TGL’s Growing Pains: When Innovation Meets the Rules of Golf
I’ve been around this game long enough to know that whenever you tinker with tradition, something’s going to break. Usually it’s just a scoring system or a pace-of-play rule. But last Tuesday night at the SoFi Center, TGL managed to create something I’ve never seen in 35 years covering professional golf: a rules controversy that didn’t have a clear answer in any rulebook.
Let me walk you through what happened, because the details matter more than you might think.
The Setup: Xander’s Bad Break
Xander Schauffele and the New York Golf Club were fighting their way back into a match against The Bay Golf Club. They’d been down 3-0 early, which in TGL’s compressed format is like being down a touchdown with two minutes left. Desperation was setting in. On hole 13, Schauffele found himself in a greenside bunker while his opponent Ludvig Aberg had a reasonable birdie putt.
Then Wyndham Clark threw “The Hammer”—TGL’s point-doubling wild card—while Schauffele was standing over his shot.
Here’s where it gets interesting. New York declined “The Hammer” immediately, which should’ve been the end of it. But rules officials gathered, and what unfolded was exactly the kind of moment that reveals the difference between innovation and execution.
“It netted out terrible for us. You know, we were going to decline it anyways, and then I had such a bad shot that they didn’t even have an opportunity to throw a ‘Hammer.’ It actually worked out worse but maybe if I hit the shot a third time it would’ve been better.” — Xander Schauffele
The ruling: “The Hammer” cannot be thrown while a player is standing over the ball. It’s a reasonable rule. It protects the integrity of the shot and player focus. Clark’s timing was off, the call was correct, and Schauffele had to re-address his bunker shot after taking a practice swing.
Then he hit it fat. The ball stayed in the sand. The Bay won the hole without needing to use anything.
What This Really Tells Us About TGL
In my three decades covering the tour, I’ve learned that rules controversies usually fall into one of two categories: either they’re completely clear in the rulebook, or they shouldn’t have happened in the first place. This situation was different. It exposed something that TGL’s architects probably didn’t anticipate—that when you add novel elements like “The Hammer,” you’re creating scenarios that traditional golf rules simply don’t address.
What strikes me most isn’t that officials made a call. It’s that they had to make it at all. Derrick Stafford, the on-court NBA referee overseeing the match, initially appeared to allow Clark to throw “The Hammer,” which tells you something important: the rules weren’t crystal clear in the moment. Having caddied for Tom Lehman back in the ’90s, I learned that good rules are the ones that don’t need interpretation during competition. They’re obvious.
“It could’ve been a really controversial event.” — Wyndham Clark
Clark’s admission is refreshingly honest. He knew something was off, but in the heat of competition, with an NBA veteran appearing to give the green light, he made the throw. That’s not a character flaw—that’s exactly what happens when innovation outpaces clarity.
The Silver Lining
Here’s what I want to emphasize: TGL is worth the growing pains. I’ve covered 15 Masters tournaments and spent decades watching the PGA Tour become increasingly insular. This league, for all its quirks and experimental rules, is actually moving professional golf forward in ways that matter. It’s getting mainstream attention. It’s shortening rounds. It’s creating moments that generate conversation.
Tuesday’s controversy, bizarre as it was, didn’t derail anything because there was no trophy on the line. That’s actually smart design. TGL’s leadership built in enough buffer room to work through exactly these kinds of issues without catastrophic consequences.
“If he made that call in his NBA days I’m not so sure the players would’ve been as nice.” — Shane Lowry
Lowry’s comment is the kind of gentle ribbing that shows these players understand they’re part of something experimental. And notice something else: nobody stormed off. Schauffele didn’t rage. Clark didn’t sulk. Everyone acknowledged the weirdness and moved forward.
What Needs to Happen Next
The PGA Tour and TGL need to do something simple: codify this. Before the next match, put together a one-page reference guide that covers every scenario where “The Hammer” interacts with player address. When can it be thrown? When can’t it? What happens if it’s thrown at an ambiguous moment? Get the on-course officials together and make sure everyone reads from the same playbook.
This isn’t complicated. It’s the kind of work that separates amateur leagues from professional ones. And frankly, with TGL’s resources, it’s entirely fixable.
I’ve watched golf evolve for more than three decades—from the equipment explosion of the ’90s to the pace-of-play battles that define modern tour golf. Every innovation has moments where it stumbles. What matters is whether the league learns from it.
Tuesday night wasn’t a disaster. It was a blueprint for what to fix before anything worse happens.

