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The PGA Tour has changed one of its most controversial rules

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Keyur Khamar

January 07, 2026
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The PGA Tour is changing one of its most controversial rules ahead of the 2026 season, and golf purists should be at least a little bit happy about it.

There are few things that get Golf Twitter fired up more than pros playing preferred lies during tournaments. To many, the "Lift, Clean, and Place" rule equates to lift, clean and cheat as players in the fairway are allowed to move their golf ball within one club length (no closer to the hole) in wet conditions.

But as PGA Tour winner Michael Kim revealed on Tuesday, the tour has made an alteration to this local rule that will lessen how much relief a player can take. Have a look:

As Kim explains, only being able to move your golf ball the length of a scorecard and not a full club length is "a great new rule change." Kim adds, "Experienced it during DP world tour and thought it was much better. A full club length can really change the angle of a chip shot some times."

In a follow-up tweet, Kim confirms that, yes, all scorecards used on the PGA Tour are standard length so there can be no shenanigans with players using bigger ones.

To the "Play it as it lies!" crowd including those at the USGA, this still isn't a perfect solution. And it still doesn't address the PGA Tour's seemingly generous invoking of this rule. But this small modification will make many—including the players themselves—feel better about it.