
‘I've been there' - Jon Rahm expresses sympathy for Shane Lowry after two-stoke penalty
Not seeing the ball move was no excuse under the rules, as the R&A explained that after reviewing the video, 'the naked eye test is satisfied whether or not the player was looking at the ball when it moved'.
Lowry did not argue with the decision and Rahm understood his frustration, having suffered under the Rules in the past.
He was slapped with two-stroke penalty during the Memorial Tournament in 2020 when a video replay showed his ball moved while addressing it, even though he didn't feel it move. Another instance involved a one-shot penalty at the 2018 PGA Championship after his foot accidentally touched the ball while searching for it in the rough.
He played with Lowry yesterday and shot a two-under 69 to move to two-under and while he didn't see footage of the Offaly man's rules incident on Friday, he had sympathy,
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'The movement of the ball was discernible to the naked eye' – R&A explain Shane Lowry's two-shot penalty
'Well, I can relate because I've been there,' Rahm said. 'They've done exactly the same thing to me where they give you the iPad, and look what happened.
'Yeah, you're in a no-win situation because if you say I didn't see it, therefore I don't think it should be a penalty, even though the rule says it should be visible to the naked eye, you always run the risk of being called something you don't want to be called. And if you take it on the safe side, you're taking a two-shot penalty.'
Lowry would have entered the third round eight shots off the lead rather than ten and Rahm was sympathetic.
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'If he starts at two-under today, you have a good Saturday, you can put yourself in contention,' he stated.
'When you get 10 shots back, it's a little bit harder.
'It's a tough spot to be in. From what I understand from the whole thing, and I haven't seen the images, this is just from what I heard, it needs to be visible without a camera.
"If the rule says visible to the naked eye, we need to uphold that more than anything else.'
Asked if the rule need to be changed, Rahm added: 'I don't know. It's always going to be based on the situation, and when you get in the rough, it's tricky.
'But if he didn't see it, I just don't know -- there's enough people, I'm assuming if he was in the rough on 12, right or left, there's enough people around you that if they see it, they're going to say so.
"Something needs to be changed for sure, I just don't know exactly how they could change it.'

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