Popular Posts

2026 British Open: Rahm’s Club-Throwing Sparks Shocking Conduct Warning!

2026 British Open: Rahm’s Club-Throwing Sparks Shocking Conduct Warning!

What Happened When Jon Rahm Lost His Cool at Royal Birkdale?

The Incident at Royal Birkdale

On Friday at the Royal Birkdale golf course, something interesting happened during a big golf tournament.

  • Jon Rahm, a professional golfer, hit a bad shot off the tee at the par-3 15th hole.
  • He got so frustrated that he tomahawked his iron (that means he swung it down hard like an axe) after the poor shot.
  • This was a test of a behavior rule (called a code-of-conduct policy) made by an organization called The R&A.

What The R&A Could Have Done

The R&A had three choices when dealing with Rahm’s outburst:

  1. Issue a warning (a gentle "don’t do that again")
  2. Hand out a two-shot penalty (add two strokes to his score, which is bad)
  3. Declare a disqualification (kick him out of the tournament)

They chose the mildest option. On the 17th tee, an official told Rahm he was getting a warning.

Important Point: A warning is the lightest punishment possible. The R&A decided Rahm’s behavior didn’t deserve a bigger penalty.

How Rahm Played After the Warning

Even with thewarning, Rahm kept playing his game:

  • He made a bogey (one over par) on the 15th hole, dropping to 2 under par.
  • He fought back with birdies (one under par) on holes 16 and 17.
  • He had a 5-foot putt to finish with three birdies in a row but missed to the left.
  • His final score was 3-under 67 for the day.
  • That put him at 4 under par for the tournament, which is four shots behind leader Lucas Herbert.

Understanding the Code of Conduct

Earlier this year, the people who run the four biggest golf tournaments (the majors) announced a code-of-conduct policy.

  • This is just a set of rules to make players behave better during competitions.
  • But many people have said it’s used unfairly — sometimes one player gets a slap on the wrist, another gets punished harder for similar stuff.

Here are two examples showing the inconsistency:

  • Sergio Garcia was caught on camera at the Masters slamming his driver into a tee box twice and then breaking the club against a cooler. He only got a warning.
  • Joaquin Niemann threw his club during a tantrum in the U.S. Open (not on camera). The USGA called it "serious misconduct" and gave him a two-stroke penalty.

What The R&A’s Policy Actually Says

The R&A’s conduct policy puts it like this:

"If a player’s (or their caddie’s) behavior is so far removed from what is expected in the spirit of the game of golf, in accordance with Rule 1.2b, the Chief Referee, in consultation with the Chief Championships Officer, may issue an official warning or apply a penalty of two strokes or disqualification, taking account of the frequency, impact or potential impact, intent and severity of the misconduct. An official warning does not need to be given prior to applying a penalty of two strokes or disqualification."

In simple words: If someone acts really unlike a golfer should, the top refs can warn them, add two strokes, or kick them out — based on how often, how bad, and why it happened. They don’t have to warn before giving a bigger penalty.

What Rahm Thinks About the Policy

Before this happened, Rahm spoke to The Associated Press:

  • He said he approves of a conduct policy as long as it is applied consistently (the same way for everyone).
  • He was playing with Garcia at Augusta on Sunday but said he didn’t know the details of Niemann’s case.
  • Rahm said: "I think it’s good. I get it. They have a code of conduct and they enforce it. Why not? It’s not going to change how I play. To go from zero to a penalty? I don’t know."

Important Point: Rahm supports behavior rules but wants them used fairly for all players, not randomly.

Summary

Jon Rahm got a warning from The R&A after angrily slamming his club at Royal Birkdale, the lightest option available. He kept playing well and sits four behind the lead. The code-of-conduct policy for majors aims to improve behavior but has been criticized for uneven use, as shown by Garcia’s warning and Niemann’s two-shot penalty. Rahm likes the policy if it’s consistent.

FAQ

Q: What does "tomahawked his iron" mean?
A: It means Rahm swung his golf club down into the ground hard, like throwing an axe, because he was mad about a bad shot.

Q: Why didn’t Rahm get a two-shot penalty?
A: The R&A looked at what he did and decided a warning was enough based on their policy’s guidelines about severity and intent.

Q: What is a code-of-conduct policy in golf?
A: It’s a rulebook addition from the majors that tells players to act nicely and lets officials warn, penalize, or disqualify those who don’t.

Q: Who is Lucas Herbert?
A: He was the tournament leader at the time, sitting at 8 under par, four shots ahead of Rahm’s 4 under.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *