I couldn't find anywhere else on the Web that was talking about this so I am doing it here...
On Sunday, on #11 at the Stadium course, Tony Finau hit his second shot into the water. He couldn't see where it went in from where he hit it, but, of course, the tv viewers could. He ended up taking a drop right next to the green, when in actuality he should have been quite a bit back and having a short pitch over water to a tight pin.
A couple minutes before the drop was taken, one of the announcers, Curt Byrum I think, said something about he and his caddy being in the wrong place, but nobody else said anything about it the rest of the broadcast.
Finau seems like a really good guy, so I have zero suspicion that he gave himself the benefit of the doubt or anything like that.
I think the tours don't take viewer call-ins about that stuff anymore (not that I personally would have called in).
Someone said bad drops are the golf rule that is most often broken on tour.
Should Byrum have told the on-course announcer to tell Finau where the ball went in the water? Announcers don't seem to have any problem relaying info to a player when he is looking for a lost ball. How is this any different (other than it hurts the player instead of helping him, but it protects the field).