Golf

Bizarre Patrick Reed rules situation results in 'lucky' drop


Patrick Reed is at the center of controversy again at the Dubai Desert Classic, this time because of a ‘lucky’ drop after a lost ball.

Getty Images/Twitter @jkirkpatrick99

A long week for Patrick Reed just grew even longer.

Just days after Reed’s tee-throwing incident with Rory McIlroy set the golf world ablaze, the enigmatic former Masters winner found himself in the crosshairs of a bizarre rules controversy on Saturday at the DP World Tour’s Dubai Desert Classic resulting in a drop that Reed later called “lucky.”

After a wayward tee shot on the 359-yard par-4 17th hole at Emirates Golf Club, Reed arrived at his ball to find it lodged in one of three palm trees adjacent to the fairway. With the help of a pair of binoculars and “two on-course referees and several marshals,” Reed identified his ball in the tree closest to the green. DP World Tour chief referee John Paramor used the binoculars to confirm Reed’s identification.

Both golfer and referee conferred on the ruling, which resulted in Reed taking an unplayable from underneath the set of palm trees closest to the hole, granting him an unobstructed view of the green.

Back at home, however, replays appeared to show Reed’s ball lodging in the tree furthest from the green, leading some viewers to suggest he had misidentified his golf ball in an apparent effort to earn a better angle into the green. Other angles of the palm where Reed said his ball was stuck appeared to show scores of other golf balls — at least six of them in one angle alone — lodged into the palm.

In a post-round interview with the golf account @TourMiss, Reed downplayed the location of his drop as little more than a lucky break, offering that his unique way of marking a golf ball — with an “arrow” and red dot — made him certain the ball he identified in the tree was his.

“I got lucky that we were able to look through the binoculars and you have to make sure it’s your ball,” Reed said. “How I mark my golf balls is I always put an arrow on the end of my line — because the Pro V1 arrow on the end stops before it — so you can see the arrow. And you could definitely see and identify the line with the arrow on the end. The Rules official luckily was there to reconfirm and check to make sure it was mine as well.”

Reed would go on to make bogey on the hole en route to a 3-under 69 on Saturday in Dubai. He sits at 11 under through three rounds at the Desert Classic, tied for 4th and four strokes back of the leader, Rory McIlroy.

In recent years, Reed’s on-course transgressions have resulted in a handful of rules-related controversies. In 2019, NBC cameras appeared to show him improving his lie from a waste bunker at the Hero World Challenge — an offense for which tournament officials later assessed him a two-stroke penalty. At the Farmers Insurance Open in 2021, Reed was criticized for removing his ball from the ground while he awaited a rules official to rule on relief for an embedded ball — a move Reed attributed to pace of play. The official eventually arrived on the scene and ruled that Reed was eligible for embedded-ball relief. Reed went on to win the tournament by five shots.

Just this week, Reed found himself at the center of a separate controversy when he appeared to throw a tee in the direction of Rory McIlroy after McIlroy ignored him during a practice round. McIlroy later downplayed the situation, but attributed the awkwardness to Reed’s lawyers, who subpoenaed McIlroy at his residence on Christmas Eve.

“Yeah, I was subpoenaed by his lawyer on Christmas Eve,” he explained. “So of course, trying to have a nice time with my family and someone shows up on your doorstep and delivers that, you’re not going to take that well.

So again, I’m living in reality, I don’t know where he’s living,” McIlroy said. “If I were in his shoes, I wouldn’t expect a hello or a handshake.”

Reed also downplayed the severity of the situation but slammed McIlroy in his own press conference.

“He saw me and he decided not to react. It’s unfortunate,” Reed said. “But it is one of those things: if you’re going to act like an immature little child then you might as well be treated like one.”

Reed will begin his final round at the Dubai Desert Classic at 9:15 a.m. local time.

James Colgan

Golf.com Editor

James Colgan is an assistant editor at GOLF, contributing stories for the website and magazine. He writes the Hot Mic, GOLF’s weekly media column, and utilizes his broadcast experience across the brand’s social media and video platforms. A 2019 graduate of Syracuse University, James — and evidently, his golf game — is still defrosting from four years in the snow. Prior to joining GOLF, James was a caddie scholarship recipient (and astute looper) on Long Island, where he is from. He can be reached at james.colgan@golf.com.





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