A New Englander's Take on Golf
June 18, 2025
A set of tee markers that caught my fancy at a golf course that is widely adored -- Old Tabby Links. Surely, no one would try and smash these beauties. But some of those put up the PGA Tour and at the majors are a different story.

So on those times when his job required him to be PGA Tour rules-enforcer and counselor at the same time, Mark Russell would be the masterful diplomat he was. “I understand it, I really do,” he would say to the player who was guilty of a little too much aggression on an inanimate object that was someone else’s property.

“But you can’t be smashing the damn tee markers.”

Truthfully, the huge majority of players listened because tee markers by overwhelming numbers lived to see another day. But let’s face it, “tee markers are sitting ducks,” said Curtis Strange and a fellow member of the World Golf Hall of Fame, Ernie Els, once explained that “Nobody’s made of rock out here. We all have our feelings.”

In other words, “it didn’t happen all the time,” said Russell, who was the longtime Vice-President of Rules and Regulations before retiring in 2021. “But (the tee markers) are convenient and in the heat of the moment, once in a while it did happen.”

Case in point: Last Friday’s second round of the U.S. Open at Oakmont when Rory McIlroy showed his disgust with an errant drive by smashing a tee marker on the left side of the 17th tee box. Sure, it was yet another hiccup in McIlroy’s wild post-Masters ride, but table that discussion for now. Instead, let’s find some sympathy in our hearts for defenseless tee markers and ask: Why are they the ones always getting smashed?

“Because they’re there.”

That answer was provided by the wisest sage on the pro golf scene, the esteemed Billy Harmon, and after laughing in a heartily fashion at his answer, it occurred to me that there’s plenty of fodder to support a story about smashing tee markers.

And one would need to start with the tee markers that likely absorbed the most smashes in PGA Tour history – those real pineapples that adorned all 18 holes at Waialae CC in Honolulu, which has hosted a PGA Tour tournament since 1965.

Mark Calcavecchia raised his hand and has never deflected ownership of his moment of anger years ago.

“I blew up a pineapple in Hawaii on the fourth hole of the year. Just covered the poor lady marshal,” said Calcavecchia. “John Huston asked me if I asked her if she had pineapple insurance.”

Corey Pavin is another one who one time buried his club into a very soft pineapple on the 13th tee, much to the misfortune of spectators standing close by. Heck, even Brad Faxon – as mild-mannered a player as you could meet – beat up on a Sony Open pineapple one year.

Having wised up, tournament officials at the Sony Open years ago changed to tee markers that are of the traditional box shape. They can still be picked on, but nothing like the days when players could easily take out their anger on a soft, perhaps over-ripe, pineapple.

“They were abused more than any tee marker on Tour,” said Strange. “Why? Because they were soft.”

Not that he condones such destruction, but Strange never was one to over-react about competitors smashing those pineapple tee markers at the Sony Open. “Quite frankly,” said Strange, “they have plenty of them over there. Get over it.”

The two-time U.S. Open champion explained, “We all have moments where we regret what we do, but sometimes it just happens.”

To some more than others, it appears, because in a very primitive data search of golfers smashing tee markers, two names came up frequently: Ian Poulter and Tyrrell Hatton.

The latter smashed a tee marker during the 2018 World Cup of Golf at the Metropolitan Club in Sydney, Australia. Then at the Dubai Desert Classic this past February Hatton explained that he was guilty as charged but threw himself on the mercy of the court.

“Yes, I probably shouldn’t have done it. Does that make me a bad person? No. It was a spur-of-the moment thing,” said the volatile, yet loveable Englishman.

Poulter is masterful at exonerating himself because he apparently considers himself the only one out there with competitive fire. “I won’t lose my passion,” he declared after smashing a tee marker in Cologne, France, in the 2011 Mercedes-Benz Championship. Four years earlier he had been reprimanded for breaking tee markers at the Open Championship at Carnoustie, then at the British Masters.

“I’m not going to accept hitting a bad shot,” said Poulter in his own defense. “It’s not in my DNA.”

Hitting those poor, little ol’ tee markers seems to be in his DNA, but players always need to step back a minute and consider what happened to Aussie Brett Ogle at the 2001 Heineken Classic outside of Perth.

Ogle smashed a tee marker after an errant drive and found out later that a piece of flying debris had cut a 43-old woman standing close by. “A hurtful fit of pique ”opined the Sydney Morning Herald and Ogle felt so awful that he reached out and apologized to the woman.

Certain golf courses, given their extreme set-up, will test players’ nerves more than others. Oakmont, for sure. But Carnoustie might be even more brutal on golfers. It led Lewine Mair, for years the widely-respected golf correspondent for the Daily Telegraph, to write about the actions of Sweden’s Henrik Stenson at the 2007 Open Championship.

