What happens when you run out of golf balls during a pro tournament? One PGA Tour Champions player found out

Assuming he was destined for a DQ, Garboski shook the hands of his playing partners and awaited his fate.

Rick Garboski was enjoying his time at the Hoag Classic on the PGA Tour Champions, so much so that he was happily offering up souvenirs for young fans who were watching him practice.

A Monday qualifier and local pro making his Champions debut, Garboski was playing with veteran Mark Calcavecchia during Saturday’s round when he dropped two in the drink at Newport Beach Country Club.

That’s when he went into his bag only to realize he’d given away a few too many keepsakes — it was empty.

Assuming his first PGA Tour Champions start was destined for a DQ, Garboski shook the hands of his playing partners and awaited his fate.

However, a rules official said organizers could dispatch someone to his locker to retrieve more balls. A penalty resulted for playing a different ball, and then another came as he was held back a group.

Calcavecchia said on Twitter it was the first time he’d seen anything like it. Garboski called it a “total rookie move.”

Garboski finished the round, carding an ugly 80, but rallied on Sunday with a 74 to finish one spot out of last — ahead of Calcavecchia.

“It’s an unfortunate error, and I’m going to laugh about it,” Garboski said. “I’m just so thankful that the Tour officials here figured out a way for me to actually finish. I didn’t mind the penalties, because I just wanted to be able to play.”

Here’s how reacted to the penalty.

Here was the statement from the PGA Tour Champions Rules Committee:

“Rick Garboski hit his third shot in the penalty area on the par-3 fourth hole during Round 2 of the Hoag Classic and was unable to retrieve his ball. He realized that he had no more balls of the same brand and model as used at the start of his round to satisfy the One Ball Rule that was in effect. Garboski asked for a ruling and acquired another brand/model of ball to complete the fourth hole. The Rules Official clarified that Garboski would receive the general penalty for a breach of the One Ball Rule during play of the fourth hole and needed to play the brand/model of ball used at the start of his round from the next teeing area to avoid being disqualified. Garboski had balls of the same brand/model available off the course and they were immediately brought to him while he completed the fourth hole. Unfortunately, Garboski had to unreasonably delay play from the fifth tee for a short period of time while the balls arrived and was assessed a further one-stroke penalty under Rule 5.6a. Rather than delay the other two players in Garboski’s original group, a Rules Official gave approval for him to wait for and then join the group of two players playing immediately behind him to complete the remainder of the round.”

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‘We’re still on the honeymoon’: Fred Couples got married again, this time in golf attire

Couples has 15 PGA Tour and 13 PGA Tour Champions titles to his name, including the 1992 Masters.

Fred Couples and his new wife, Suzanne, said “I do,” on 2-22-22.

The 15-time winner on the PGA Tour and 1992 Masters champion recently remarried the week of the PGA Tour Champions Cologuard Classic, and judging by the wedding photo, Boom Boom looked like he was ready to walk straight from the ceremony to the first tee for a quick round.

“Suzanne invited a small amount and I invited a small amount and we had a great celebration,” Couples said of the ceremony. “It’s been nine days now so we’re still on the honeymoon.”

Couples has 13 wins on the senior circuit – most recently in 2017 at the American Family Insurance Championship – as well as two senior majors, the 2011 Constellation Energy Senior Players and the 2012 Senior Open Championship. The 62-year-old is in the field for the Hoag Classic this week and is grouped with last week’s champion Miguel Angel Jiménez and Jim Furyk to start the week.

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John Daly keeps playing golf with a separated shoulder: ‘Sometimes it will pop back into place and I have to pop it back out’

‘I just play with it separated, that’s how I get a nice cut out there. I just don’t hit it anywhere anymore.’

There’s nothing drab about John Daly — not his wardrobe, not his ball-striking and certainly not his interviews.

In preparation for this week’s Hoag Classic in Newport Beach, California, Daly was asked about the prospect of being a role model. As you might expect from the two-time major champion, he didn’t mince words.

“Well, if you look at me as a role model, if you do the opposite of John Daly, you’re going to do really well in life. That’s the only way I can answer that,” he said.

Daly — who has a new album coming out later this week entitled “Whiskey and Water” featuring the likes of longtime friend Willie Nelson — isn’t the same guy who could flail at everything and outhit the longest players. His health is a constant issue, between now-benign bladder cancer and a shoulder that simply hasn’t healed.

In fact, Daly said he has learned to play golf with a shoulder that isn’t just ailing, but permanently separated.

“It’s separated. I just play with it separated, that’s how I get a nice cut out there. I just don’t hit it anywhere anymore.” Daly said. “Sometimes it will pop back into place and I have to pop it back out.”

The shoulder hasn’t slowed him completely, however. Daly and his son, John II, poured in 13 birdies and an eagle en route to shooting 15-under 57 in the two-person scramble format at the PNC Championship in December.

The 36-hole total of 27-under 117 was two strokes better than Tiger and Charlie Woods, breaking the previous tournament scoring record set by Davis Love III/Dru Love in 2018 by one stroke, and earned Team Daly the red-leather Willie Park winner’s belts.

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So, he can still play, when all the pieces are in working order. But Daly admits he never knows if that’ll be the case when he wakes up.

“Some days are good, some days are bad,” Daly said. “Some days I feel like Superman, some days I feel like Jimmy Hoffa six feet under.”

Daly can still hit just under 300 yards, but while that once marked one of the longest balls on Tour, it’s now overshadowed by the masses. And while the former University of Arkansas star is pleased to have helped push the driving limits, he also said the game still revolves around those who convert when they get close to the green.

“When I came up you heard of long drivers being in long drive championships. Remax sponsored it and you had guys that could hit it 420, 450, almost to 500 yards. When I came out it was me, Freddie Couples, Davis Love. It wasn’t — like nobody really heard of guys hitting it really long except for us three,” Daly said. “The game of golf was always around the short game and the middle irons. When I came out, hopefully I changed it a little bit. But the bottom line, it still doesn’t matter, the guys are scoring because of the way they’re chipping and putting and all that, but now there’s probably 50 guys that could hit it over 350 yards on the PGA Tour.

“It’s great to see, but they’re still chipping and putting.”

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Ernie Els earns first PGA Tour Champions title in just third appearance

In just his third start on the senior tour, Ernie Els won his first PGA Tour Champions event at the Hoag Classic.

A big win for Big Ernie.

In just his third start on the PGA Tour Champions, Ernie Els won his first senior tour event on Sunday at the Hoag Classic at Newport Beach Country Club in Newport Beach, California.

Els shot a final-round 4-under 67 thanks to birdies on the par-5 15th and 18th holes to reach 16 under.

Glen Day, Fred Couples and Robert Karlsson all finished T-2 at 14 under, followed by Scott McCarron in fifth at 13 under.

In his previous two senior tour events, Els lost in a playoff to Miguel Angel Jimenez at the season-opening Mitsubishi Electric Championship and finished T-34 at last week’s Cologuard Classic.

Hoag Classic: Leaderboard

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