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The conditions at the Memorial Park Golf Club are not favorable. The last couple of days in Houston, Texas saw a lot of rain. The fairways were flooded enough for the course to be evacuated thrice in two days. Now that the major has teed off, the pros are paying the price for the poor conditions. And that has made it difficult for them to perform.

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As Beth Ann Nichols from Golfweek reported, “It’s a complete guessing game. The topic of mud balls came up often during pre-tournament press conferences at soggy Memorial Park. On Thursday, in the opening round of the Chevron Championship, many LPGA players were surprised by the tour’s decision to play the ball down. Two-time Chevron winner Brittany Lincicome counted seven times during the course of her opening round that her ball had enough dirt caked on to impact the flight.”

Looking to compete for her third Chevron Championship title, Brittany Lincicome has had a horrid time in the first round of the event. After 18 holes, she shot a 6-over 78 in a round packed only with bogeys. Six bogeys and twelve pars were enough to push her down to T122 on the leaderboard. We can assume the seven mudballs throughout the day had a huge role to play in that.

But the tournament officials didn’t budge. Even after watching the multi-time major winners downfall. They didn’t even listen to Hannah Green, who had the same complaint.

“I feel like we need to have our ruling go to a card length instead a club length. Because I feel like the reason why we never play it up is because we actually are somewhat changing the angle of the shot. With a scorecard length, you can’t. Maybe one day that rule will change and help us out a little bit.”

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The PGA Tour changed the rules of preferred lies after receiving a lot of complaints about it. They modified the relief from club lenght, (46 inches on average,) to full scorecard lenght (11 inches). That made the rule more acceptable.

However, the LPGA Tour still follows the club lenght rule for preferred lies. Green believes that’s the reason the tournament officials don’t apply it frequently in challenging conditions. She believes that if the LPGA Tour also changes the rules, then the tournament officials will be more comfortable exercising them.

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