“After hitting his first shot out of bounds at the eighth and knocking his second way right, (Stenson) took out his frustrations on the R&A’s tee marker. It smashed into a million pieces . . . ” she wrote, adding later that the Swede was assessed a fine of 500 pounds.

In Stenson’s case it was tough to hide, given the eyeballs on an event the stature of the Open Championship. But Russell said rules officials can’t be everywhere, so many times they only hear of tee marker-smashes through marshals.

“(Yet) I never had a player who didn’t own up,” said Russell. In fact, one time a player corrected the marshal’s account. “(The player) told me, ‘I didn’t take one big smash, I took a swipe at it and missed, but on my second swing I got it.’ ”

If there’s a deterrent, Russell saw it years ago at the LaJet Golf Classic in Abilene, Texas. “They used these oil drill bits and big, steel tee markers,” laughed Russell. “No one was going to smash those.”

Reminded of those tee markers, Strange laughed. “I won there (in 1984),” but, no, it never entered his mind to smash one of them. He could get hot, yes, but Strange wasn’t a tee-marker-smasher, though he understood why others were and to this day he’s not offended when he does see a player act as McIlroy did at Oakmont.

If the PGA Tour or the R&A or the USGA or the PGA of America think it’s an issue and this smashing of tee markers needs to be eliminated, Strange suggests “they just put a big stone there.”

Any chance some of those LaJet tee markers could be found and dusted off?

I have a passion for playing golf that is surpassed only by my passion for writing about people who have a passion for playing golf, for working in golf, for living their lives around golf. Chasing the best professional golfers around the world for The Boston Globe, Golfweek Magazine, and the PGA Tour for more than 20 years was a blessing for which I’ll be eternally grateful. I’ve been left with precious memories of golf at its very best, but here is a takeaway that rates even more valuable – the game belongs to everyone who loves it. “Power Fades” is a weekly tribute with that in mind, a digital production to celebrate a game that many of us embrace. If you share a passion for golf, sign up down below for a free subscription and join the ride. Should you have suggestions, thoughts, critiques, or general comments, pass them along. And if you’d like to support “Power Fades” with contributing sponsorships or advertisements, you can contact me. Jim@powerfades.com

1 – Sorry, the Knicks have to keep searching

Had to break the news to the Knicks the other night. My wife refuses to give them permission to speak to me about their head-coaching job.


2 – Why so mad?

If this is how Rory McIlroy is acting after winning the career Grand Slam, can you imagine how miserable he would be if Justin Rose had won that playoff at Augusta?


3 – Kid stuff

The average age for the top 10-ranked women in the world of pro golf is 24.3. And to think, it used to be suggested that a pro golfer’s prime was 28-to-35.

4 – Title it however you wish, but water is water

The Rules of Golf call it “temporary water.” It’s not termed casual. So my guess is, even though Sam Burns and Adam Scott might have needed a pair of oars in those fairways coming home, it was not ruled temporary. Meaning, I guess, the water was permanent.

GOLF COURSE SIGNS: Continuing to admire the messages that golf course owners/operators feel the need to get across to their golfers, here's one that longtime friend and fellow golf writer Phil Robinson sent in. At Crail, a brilliant course in Scotland, as if the barbed wire isn't clear enough, a sign reinforces the idea that you shouldn't think about going into the field. Should you have photos of signs that have caught your fancy, feel free to forward them to jim@powerfades.com

5 – Still waiting for warm weather

How bad has our late spring weather been in the northeast? Buddy of mine called to say he was still playing “winter rules” and wearing three layers in June.


6 – Interpretations are personal

Of course, he’s the same guy who starts playing “leaf rules” three weeks before foliage begins.


7 – Let’s be honest here

Gush about the U.S. Open being arguably the sternest test every year. Lavish praise on the army of superintendents pushing mowers. Pontificate about how historic and magnificent these golf courses are. But please, stop calling it a field of “the best 156 golfers in the world.” It is not. Far from it. It is a healthy gathering of the best golfers in the world and a significant list of qualifiers who present great human-interest stories and prove it definitely is an “Open” championship. But it is not "the best 156 golfers in the world."


8 – The winning caddie

It’s unlikely that anyone who watched the U.S. Open stopped and said, “Hey, is that a former two-time winner of the Boston Open on the bag for J.J. Spaun?” But indeed it was. Cheers to you, Mark Carens.


9 – They haven’t got a chance

Biggest mismatch over the last 20 years in golf: Trees trying to stand up against today’s architects and the golf committees who hire them.


 

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