What would you do?

On Monday you’re playing in second stage of the PGA qualifying tournament and you tee off on a short par three. You’re caddy tosses you a ball and you hit two strokes with the ball before realizing that the ball is not the same model as the one you started the round.


Do you take the two-stroke penalty?





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Thursday you continue play and finish in the top 20 with a very good shot of making the final stage in December. Later that night thinking back about the tournament, you’re pretty sure the ball you used during that round might not be on the approved list of equipment, meaning automatic disqualification.

Do you keep playing (no one would be aware of your mistake) or turn yourself in, get DQ'ed and lose a chance at a 2009 PGA Tour card?





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J.P. Hayes had this quandary this past week. He chose the latter.

Read more [ESPN.com]

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Comments

He is going to be as popular as ever, and for being honest. That is not a bad thing. It is kind of refreshing for a change.

totally agree, PGA tour will exempt him whenever possible

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