New Augusta National-based rule targets slow play

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Fred Ridley (Photo by Ben Jared/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)

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Bobby Jones, the legendary amateur and Augusta National co-founder, didn’t just play golf well — he also played the game quickly. There was little fidgeting or second-guessing when Jones stepped over a shot. Slide in, maybe a quick waggle and let it rip. Ditto on the greens, where he believed examining putts from multiple angles was unnecessary if not counterproductive.

A century or so after Jones’s prime, his proclivity for a peppy pace is alive and well at the club he helped establish — or, at the least, the club’s forward-looking chairman, Fred Ridley, has championed the cause. Look no further than Ridley’s state-of-the-union remarks at the Masters a year ago. In the weeks leading up to the 2025 tournament, the sluggish pace on the PGA Tour had become so offensive that CBS Golf reporter Dottie Pepper called it out on the air.

Pepper’s critique sparked much heated debate on the topic, which led Ridley to say in scripted comments to the press: “The subject of pace of play is top of mind. Playing without undue delay, as the rules and the game’s traditions dictate, is an essential skill of golf at all levels. Recognizing the challenges professionals face each week, I also believe pace of play is an important element of the examination of the world’s best players.

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