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ZERO Class Moments in Golf

Watch next –

00:00 Buzzer
01:25 Shane
02:47 Charley Hull
04:10 Green Jacket
05:40 Lowry
07:07 Rae’s Creek
08:42 Rory Fury
09:55 John Daly
11:29 ZJ
12:50 Heat
14:25 Rory
15:49 Masters Outburst
17:05 Daly
18:39 Reed
20:00 Remote
21:27 Bryson

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From oncourse behavior so trashy it’s embarrassing to explosive confrontations that left everyone speechless. These are the ugliest zeroclass moments in golf history. And first we start with one of the weirdest moments you’ll ever see on a golf course. And it’s courtesy of Keith Mitchell. He steps up to the tea, takes his swing, and instantly hates it. You can see it on his face. The ball veers right, not even close to the line he wanted. And that’s when he completely loses it, slamming his driver into the turf so hard you’d think the ground owed him money. And just when it couldn’t get any worse, it did. Right as his ball is sailing through the air, a loud air horn blasts across TPC Sawrass. Play is officially suspended. The timing is almost comical. Mitchell throwing a tantrum while the course is literally shutting down around him. But here’s the kicker. His shot counts. No mulligans, no redo. Did it cover? He asks his caddy, probably praying for a miracle. It did not, the caddy replies. It went in the water. Yes. Mitchell doesn’t say a word. He just takes a slow, furious walk forward and slams the driver into the turf again as if he’s trying to break the course for daring to betray him. This wasn’t just frustration. It was pure zero class behavior. Like watching a weekend hacker throw a fit. only this time it was at one of golf’s biggest events with the whole world watching. Let’s move on to number 15. Well, Oakmont doesn’t just test your golf game, it tests your soul. And for Shane Lowry, it didn’t take long for the place to chew him up and spit him out. His round started like a slow motion car crash. Bogey on the first, double on the second, bogey on the third, and then another bogey on the fourth. By the time he tapped in for yet another bogey, the frustration had boiled over. Lowry looked like a man who’d had enough, muttering on a hot mic for the world to hear. Okay. But it didn’t stop there. Moments later, after missing another putt, Lowry smacked his putter against the ground. His body language screaming, “Get me out of here.” It was raw, unfiltered, and completely disrespectful to the game’s usual code of composure. Oakmont had officially broken him. The day got worse. On the 14th hole, Lowry picked up his ball without marking it. A penalty so basic it’s usually reserved for amateurs on a weekend scramble. He called it the stupidest thing I’ve ever done. But the damage to his round and his pride was already done. When he stormed off the green, Lowry took out his frustration on a microphone by slamming it into the turf. For Shane Lowry, Oakmont wasn’t just a tough course. It was a battlefield he walked away from. Beaten, bruised, and visibly fed up. Coming in at number 14, golf prides itself on respect. Respect for the game, the course, and your playing partners. But Charlie Hull threw all of that out the window during the US Women’s Open when she decided she had zero time for Lexi Thompson’s pace of play. Hull, known for her fast, nononsense style, was paired with Thompson and Nelly Corda. And by the eighth hole, she’d clearly had enough. As Lexi lined up her putt, Hull didn’t even wait around. She walked straight to the ninth tea, sat down, and essentially said with her actions, “You’re too slow, and I’m not sticking around to watch it.” It was a moment dripping with pure disrespect. Fans noticed immediately. Cameras caught Hall looking annoyed, muttering, and rushing between shots like she wanted to make a point, and she did by flatout refusing to engage with her playing partner. Lexi, for her part, later clapped back online, insisting they’d been waiting on every hole and that no one in the group was warned for slow play, but the damage was done. Hull’s silent protest had already gone viral with golf media exploding over the obvious tension. One fan summed it up perfectly. Charlie Hall didn’t just throw shade, she threw the whole tree at Lexi. This wasn’t just impatience, it was a public snub. a play faster or I’m out message that turned one of golf’s classiest traditions into a bit of a schoolyard drama. Next up number 13. If Lee of Golf needed drama before its season finale, Brooks Kepka and Phil Mickelson delivered it on a silver platter. Brooks, captain of the leading team, walked into the pre-finale press conference with one major advantage, the right