For most of us mere mortals, a golf ball is a prized possession that we will hang onto for dear life. The phrase “I got round with the same ball” is one we are only rarely able to use and to achieve the feat is a badge of honour.
Apart from anything, golf balls are not cheap – It’s anywhere up to £4.50 every time you break a new one out of the sleeve. Until one is battered into submission, the average amateur’s objective is to hold on to it and use it until they lose it.
How Often Do Pros Change their ball?
Pro golfers are a little different. The smallest fractions can make all the difference at the top level and an imperfection on a golf ball will often cause them to reach for a new one. Golf balls are generally available to them (effectively) free, so cost is not a factor in their decision-making process when it comes to making a change.
Most pros will change their golf ball every few holes if they don’t see any obvious signs of damage. If they fire one off a tree or a cart path, they’ll likely change it on the next hole. If the damage is extreme, they may even be able to change it mid hole, placing a new ball on the original ball’s spot.
Under The Rules of Golf, Rule 4.2c says “The player may substitute another ball only if it can be clearly seen that the original ball is cut or cracked and this damage happened during the hole being played – but not if it is only scratched or scraped or its paint is only damaged or discoloured.”
There are pro golfers who will play with a new ball on every single hole but mainly through superstition rather than requirement – 2002 USPGA Champion and Sky Sports commentator Rich Beem used to do so.
Would A Pro Ever Keep The same ball for 18 holes?
When Jordan Spieth won the Emirates Australian Open in 2014, he used the same ball for all 18 holes in his winning round of 63. So, yes, pros do occasionally use the same ball for a full round. It doesn’t happen often though.
There are even stories of players keeping the same ball for a full tournament. Back in the day, Sam Snead used the same Spalding Ball for 72 holes to win the 1945 Los Angeles Open. More recently Alex Chiarella won the 2019 Lethbridge Paradise Canyon Open on the Mackenzie Tour using the same Titleist 1 for all 72 holes. He felt the ball had “good mojo.”
But that would be a huge rarity these days. Most pros, even at the lower levels, are given balls by their equipment…
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