Blue in Munich
Crocked Professional Yeti Impersonator
Ok. The rule being challenged is 6-6d which if breached leads to a DQ of a player and in particular that aspect of it whereby the failure to include the penalty for a breach of rule of which he was unaware. Those who think it is stupid/ridiculous/draconian etc might think of their answer to this question:
You have handed in your card with a score that is going to win a tournament. The runner up is 1 stroke behind you. There is necessarily a moment laid down at which your card is considered to be returned and cannot thereafter be altered.* At some point after that moment, it is discovered that you had breached a rule and not realised it. The penalty is 2 strokes. Would you be happy to step up and take the first prize, knowing that you had unwittingly incurred a penalty and that your score should actually have been 1 more than the guy getting second prize?
If anyone's answer to that is yes, it says something about his integrity as a sportsman. If the answer is no, then you need to have available the penalty of disqualification for submitting a wrong score.
And to anticipate anyone's saying that the player should be allowed to alter his score when the facts of the penalty have come to light, bear in mind that you could not leave such a situation open indefinitely. Imagine if just at the moment the announcement had started, "And the Champion Golfer of the Year is ......" the runner-up could butt in to say, "Hang on a minute, I've just realised I only took a 3 at the 15th, not a 4. There should be a playoff."
That one is already covered and has been since at least the 1968 Masters and possibly before, so hardly a valid point.
I certainly wouldn't be happy to accept the first prize in the circumstance you describe, but I also wouldn't be happy to be disqualified for failing to add a penalty that I knew absolutely nothing about and therefore couldn't possibly know I needed to add.
Your comment (part of which I have bolded) goes on afterwards to state "you need to have available the penalty of disqualification for submitting a wrong score." Need to have available. Not necessarily to impose, but need to have available, for the obvious circumstance where players knew but chose not to add the penalty.
I'm not suggesting that the officials did anything wrong, I'm aware that the the player and caddie are one, I'm more aware than most that ignorance of the law is no excuse, and I'm not arguing against any of those points. My beef with the situation is that it offends my sense of fair play that someone is DQ'd for failing to add a penalty that they knew nothing about.
Whilst I'd agree that ignorance of the law is no excuse, there is another credo that appears quite appropriate in this case, which is that rigid justice is the biggest injustice.