to handpick his opponent from any of the remaining seven teams without a first round buy. Sitting across from him was Mickelson. And the trash talk started faster than a Phil Flop shot. Mikkelson with that trademark smirk fired the first shot. Pick me. Let’s do a rematch of the 2021 PGA Championship. The same showdown where Lefty stunned the golf world, beating Brooks by two shots. But Brooks wasn’t about to let him have the last laugh. The former world number one leaned into the mic and delivered a brutal jab. You probably don’t know this cuz you’ve never been number one in the world. Oo, that’s true. That’s true. They finish at the end of the year. They give you a little trophy. I’ve got two of those, so I could bring one of them, show you if you’d like. Boom. A mic drop moment aimed right at Mickelson’s legacy. For years, Mickelson’s prime was spent living in Tiger Wood’s shadow, peeking at world number two, but never hitting the top spot. Phil, never one to back down, fired right back with a dagger of his own. That’s a beautiful green shirt. You have a green jacket. I do not. I will, though. Don’t worry. I will. Ouch. If Brook’s world number one flex was a jab, Mickelson’s reference to his 2004 Masters win was a straight knockout punch. Number 12 takes us back to Shane Lowry. And trust me, you have to do something pretty wild to make this list twice. Some players lose their cool over a divot, but a pitch mark that’s a hundred times worse. And Lowry let everyone with an earshot know exactly how he felt. It happened at the PGA Championship when Lowry’s drive found the fairway, but with a brutal twist. Instead of a clean lie, his ball ended up plugged into another player’s pitch mark. For the pros, that’s the golf equivalent of a slap in the face. But instead of handling it with composure, Lowry decided to make a scene. When the officials told him there would be no relief, no drop, play it as it lies, Lowry didn’t just nod and move on. He argued. He tried to plead his case, going back and forth with the officials, clearly frustrated and convinced he was getting the short end of the stick. But the ruling stood. Lowry stepped up, took the shot from that crater of a lie, and it wasn’t pretty. The ball came out poorly, and that’s when he absolutely lost it, slamming his club into the turf with such force you could practically feel the ground shake. As if that wasn’t enough, he barked out, “Fuck this place.” And later, after missing his par putt, he even flipped off his golf ball like the ball was somehow to blame for his mess. The whole episode screamed zero class. Arguing with officials, trash-talking the course, and throwing a tantrum like a weekend hacker. Not a good look for a major champion. Number 11 brings us to one of the most flatout disrespectful moments you’ll ever see at the Masters. And somehow it didn’t end with security walking him out. Jose Ballister, just 21 years old and making his master’s debut, had the perfect chance to introduce himself as golf’s next big thing. But instead of making headlines with his swing, he made them for something way more outrageous. It all started with a hat. An upside down Sunundevils cap, a playful nod to his Arizona State days. Some fans laughed it off. Augusta, not so much. But hey, a hat is harmless until it wasn’t. Then came the moment that had social media in full meltdown mode. Mid round, hole 13, Ray Creek. Ballister suddenly needed to go. But instead of walking 30 seconds to a restroom, he reportedly decided to handle his business right there. Yes, in Ray Creek, Augusta National’s sacred water hazard. The same water where Master’s dreams have either soared or sunk now turned into Ballister’s personal bathroom. The reaction, pure chaos. Fans were demanding an instant DQ. One angry post read, “Not only is that hat a crime, but this ban him for life.” Another called it the most disgraceful thing ever done at Augusta. Ballister later tried to laugh it off, saying he completely forgot about the restrooms and joking it was one of the few claps he got that day. But the internet was already calling it Ballisters’s stream. And once that nickname hit, there was no going back. Here we are with number 10 of the list. Someone in the crowd shouted something so disgusting. Rory Mroy stopped in his tracks. And what he did next had that fan thrown out of the RDER Cup in front of thousands. The 2016 Rder Cup at Hazeline was already intense. US fans had packed the course, waving flags, screaming chance, and letting team Europe know whose turf they were on. But somewhere between the passion and the pride, things crossed the line. Rory had been getting heckled all day. That’s par for the course in a Ryder