Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Slow play is being tackled by Euro Tour

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THE European golf tour has announced a four-point plan to tackle slow play, including a shortened process before players are handed a one-shot penalty.

Financial penalties will also be increased for players who are regularly timed by officials during the season, while members will have to pass an online rules test and field sizes in fully sanctioned events will be reduced from 156 to a minimum of 144.

Currently, a player being monitored would have to exceed the time allowance, 50 seconds if first to play, 40 seconds thereafter, before being officially timed and would then have to exceed the limit twice more in the same round to be given a one-shot penalty.

Under the new regulation­s to be introduced next season, when players are out of position and either being monitored or timed, a one-shot penalty will be incurred if they exceed the time limit twice.

Players will have the option to request one time extension per round, giving an additional 40 seconds to hit a shot.

Fines for consistent­ly slow players who are regularly timed will increase. For example, a player who is timed

15 times in the 2020 season will have to pay £26,000 in fines as opposed to £9,000 this year.

The slow play debate turned personal last week as Bryson DeChambeau came in for criticism from fellow profession­als after taking two minutes and 20 seconds to hit a putt during the second round of The Northern Trust at Liberty National.

However, the European Tour’s initiative stemmed from a meeting of its Tournament Committee and was approved in July.

“There is no doubt that pace of play is a hot topic in golf and, as players, we were keen to explore ways to address these issues in various areas,” tournament committee chairman David Howell said.

“We have had interestin­g debates in the process of agreeing the new initiative­s but, with a combinatio­n of education, deterrents, technology and modificati­ons to the fields, we believe we have arrived at a set of fair and proportion­al measures to improve the experience for everyone involved in the game.”

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