There was some drama on Thursday morning in the featured group at TPC Sawgrass as Rory McIlroy, Jordan Spieth and Viktor Hovland were involved in a long discussion over where McIlroy's ball crossed into the water on the 7th hole (his 16th of the day).
It was the second time McIlroy had to take a drop after also pulling it left into the lake on the 18th, and the players couldn't seem to agree as to where was the right spot.
McIlroy believed that his ball bounced to the right of and above the red line first, and therefore pointing out where it crossed to be the position of his drop but Spieth walked over to say he was told by TV workers that it went straight into the water.
Viktor Hovland said he thought it was "really close" and "couldn't say".
"Everyone that I'm hearing that had eyes on it, which again is not what matters, are saying they're 100% certain it landed below the line," Spieth said of what he heard from TV crews.
"I think my ball bounced above the red line but it's not definitive," McIlroy said to the rules official when he arrived.
The ruling took a good 10 minutes to sort out, with the three players, caddie, officials and even Sky Sports' Wayne 'Radar' Riley involved, whose name got brought up by Jordan Spieth after his opinion was asked on the 18th hole earlier in the day.
"We have no evidence so you guys have got to go with what you saw," the official said.
"There's a little bit of an atmosphere out here," Radar said at the end of hole after earlier saying he didn't know why his name was being brought up by Spieth.
"I think Jordan was just trying to make sure that I was doing the right thing. I mean, I was pretty sure that my ball had crossed where I was sort of dropping it. It's so hard, right, because there was no TV evidence. I was adamant," McIlroy said after signing for a seven-under-par 65.
"But I think, again, he was just trying to make sure that I was going to do the right thing. If anything, I was being conservative with it. I think at the end of the day we're all trying to protect ourselves, protect the field, as well. I wouldn't say it was needless. I think he was just trying to make sure that what happened was the right thing."
The PGA Tour later released the full video from the broadcast. See for yourself...
Watch the entire exchange:
Rory McIlroy, Jordan Spieth and Viktor Hovland discuss McIlroy's drop on No. 7. Rory makes double bogey to move from solo leader to T2. pic.twitter.com/dkV6a5Q22WMarch 14, 2024
Barstool Sports Journalist Dan Rapaport, who features in Netflix docuseries Full Swing, tweeted that the vibes in the group were "very strange."
McIlroy eventually dropped his ball and would go on to make a double bogey, dropping him back from eight-under-par back to minus-six.
It's the second time Viktor Hovland has been in a debate over where a ball crossed the line at TPC Sawgrass, after a frosty issue occurred with Daniel Berger in 2022.
This latest rules discussion involving McIlroy, Hovland and Spieth certainly made for some fascinating TV. Here's what social media were saying:
What a sport pic.twitter.com/iFkuzDkHrVMarch 14, 2024
Some of the best audio of the entire year currently on PGA Tour Live between Rory, Spieth and Hovland ... shoutout to the broadcast team for laying out for 5+ minutes and allowing that conversation about Rory's drop to exist.March 14, 2024
This is taking an incredible amount of time to sort Rory's drop on the 7th. #PlayersChampionshipMarch 14, 2024
Out with the Rory/Spieth/Hovland group and the vibes are strange. Very strange.March 14, 2024
They should make that Rory-Spieth-Hovland exchange episode 9 of Full Swing S2.March 14, 2024
🐢 “I believe it crossed where the turtles were back there…” - Hovi pic.twitter.com/aLEOmAM2wHMarch 14, 2024
That whole Rory-Spieth-Viktor conversation about Rory's drop is the type of stuff that the @pgatour should lean heavily into ... it's one of the unique parts of golf where the players govern themselves and it was a fascinating conversation. Post the whole thing!March 14, 2024