Houston Chronicle

Reed’s reputation casts doubt

- By Doug Ferguson

The violation was so egregious that Rickie Fowler, glancing at the replay on television, quickly raised his eyebrows and said: “Whoa! What was THAT?” It was Patrick Reed. This was just over a year ago in the Bahamas, the day Reed, who lives in The Woodlands, infamously used the back of his wedge to scoop away sand — twice — from behind his golf ball in a waste bunker, improving his line of play. Only when he was shown video evidence did Reed accept the two-shot penalty, but not before suggesting the camera angle made it look worse than it was.

The penalty, as it turns out, was worth more than two shots.

There is no greater punishment in golf than being stuck with a reputation for cheating.

Reed was always going to have a hard time living down that incident.

It followed him to Australia, where the fans were so abusive his caddie got into it with a spectator and was replaced for the final day of the Presidents Cup. It stayed with him in the chill environmen­t of Kapalua, where a spectator yelled “CHEATER!” after Reed hit a putt in a playoff. A few weeks later in San Diego, Reed asked police to remove hecklers.

The verbal abuse was silenced by golf not having fans because of the pandemic.

And then more outrage involving Reed, fueled mightily by social media, arrived during an otherwise idyllic Saturday afternoon at Torrey Pines.

Moving past this one will be almost impossible.

As far as the PGA Tour is concerned, Reed did nothing wrong on the 10th hole of the third round at the Farmers Insurance Open. And according to the Rules of Golf, which relies on facts over reputation, the tour was right.

“He operated the way the rules permit him to operate,” said John Mutch, the tour’s senior tournament director.

This was about optics. Mostly, it was about Reed.

He pulled his approach from a fairway bunker into thick grass left of the 10th green. Approachin­g where a volunteer had marked the spot with a tiny flag, Reed asked if the ball bounced. “No, I didn’t see it bounce,” the volunteere­d replied.

He turned to his playing partners, PGA Tour rookie Will Gordon and secondyear player Robby Shelton, and told them, “They said it didn’t bounce,” and that he would check for an embedded lie. Crouching over, he marked the spot with a tee, put the ball in the palm of his hand and kept probing the turf for about five seconds when he called for an official. And then he poked around for another five seconds.

“I believe it broke ground, but I’m going to let you make that call,” Reed told Brad Fabel, the rules official.

Fabel didn’t immediatel­y know what he was talking about because Reed had placed the ball about 8 feet away. Reed showed him where the ball was, Fabel poked around and agreed there was a “lip,” meaning the ball had broken the plane of the soil.

Free drop.

The procedure Reed followed wasn’t illegal. It wasn’t even necessary for him to call for an official. Rory McIlroy didn’t ask for a ruling when the same thing happened on the 18th hole that day. And according to McIlroy, Rory Sabbatini also took relief from an embedded ball on the 15th hole Saturday.

The rule (16-3) allows players to proceed as if the ball is embedded provided it is “reasonable to conclude” based on the informatio­n at hand.

Reed wasn’t careful, either. The lie was suspect enough to call for a ruling. Even the rules official working the broadcast, Ken Tackett, suggested the “best practice” would be to leave the ball where it was until the official arrived. That would eliminate anything questionab­le.

And with Reed, there are bound to be questions.

Adding to the firestorm was video that clearly showed the ball bounced forward. That doesn’t change anything. Players can act on only what they know at the time.

But with Reed, it changes everything, and his response after the round only raised another question.

“If we saw the ball bounce or if someone said the ball bounced, then I never would have marked the golf ball,” he said. “You know when the ball bounces, it’s almost impossible for it to break the plane.”

So if it bounced no more than a few feet — roughly the height from which players take a drop — how did it become embedded?

Winning doesn’t take care of everything. Otherwise, the talk out of Torrey Pines would be Reed’s phenomenal short game and his overall toughness that carried him to a fiveshot victory.

Instead, he left with suspicion as his shadow.

Blame that on the Bahamas.

 ?? Katelyn Mulcahy / Getty Images ?? Patrick Reed won the Farmers Insurance Open by five shots last weekend, but a third-round incident added more controvers­y to his career.
Katelyn Mulcahy / Getty Images Patrick Reed won the Farmers Insurance Open by five shots last weekend, but a third-round incident added more controvers­y to his career.

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