See my prior post. I think he would actually have to re-tee it because the rule states that the ball needs to be 'replaced.' In most cases one doesn't know exactly where the ball was before it was moved and we have to make our best guess, but in this case he knows exactly where it was.
Saw a "double tap" in the last round today. Wedge shot, hit again on the back swing. Apparently not a stroke penalty.
Also, Bryson is about to murder the tour for awhile best I can tell.
No. Replacing a ball that was accidentally moved is not generally done by drop. It most often occurs on the green, and the player just physically moves the ball back to where he thought it was before it moved. Same if it occurs in the rough. For example, if the ball moves while you are addressing it in the rough, you physically replqce it as close as possible to where it was before it moved. A drop would not allow you to do that, so the ball is not dropped in those situations.
Ok. If it was the wind from the club, the ruling is really simple. Pull out the tee and play on. Ball has to be played as it lies, hitting stroke two.
FWIW, I would take doing something that embarrassing every once in a while if I could play to a plus four and make a lot of money playing golf.
Golf.com asked a bunch of folks if Bryson Dechambeau has cracked golf's code? The consensus seems to be that on simplistic courses that don't really punish the occasional wayward shot, he's going to dominate. But at US and British Open kinda courses, he's going to struggle.
https://golf.com/news/has-bryson-dec...-confidential/
Why are you wasting time here when you could be wasting it by listening to the latest episode of the DBR Podcast?
Update on the Flaming Antenna of Mt. Mansfield...tomorrow morning at 5:30, a giant skyhook type helicopter is going to hoist the burned antenna from the tippy top of the mountain, carry it away, and bring in a new fresh one which hopefully won't catch on fire.
Good view from the end of my driveway if you can be here by 5:30 , I'll have the coffee ready.
What caused the antenna to ignite?
There was a short in some aging circuitry, which ignited some flammable material (who would've thunk there was flammable material in an antenna?)
Anyway, the helicopter is working hard today, nice scene of the sun rising over the mountain as they lower the new antenna...several antennae to be moved, long day up there...
2020 really has it all...
https://www.washingtonpost.com/weath...rnado-warning/
CC2DE019-1F8C-486A-8FA8-53E9E65EEF59.jpgThe powerful fire and potent rotation inside the wildfire even prompted the National Weather Service in Reno, Nev., to issue what is believed to be the first weather alert of its kind: a “fire tornado warning.”
“Amazing event. Not aware of this ever before,” wrote Neil Lareau, who studies extreme fire behavior at the University of Nevada at Reno. Lareau’s research helped confirm the existence and intensity of the deadly fire tornado associated with the 2018 Carr Fire in Redding, Calif.
“Coach said no 3s.” - Zion on The Block
Eyes on Cow Butts. Why?
cowbutts1-800x535.jpg
Because, Science!!!
Just in time for Halloween: This 3D home tour is the best accidental video game of 2020
Here is a direct link. Then click on 3D Walkthrough, and move around and zoom in as much as you like.“Find the bathtub.” That’s the simple goal behind a fascinating new game devised after a 3D walkthrough of a Louisville, Kent., home went viral on Twitter.
It took me about 10 minutes to find the bathtub. (It was in none of the bathrooms I checked.) I will say that the contents of the house are weird and unsettling in a "I can't believe anyone could live or work or hoard like this" way, but I did not find it scary. There is a cat, and he looks judgmental, but there are no other living things inside.
Try it out! Better use of your time than politics.
Consider yourselves lucky for trying. The homeowner has now taken down the link to the 3D walkthrough. (It may still exist, but it's harder to find than the bathtub.)
Owner of mysterious 3D tour house explains strange bathtub and all those Girls Gone Wild DVDs
Doesn't really explain the industrial strength burner of CDs and DVDs in the computer room, but okay.As context, we learn that 8800 Blue Lick had been raided in the past for selling allegedly stolen goods, though Curtis says “he was running a legitimate family business buying discount goods from peddlers marts and flea markets and reselling them for profit on Amazon and eBay.”