Cup, sure, but this wasn’t light-hearted banter. It was vulgar, repetitive, and by the time he walked off the seventh green, one fan made it especially ugly. Nobody knows exactly what was said, but whatever it was, it snapped something in Rory. He stopped midwalk, turned around, and pointed the guy out in front of thousands. Rory didn’t yell. He didn’t throw anything. He just made it clear that guy needs to go. Course officials stepped in immediately. The fan still shouting as he was led away was ejected on the spot. Escorted out of the Ryder Cup for taking it way too far. And to this day, he holds the unofficial record for fastest Walk of Shame ever broadcast on NBC. Next, number nine. And just when you thought you’d seen it all, here comes this. Something shattered in the trees. Loud enough to make the whole gallery turn around. At first, nobody was sure what had happened, but seconds later, all eyes were on John Daly and a completely frozen fan standing in front of him. It was the first round of the 2008 Australian Open at Royal Sydney Golf Club. Daly had just pulled his T-shot into the rough near the ninth hole and was making his way through the trees to find it. He was already irritated, searching for his ball, trying to reset, and that’s when a fan got way too close. A man named Brad Kle stepped in with a camera, not from a distance, not subtle. He held it up just inches from Dy’s face, and let the flash go off. Daly didn’t hesitate. He ripped the camera out of the guy’s hands, turned, and smashed it against a tree. No words, no warning, just a loud crack as the camera exploded into pieces. The fan stood there speechless. And daily? He simply looked over and said, “You want it back? I’ll buy you a new one.” Later, he explained that the flash had burned his eyes and it wouldn’t have mattered if he was 10 under. He still would have done the exact same thing. And in a twist only John Dailyaly could pull off, he wasn’t punished. Turns out the fan wasn’t even supposed to have a camera that close in the first place. So, no fine, no disqualification, and no apology. Just one broken camera and a new chapter in the legend of golf’s most unpredictable man. Now, this next one, he turned around with a look that shut down the entire gallery. Nobody expected Zack Johnson to lose it like that, but after what he just heard, he wasn’t letting it slide. It happened during the final round of the 2024 Waste Management Phoenix Open. The scene was typical for Scottsdale. Loud music, beer flying, fans packed into every hole like it was a football game instead of a golf tournament. But as the day went on, something changed. Zack Johnson had been dealing with hecklers all afternoon. Not the funny, harmless stuff. This was different. The comments were sharper, more personal. Fans weren’t just chirping about his swing. They were going after him. His Rder Cup captaincy, his decisions, his entire reputation. And finally, between shots on the back nine, someone said something that made Johnson stop walking. He turned around, took a few steps toward the gallery, and with his voice raised just enough to carry over the crowd, he snapped it. Oh, don’t don’t serve me. Somebody said it. I’m I’m just sick of it. Just shut up. Okay. The fans around him went silent. Everyone could feel the shift. The video of the moment blew up online, and after the round, Johnson didn’t back down. He said the tournament had crossed the line. that fan behavior was out of control and that after more than two decades on tour, he’d never seen anything like it. Coming in at number seven, so he called out Rory Mroyy’s biggest failure and that’s when Rory went crazy. Absolutely no one saw it coming. So what happened? Well, it all went down at the 2025 Players Championship. Rory was walking down the fairway, focused, dialed in, doing his thing, when someone from the crowd decided to test him. And not just with some random trash talk. The guy was later identified as Luke Potter, a college golfer from the University of Texas. Not exactly a nobody in the golf world, but on that day, he decided to act like a heckler. And not just any heckler, one who brought up the darkest moment of Rory’s career. Don’t choke like Augusta. 