Ludvig Aberg became the first golfer to benefit from the PGA Tour's updated driver replacement rule during the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. On the 18th hole, he cracked his driver's face after hitting out of bounds and quickly swapped it using a spare head from his bag. This 2026 change simplifies repairs that previously required retrieving equipment from the locker room.
The PGA Tour introduced several rule updates for the 2026 season to make the game more player-friendly and reduce frustrations from equipment issues. One key revision to Model Local Rule G-9 now permits players to carry a spare driver head in their bag, allowing immediate replacement if the club sustains visible damage like a cracked face. Previously, in 2025, such replacements were allowed but required fetching the part from the locker room, a process described as time-consuming.
During the recent AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, Swedish golfer Ludvig Aberg encountered this scenario on the 18th hole. His drive went out of bounds, and the impact cracked his driver's face. Thanks to the new rule, Aberg and his caddie, Joe Skovron, swiftly installed the backup head from the bag's storage area. Skovron explained to the Associated Press: "They sent out rules changes at the start of the year and one of them was you no longer had to keep it (the replacement part) in the locker. Before, someone had to get it for you. Now you can carry it in the bag, and if your driver is deemed damaged, you could put that one in. I had the backup in the belly of the bag."
PGA Tour Vice President of Rules and Officiating Steve Rentoul praised the update, stating: "We like the fact if a club is cracked or broken, it can be replaced right there. The old method of the replacement was so archaic."
Other 2026 changes include reducing the penalty for accidentally moving one's ball to one stroke, free relief for balls embedded in another player's pitch mark, internal out-of-bounds applying only to tee shots, expanded relief near greens for immovable obstructions, and shrinking the relief area for such obstructions to a scorecard length of 11 inches from a club length of 46 inches. These adjustments aim to streamline play and align with standards from other tours.
Aberg, who is now defending his title at the 2026 Genesis Invitational at Riviera Golf Club, could see further benefits from these rules amid challenging weather conditions there.