Bryson DeChambeau Hit With Stunning Open Penalty As Contention Turns Chaotic

A controversial ruling at the British Open leaves Bryson DeChambeau reassessing his next move after a stellar round was marred by an unexpected penalty.

Bryson DeChambeau’s second round at the British Open ended with a jolt no one saw coming. He had just finished a 7-under 66, climbed to seven-under for the tournament and moved within a shot of leader Lucas Herbert, then the scorecard changed fast: a two-shot penalty tied to something that happened on the fifth hole.

The ruling came after DeChambeau had already walked off the 18th green, and he immediately pushed back. He then returned to the fifth hole with two rules officials and was seen getting heated while making his case.

The issue centered on his tee shot at the short par-4 5th, which finished in the deep rough right of the green. DeChambeau walked around the area to get a look at his ball and the pin, and officials ruled that he improved his lie by stomping down some of the long grass behind the ball.

Jim Furyk addressed the sequence on the broadcast and laid out why the officials were focused on the turf behind DeChambeau.

“So right before this video started, Bryson backed up,” Furyk said. “You can see the fescue behind him, the grass behind him is pushed backwards.

He backed up into it. He laid it down a little bit.

It’s noticeable, it’s about three steps. And now his ball is forward of that.

Would it have affected his swing I think is really the question. He’s playing the ball way back in his stance, he has a very vertical upright swing, he’s hacking down onto this ball-I think Bryson’s saying that ‘hey, that would not have impeded my swing’ and I think the R&A is questioning that and that’s what they were talking about this whole time.”

Grant Moir, the Chief Rules Referee at The Open, also explained the decision that led to the two-stroke penalty.

The impact on the leaderboard was immediate. DeChambeau’s 66 became a 68, dropping him to five-under for the championship and into a tie for fifth with Sam Burns and Si Woo Kim. Without the penalty, he would have been in the final group Saturday with Herbert, who shot a 62 on Friday to take the solo lead.

What happened after the round made the whole scene even stranger. DeChambeau’s agent said there is a chance he might not play on Saturday, and later said, “He’s a lot of things. He’s not a cheater.”

The agent also said DeChambeau has until his tee time tomorrow to decide whether he will play, and that he will make the call alone, not with his team. “He’s a big boy.

He’ll see how he feels. But he certainly feels he was unfairly penalized.”

It was a wild finish to a round that had been building beautifully for DeChambeau, especially after he caught fire on the back nine and birdied his final two holes. Instead, the day ended with a rules dispute, a penalty, and uncertainty about whether he will tee it up on Saturday.

This is the first cut DeChambeau has made at a major championship this year, and it came with far more drama than anyone could have imagined after his final putt.

In Other News...

British Open Fans Missed One Of Friday's Biggest Moments

Friday at Royal Birkdale had the kind of second-round chaos that can make a major feel like it is happening in layers. Lucas Herbert and Sam Burns both posted eight-under 62s to tie a major-championship record, while Bryson DeChambeau finally made the cut in a major this year and put himself one shot off the lead heading into the weekend. Jon Rahm and Scottie Scheffler stayed in the mix, and Tommy Fleetwood gave the home crowd something to cheer with a move up the board in his own backyard.

Even with all that going on, the day still had room for a few of the sports sharper edges. Wyndham Clarks strong finish was not enough to extend his week, and Rahm had to navigate a tense moment of his own before escaping a conduct penalty. For fans who only caught the broadcast in passing, the leaderboard may have looked busy enough on its own, but the real drama was in how many contenders kept forcing their way into the picture. [Read more 🡒]