2011. Rory, you still see those trees in your sleep? Rory didn’t laugh. Didn’t look amused. At first, he tried to ignore it, but Potter kept at it, holding up his phone, and recording Rory from just feet away, still mocking that infamous Sunday meltdown at the masters. That’s when Rory snapped. He turned, walked straight toward Potter, and without saying a word, reached out, and grabbed the phone right out of his hand. No warning, no hesitation, just took it. Then he turned his back and walked away, leaving Potter standing there like a kid who just got grounded in public. The whole thing was caught on someone else’s phone. Of course, the clip exploded online within minutes. People argued about who crossed the line. The heckler for bringing up ancient history or Rory for snatching the phone like a bouncer taking keys from a drunk. So, if you think you can poke them without consequences, think again. Here’s number six. Why don’t you off? That’s not the kind of thing you expect to hear as a player walks off the 18th green. But Ian Palter wasn’t in the mood for golf etiquette anymore. The man was fuming. You could see it in his eyes, jaw clenched, voice raised, his words slicing through the noise like a blade. A fan had pushed him too far. And Poulter, never known for holding back, finally erupted. The fan tried to play it cool. Told him to relax. Wrong move. Palter fired back again louder this time. It wasn’t performative. It wasn’t some WWE promo for the cameras. This was real anger. Personal. The kind of anger that doesn’t show up unless someone’s been poking at you all day. Then came the warning. If it continued, the fan would be removed. No more second chances. Only after all that do you realize this wasn’t some back n meltdown. It happened after the round at the end of the final day at Live Golf Houston 2024. Hter had just finished walking 18 holes in the Texas Heat under pressure with voices trailing him the whole way. And when he reached the end, someone had the nerve to chirp one last time. But here’s the thing. When a guy like Poulter, known for intensity, passion, and Rder Cup fire, tells you to back off, you probably earned it. You’ve made it to our top five. One word. That’s all it took for the entire gallery to go silent. And just like that, Zach Johnson became the center of the most uncomfortable moment at Augusta in 2024. The 12th hole at the Masters is legendary for beauty, for disaster, and for breaking the hearts of even the best. And on this particular day, it absolutely chewed up Zack Johnson and spit him out. A T-OT into Ray Creek, a chunked pitch, a lip out putt, and he ended with a triple bogey. Johnson walked off the green with his head down and shoulders tight. And then just as he passed by the ropes right near a group of stunned spectators, he shouted something that wasn’t exactly familyfriendly. Off. Loud. Sharp. Clear enough to make jaws drop. And more than a few people thought he was yelling it at them. Phones didn’t catch the buildup, but they definitely caught the moment. Clips flooded social media. Debates sparked and then Paige Spirinac chimed in. You can’t just scream at patrons at Augusta, she posted. It’s not a frat party, it’s the masters. The post exploded. Thousands of likes, hundreds of replies. Suddenly, Johnson’s outburst wasn’t just a one-day story. It was the conversation in golf. Next up, number four. Nobody expected fist to fly at a PGA Tour event. But when John Dy’s ball came screaming into the group ahead, all hell nearly broke loose. It happened in 1994 at the NEC World Series of Golf. Daly, already known for his grip it and rip it style and unpredictable temper, was charging through the final round when things went off the rails. On one particular hole, Daly didn’t wait. He launched his shot straight down the fairway right into the group ahead. That group included pro golfer Jeff Roth, who barely had time to react as Dy’s ball came crashing in dangerously close. Now, hitting into a group is one of those unspoken lines you just don’t cross in professional golf. But this wasn’t just a warning shot. This was reckless. Roth was furious. But before he could even respond, someone else stepped in. His father. That’s right. Jeff Roth’s dad came storming out like it was a bar fight in slow motion. He marched right up to Daly and what followed was something straight out of a soap opera. Shouting, shoving, full-blown chaos. And Daly, he didn’t exactly deescalate. He stood his ground, chest out, shouting right back. The PGA Tour slapped Daly with a $13,000 fine and a suspension, citing conduct unbecoming of a professional. But by then, the damage was done. The clip made its rounds, the headlines exploded, and fans suddenly realized something. John Daly doesn’t just play golf like a wrecking ball. He brings that same energy to the parking lot, too. Sliding into number three, it wasn’t Patrick Reed who threw the first shove, but it sure felt like his entire team was ready for a street fight. At the 2019 President’s Cup in Australia, things were already ugly. Reed had been battling more than just the course. Fans were relentless. After his infamous rules controversy just a