Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

For Rahm, reversal right call

Chief ref waves off Spaniard’s 2-shot penalty after round

- By Sam Farmer Los Angeles Times

SOUTHPORT, England — was involved in a thorny rules situation that briefly cost him two strokes.

While walking up to his ball on No. 17, the Spaniard noticed a vine laying nearby that he wanted to move. Thinking the plant was dead, he pulled it away. That’s when playing partner came over and noticed the piece of plant was still connected to the ground.

“I got there and I thought it was a loose impediment because it looked dead, so I just moved it to the side,” Rahm said. “And that’s when Lee came and he realized it was attached.”

The two summoned a rules official who asked Rahm if he had improved his lie, a two-shot penalty. Rahm insisted he didn’t.

Instead of clearing Rahm on the spot, the official tentativel­y assessed a twoshot penalty, with the caveat the final decision would be made after the round. Rahm, who had been at par, finished his round at 1 over.

In the scoring trailer, after talking to the players, the chief referee decided not to assess a penalty.

“Lee explained his facts, I explained what happened from my point of view and they made the call,” said Rahm, who finished 1-under 69 without the penalty.

Jon Rahm Lee Westwood O’Meara, Mark

who won the British Open here in 1998, was in the first group, teeing off in the drizzle at 6:35 a.m., and had the honor of hitting the first ball of the day.

He should have stayed in bed.

O’Meara sliced his opening drive out of bounds, then yanked his do-over into a bunker on the left side. By the time he finished the 422-yard hole he had an eight — double the par.

It was a stumbling start for O’Meara, 60, who shot a 43 on the front before recovering with a 38 on the back for an 81.

Sometimes, players have to reboot their careers and work their way back up. That’s the case for

Ian Poulter,

who was runner-up at Birkdale in 2008 and reached as high as No. 5 in the world rankings before his star faded.

Poulter was sidelined for four months with a foot injury last year, and, having dropped out of the top 50, had to play his way into the Open by winning one of three qualifying spots.

All that made it even sweeter for him to shoot 67 on Thursday to secure a spot on the leaderboar­d. Poulter said he had felt “a bit of pressure” to qualify.

After his injury, he dropped out of the top 200 last year, and saw his string of consecutiv­e Ryder Cup appearance­s end at five. He received a medical exemption to play on the PGA Tour but missed the cut in his first two events back and would have lost his tour card but for a rules change.

The PGA Tour decided its rules had “unintentio­nally made it more difficult” for injured players to come back. Therefore, Poulter was allowed to continue for the rest of the season.

“I’ve definitely had some low spots in the last 18 months,” Poulter said. “And certainly 12 months, I was getting very down. It’s easy to be down when you feel you’re a great player and all of a sudden you’re hampered with a bit of injury. You’re not getting the results you want. It’s very easy to slide away.

“So I’m proud of the way I’ve been able to refocus, get things back on the straight and narrow, clear away some of the noise in the background, and get back to really focusing hard on what I need to do to get the level of golf back that I think I can play.”

reportedly makes about $10 million a year from his Nike deal, so it’s only right that he shines a spotlight on the company. He did that Thursday by wearing white Air Jordan high tops.

According to the Birkdale website: “Smart attire is

Jason Day

essential, golf shoes are to be worn; smart tailored shorts may be worn with knee length socks or short socks; sports shorts and combat/cargo shorts are not permitted.”

But Day said he had to wear the shoes, because they were the ones that matched his black stovepipe pants.

“Got to wear the right pants and right shoe combo with it,” said Day, ranked No. 6 in the world. “If you wear golf shoes with these pants, they don’t look that great. So they look all right with these shoes. I’m happy with them. They look good on TV. I just watched it on replay.”

 ?? GREGORY SHAMUS/GETTY ?? Jon Rahm tees off at Royal Birkdale during the first round of the British Open on Thursday.
GREGORY SHAMUS/GETTY Jon Rahm tees off at Royal Birkdale during the first round of the British Open on Thursday.

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