunday pressure, a golf ball somehow hitting a cart path before getting lodged in a tree.

The final round of the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines was just one thing after another, keeping us all glued to the TV.

But one thing the major sports networks don’t show—and for good reason—are idiots who run out on to the field of play.

Thankfully 2002 PGA Champion Rich Beem captured the video of a man running on the 13th fairway, dropping two golf balls, hitting one before dancing, hitting the other one, then egging on security before attempting to run away.

Alright, we’ve said too much. Just watch the video.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CQW-tJJFGp3/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

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PGA’s Seth Waugh apologizes to Phil Mickelson, Brooks Koepka for fan overflow

The scene on the 18th hole at the PGA Championship was chaotic, energetic, emotional but also maybe a little too close for comfort.

The scene was chaotic, energetic, emotional but also a little too close for comfort, especially for the two golfers in the final group.

As Phil Mickelson was walking up the 18th hole on Sunday, putting the finishing touches on an historic PGA Championship victory, it was pure bedlam behind him, as fans stormed the fairway, maneuvering for position, snapping cell phone photos and generally enjoying getting a little carried away.

Security at Kiawah Island’s Ocean Course was simply overwhelmed by the moment.

Many simply got too close and one spectator even grabbed Mickelson by the shoulders. When asked on Twitter about that incident, Lefty said:

Elbowed him in the ribs. He backed off.

“I’ve never had something like that,” Mickelson said at his post-round media session. “It was a little bit unnerving but it was exceptionally awesome, too.”

As for runner-up Brooks Koepka, he managed to break through the crowd after being bumped in the knee a few times and seeing his caddie, Ricky Elliott, getting “drilled” in the face.

“It would have been cool if I didn’t have a knee injury and got dinged a few times in the knee in that crowd because no one really gave a s–t, personally,” Koepka said.

On Monday evening, PGA of America CEO Seth Waugh released a statement, admitting fans overdid it just a bit.

He also said that he spoke to both Mickelson and Koepka to extend an apology.