week earlier, he became the villain of the tournament. And the Australian crowd, they were loving every second of it. The jeers were brutal. every hole, every shot, one fan after another lined up to take their turn. And eventually, someone said the wrong thing to the wrong guy, but it wasn’t Reed who reacted. It was his caddy, and his caddy just so happened to be his brother-in-law. Kesler Crraane had heard enough. According to him, the fan had been heckling non-stop, following them from hole to hole, trying to get under Reed’s skin. And at one point as they were walking off the green, the guy mouthed off again, louder, meaner, and right in their face. That’s when Kesler turned around and shoved the guy. Straight up shoved him. No warning, no words, just hands. Security had to step in. The moment didn’t last long, but it was caught on video and spread like wildfire. The PGA responded fast. Kesler was immediately suspended for the final day of the tournament, and Reed had to play without him on the bag. An awkward moment to say the least. For number two, we’re back in 2022 and Rory Mroy found himself facing not just a heckling fan, but a piece of technology that seemed straight out of a golf themed episode of Black Mirror. The setting was the BMW Championship at Wilmington Country Club Delaware, a tournament that was about to make headlines for reasons nobody could have ever predicted. Mroy was lining up a crucial shot, his focus locked in despite the jeers of a particularly loud heckler in the gallery. But then something strange caught his attention on the green. At first glance, it looked like a regular golf ball. But then it moved. Not rolled, but darted across the green as if possessed by some mischievous spirit. And that’s when the truth emerged. This wasn’t just a golf ball. It was a remotec controlled golf ball zipping erratically across the pristine green like a weward robotic prankster. Somewhere in the crowd, an unseen puppet master held the controls, steering their tiny disruptor with precision, aimed at one of the greatest golfers in the world. The ball, apparently programmed for maximum disruption, began following Mroy around, but Rory wasn’t having it. With the crowd watching in complete silence, he made his move. In one quick motion, he lunged for the ball like a hawk going after its prey. Without missing a beat, he turned, marched straight to the nearest lake, and chucked the thing into the water with the kind of frustration that said, “Enough of this nonsense.” Last but not least, here’s number one. And we’ve got a moment where Bryson Desambo nearly found himself in a full-blown standoff with a fan. All because of this incident. Bryson Desambo might be one of the most polarizing figures in golf, but even his biggest critics had to respect what he did at the 2021 PGA Championship. It was the final round and the energy was insane. Desambo had just walked off the ninth green heading toward the 10th T. A long par five that played perfectly to his power game. Fans crowded the ropes all hoping to get a close look at the big hitter. In the middle of the crowd was a young boy barely tall enough to see over the barrier, eyes wide as his favorite player passed by. Desambo tossed a ball in his direction. A quick, kind gesture that should have made the kid’s day, but just as the ball was about to reach its target, an older man lunged forward and snatched it right out of the air. The kid froze. His excitement turned into disbelief. And Bryson, he saw the whole thing. He stopped walking and turned back toward the man, eyes locked in. For a second, it looked like he might walk straight into the crowd. The moment got tense. Real tense. The crowd around them went silent. Phones came out. The man, clearly embarrassed, tried to shrug it off, but Bryson didn’t budge. After a few long seconds of uncomfortable eye contact and pressure, the guy finally gave in and handed the ball to the boy it was meant for all along. The kid lit up. Bryson gave him a quick nod and kept walking. Hey, before you go, I think you’ll really like this one, too. Just click that video in the middle. Enjoy.

7 Comments

  1. Not a Hull fan, but I totally get her frustration with the LPGA pace of play. It is absolutely disgusting. The LPGA keeps whining they don't get the respect they deserve, but watching them is like watching a sloth on a branch. I used to love watching the ladies play, as I think it's much easier to learn from their swings than the PGA players, but it's become impossible to stay interested. If you want respect and viewers, pick up the pace ladies. Your current pace of play is absolutely ridiculous.

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