07/18/25 01:24:00
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07/18 13:22 CDT British Open bunkergate: R&A does away with tradition of having
a crew rank bunkers
British Open bunkergate: R&A does away with tradition of having a crew rank
bunkers
By DOUG FERGUSON
AP Golf Writer
PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland (AP) --- It only took two holes for Jon Rahm to hit
into his first bunker in the British Open. And that's how long it took caddie
Adam Hayes to realize the R&A had decided to end a tradition unlike any other
at the major championships.
Hayes was going to have to rake the sand himself.
This is nothing that merits hazardous pay. Hayes has been caddying for more
than 20 years and it's part of the job.
But at the British Open, it was always different. Dating to 1984 at St.
Andrews, what now is the British and International Golf Greenkeepers
Association (BIGGA) has sent a crew to the Open where one person walked with
each group and raked the bunkers in a trained, uniform fashion.
Not at Royal Portrush.
"I looked around and was like, ?Uh, I've got to rake this,'" Hayes said. "I do
think it's one of the cool things about the The Open, a tradition that for
whatever reason they cut out. And I think they should bring it back.
"I don't know why they did it," he said. "But I don't know a lot of things."
That reason? Good question.
"It's a change for us, but we think a good one," said Mark Darbon, the new CEO
of the R&A. When asked why it was good, he only said, "A number of factors. We
just think it's a good model for us here at Portrush."
What next? Mr. Whippy ice cream without the chocolate flake?
According to Jim Croxton, the CEO of BIGGA, the R&A informed the group after
last year's British Open their services would no longer be needed.
"With the growth of on-site greenkeeping teams, as well as the R&A providing
top class agronomy support, the requirement for the additional Support Team has
lessened; in recent years this team was only responsible for match raking,"
Croxton said in an email to Golf.com.
News travels slowly. In fact, it seems even the R&A overlooked the decision
because on the entry way to portable restrooms for players, a sign reads, "For
use by Rules Officials, Players, Caddies, Walking Scorers, Scoreboard Carriers
& Bunker Rakers."
All it took was one round for potential problems, both involving Tommy
Fleetwood. His caddie, Ian Finnis, spent an extraordinary amount of time raking
a bunker from which Fleetwood had a plugged lie near the lip.
Then on the next hole, they discovered the bunker they were in apparently had
not been raked, or at least not raked properly. The best he could do was
advance it a few yards into the rough, leading to a bogey on Thursday.
"It wasn't a great rake job," Fleetwood said. "First thing is I was not very
happy to be in there. That was the first thing, so that's my fault. ... It was
in somebody's hitting mark that hadn't really been raked great. I probably
could have managed it better."
Fleetwood also was perplexed why BIGGA was not brought back.
"They've always had bunker rakers until this week? I thought so. I thought that
was odd," he said. "I mean, still, you just rake the bunkers, right? It's part
of the game. I'm not going to hold it against anyone too much. You don't know
what was going on, you don't know what was happening in that moment. I'm not
going to get angry about anyone where you don't know what's happening, but it
wasn't great.
"Yeah, bunker rakers would have been nice."
Among the reasons cited by Croxton and an R&A spokesman was the desire to
eliminate the amount of people --- besides players and caddies --- inside the
ropes. How one person performing a service causes the fairways to look like the
M25 loop in London is hard to fathom, especially with so many broadcast
partners.
Mike Kerr, who first caddied at the Open in 2002, was another who didn't
realize there had been a change. He works for Carlos Ortiz and noticed the
caddie for Chris Kirk running the plastic rake through the sand on Thursday and
looked around for the BIGGA crew.
Kerr said it wasn't just a huge perk for caddies for a skilled crew to rake the
bunkers. He felt it helped speed play --- and keep from being rushed.
"It's so hard when you're trying to figure out the wind and the lie and you've
got to the rake the bunker and hurry up to get back to your player," he said.
Brian Harman's caddie, Scott Tway, also was surprised when he saw the caddie
for Joaquin Niemann raking a bunker early in the second round. His first
thought: "Where are the rakers?"
"It was nice. It was awesome. I don't know what happened," Tway said. "For
caddies, that was one of the nicest things about this tournament was not having
to rake bunkers."
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AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf
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