Ok - let's get your opinion on this.
A player hits his ball into a water hazard, losing sight of it.
When he reaches the hazard, he sees a ball buried in mud.
He declares it 'unplayable' - or defines it as 'lost in the hazard' (since he can't at this point correctly identify that it is his ball).
He then proceeds into the hazard to recover the ball, with the declared intention to drop according to the rules.
Unable to reach the ball, he grabs a club from the bag, and digs the ball out of the mud.
He finds that it is not his ball anyway (not that it has all that much importance I think, but still ...)
Now - the question:
Did he in fact 'test the hazard' when recovering the ball with the club? Should he recieve a penalty?
Edited to add ...
Would the outcome be different if he had gotten his club out, and leaned on it while pondering whether to attempt to recover the ball?
Or would it be different, had he picked out one of those 'fishing rods' you can buy, and recovered the ball with that?
A player hits his ball into a water hazard, losing sight of it.
When he reaches the hazard, he sees a ball buried in mud.
He declares it 'unplayable' - or defines it as 'lost in the hazard' (since he can't at this point correctly identify that it is his ball).
He then proceeds into the hazard to recover the ball, with the declared intention to drop according to the rules.
Unable to reach the ball, he grabs a club from the bag, and digs the ball out of the mud.
He finds that it is not his ball anyway (not that it has all that much importance I think, but still ...)
Now - the question:
Did he in fact 'test the hazard' when recovering the ball with the club? Should he recieve a penalty?
Edited to add ...
Would the outcome be different if he had gotten his club out, and leaned on it while pondering whether to attempt to recover the ball?
Or would it be different, had he picked out one of those 'fishing rods' you can buy, and recovered the ball with that?
Comment