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Imago

USGA Rule 9.4b states that if the player lifts or deliberately touches their ball at rest or causes it to move, the player gets one penalty stroke. Simple enough on paper, but during the Valspar Championship at Innisbrook on Friday, Matt Wallace applied it against himself.

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Matt Wallace arrived at the par-5 11th hole having started his second round at 2-over par. The chances of him making the cutline looked bleak. On the 11th, his drive found the trees on the right, leaving him on a lie of pine straw and leaves. As he addressed the ball for his second shot, it moved. Nobody around him noticed, but he called it on himself anyway.

“When I was waggling, the ball definitely moved,” Matt Wallace told the media. “Didn’t know if it was in the action of my swing, but I definitely touched it, and the ball moved from that. I just asked a few people around, saying obviously I thought some people would see that, and nobody saw it. So, yeah, maybe a bit of good karma coming my way.”

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“I’d rather miss the cut doing something like that by one shot and then giving it my all for the rest than making it and knowing something’s happened. So I called it on myself, and then I made a few birdies. I’m happy with the outcome, and it’s the right thing to do.”

Positive karma arrived quickly. Despite the one-stroke penalty, Wallace made par on the 11th and then birdied three of his last five holes to card a 68, finishing the round at 1-under overall, two shots inside the cut line in the $9.1 million event. Wallace has gone from T7 to T17 to missing the cut entirely at this course in three straight years. Despite Friday being about settling scores at the Copperhead course, Wallace opted to be honest.

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Making the weekend at one of his favorite PGA Tour stops carried significant weight, both in terms of ranking points and prize money, for Wallace, as he had missed three of four cuts to start the 2026 season. Notably, Matt Wallace isn’t the only golfer who has inflicted a penalty on himself.

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In 2010, Brian Davis called a two-stroke penalty on himself during a playoff at the Verizon Heritage after his club grazed a reed on the backswing. Nobody else saw it. He lost the tournament as a direct result. Davis has since been held up as one of the sport’s clearest examples of integrity over outcome. The tournament was never on the line for Wallace, but the principle was no different from what Davis did in 2010.

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Matt Wallace’s and Davis’s self-calls sit within a broader pattern on the PGA Tour. Golf is a gentleman’s game, after all.

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A pattern the PGA Tour knows well

In August 2024, Sahith Theegala reported a club-touched-sand violation in a bunker at the Tour Championship, even though commentators couldn’t confirm it on replay. He took the two-shot penalty anyway, costing him millions in prize money and leaderboard position.

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Justin Thomas did the same at the 2025 RBC Heritage, calling a one-shot penalty on himself after his ball moved slightly while removing loose debris. The infraction turned a birdie into a par and shifted his leaderboard standing, a consequence he accepted without hesitation or outside prompting.

Russell Henley went further. In a 2025 incident where officials themselves concluded no penalty was necessary, Henley disagreed. He said he was certain he had caused the movement and penalised himself.

As for Wallace, let the karma keep coming.

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