John,
That was David Feherty and it was in America.
It was and after that the local rule which was authorized was removed from the rule book and the tours were told not to use it. He would no longer be penalized.
Things do change, just as the Stewart Cink incident caused a change and the Mark Roe / Jesper Parnevik score card incident at the 2003 Open caused a change.
Kevin,
The LPGA says they didn't find out about it until after she had teed off on Saturday. They could have gone out and stopped her and the rest of the group while they got her side of the story, they felt that would be disruptive. I have no problem with them waiting in this case.
Richard,
I agree that there should be a better process, my post on my blog which I made long before getting into this discussion says the LPGA should have a staff person in the tent to check everything before the player leaves. The USGA does, the PGA Tour usually does, there is no reason the LPGA can't. Even then, mistakes happen. There was one where there were two signatures on the card, unfortunately neither one was for the player whose card it was (the other two players accidentally both signed it.)
I guess I still fail to see where it is so hard to require a player to take a couple of very simple steps: Check the Scores, Sign the Card and Make sure the person who wrote down the scores signs the card. There are plenty of ways to check all this out to make sure there are no mistakes. Trouble is the players don't want to go through all that because they are so d**n smart they don't need any help. In the end, they will be the ones to pay for their mistake, just as I did once.
I remember meeting with two of my teammates the day after I forgot to sign my card and our team had to count a 90 instead of my 78. They were going to give me a lot of grief. I just looked at them and said, "I f**ked up". They said it wasn't going to be any fun if I admitted my mistake, but it was my mistake so what else could I do?
As an official who sits at the scoring table a lot, I'm willing to let a player sit there until he is totally happy with his card and has had me double or triple check it. Unfortunately we get times where the guys get together off the green and one guy brings all the cards to us, or they just walk up and throw them on the table. Even though I ask them to wait until I've checked it, I'm not going to forcibly hold them until I have. Guess what, if someone was stupid enough not to sign his card, he pays the price and there would absolutely nothing I can do about it.