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Two Korn Ferry Tour players were DQ'd this week for a simple hand gesture. What happened?

Two Korn Ferry Tour players were DQ'd this week for a simple hand gesture. What happened?

USA Today3 days ago
It was a simple gesture, but clearly it was weighing on Cole Hammer's mind.
The former University of Texas star, now on the Korn Ferry Tour, was playing in the opening round of this week's Memorial Health Championship in Springfield, Illinois. After hitting a 4-iron on the 232-yard par-3 17th hole, Hammer looked at Nico Torres, the caddie of his playing partner, Nelson Ledesma. When Torres flashed four fingers at Hammer, a clear inquisition of whether he'd used a 4-iron, the 25-year-old Hammer lifted four fingers in response as confirmation.
Ledesma and Hammer finished their rounds, but on Friday, Hammer self-reported the incident. It was determined that both players were in violation of Rule 10.2a, which prohibits players from giving or asking for advice from anyone other than their caddie. Hammer and Ledesma were both disqualified from the event.
'Out of instinct, I flashed '4' as well,' Hammer told GolfChannel.com, which reported the story first, about the incident. 'It was a heat-of-the-moment thing, and I didn't think a whole lot about it until after the round.'
After the first round of play, Hammer was 1 under while Ledesma was 2 over.
A decade ago, at Chambers Bay in Seattle, Cole Hammer had one of the great coming-out parties in golf. Not only did he qualify for the 2015 U.S. Open at age 15, the third youngest to ever to do so, but he shot 77 in the first round and beat Tiger Woods by three strokes that day. With his boyish grin and precocious game, Hammer Time was born.
According to Rule 10-2a, during a round a player must not:
A similar incident was debated at the 2023 Masters when, on the par-5 15th hole, Brooks Koepka and Gary Woodland hit their tee shots to the same general area, but Koepka was away. Video of the hole showed Koepka hit his second and handed his club back Ricky Elliott. As he stuck the club back in the bag and grabbed Koepka's putter, Elliott appeared to say 'five' in the direction of Woodland's caddie – Brennan Little – before Woodland hit his second shot.
The Masters Tournament Committee released the following notice after the completion of an investigation: 'Following the completion of Brooks Koepka's round, the committee questioned his caddie and others in the group about a possible incident on No. 15. All involved were adamant that no advice was given or requested. Consequently, the committee determined that there was no breach of the rules.'
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Taylor Fritz wins resumed Wimbledon match in which Mpetshi Perricard hit a record 153 mph serve
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Taylor Fritz wins resumed Wimbledon match in which Mpetshi Perricard hit a record 153 mph serve
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LONDON (AP) — Taylor Fritz dealt with his opponent's 153 mph serve — it was the fastest in Wimbledon history, but Fritz won the point — and an overnight suspension before the fifth set to finish off a 6-7 (6), 6-7 (8), 6-4, 7-6 (6), 6-4 first-round win over Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard when they resumed Tuesday. Not only did 2024 U.S. Open runner-up Fritz need to turn things around after dropping the opening two sets, but he was two points from defeat on a half-dozen occasions in the fourth-set tiebreaker Monday night. 'A really crazy match,' the No. 5-seeded Fritz said Tuesday after wrapping up the victory at No. 1 Court. 'I thought it was about to be all over last night in the fourth-set tiebreaker. But he came back on me in the first two tiebreakers, so I thought maybe I had one in me. I'm super happy to get through it.' After Fritz forced the fifth set on Monday at about 10:15 p.m., the match was suspended because there is a curfew at the All England Club that halts play at 11 p.m., and officials were concerned about finishing by that time. It was clear Fritz preferred to continue, but it wasn't up to him. 'I mean, it's obviously not ideal. I felt like if we weren't going to have time to finish the fifth set, then absolutely I think it makes sense not to play the fifth set. But we were having sets about as long as you can possibly play sets, and they were still in the time frame that we had last night to play the fifth,' the 27-year-old Californian said. 'I obviously wanted to play it, but either way, I felt confident coming back today (and) getting it done, as well.' As it turned out, he needed only 35 minutes Tuesday to get the job done in a contest that featured 66 total aces — 37 by Mpetshi Perricard, 29 by Fritz. On the third point of the match Monday, Mpetshi Perricard — a 6-foot-8 Frenchman who is 21 — smacked a serve at 153 mph, eclipsing the old tournament best of 148 mph hit by Taylor Dent in 2010. Fritz not only managed to get his racket on the ball and return it, but he eventually took that point with a forehand volley winner. 'The funny thing is, I always tell my coaches (when) they sometimes say maybe I should try to serve (into the) body ... (that) I think body serves are awful. I never win the point when I do it,' Fritz said. 'And I sent the video (of the 153 mph serve) to my coach, saying: 'There you go. He served the fastest serve in the history of Wimbledon right into my chest, and I won the point, so there's your proof: Body serves are bad.'' Fritz lost in the first round at the French Open last month, but he is far more comfortable on slick, speedy grass courts, which reward the power on his big serve and forehand. He reached the quarterfinals at Wimbledon in 2022 and last year and is coming off his fourth Eastbourne Open title on the surface last week. 'This is a huge, huge week for me, with the recent results on grass. So I was thinking about that in this match,' he said. 'It put a lot of pressure on me, because I really didn't want to go out in the first round.'

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