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Rangerfinders on PGA Tour? Annika Sorenstam has better ways to fix slow play
ORLANDO, Fla. â Slow pace of play has plagued the PGA Tour and the LPGA for years, frustrating players, fans, and broadcasters alike. It almost reached a breaking point last week at the Farmers Insurance Open in San Diego, where CBS Sportsâ Dottie Pepper expressed her frustrations about the final group needing three hours to complete nine holes.
âWe are starting to need a new word to talk about the pace of play issue, and that is respect,â Pepper said on the broadcast.
âRespect for your fellow competitors, for the fans, for the broadcasts, for all of it. Itâs gotta get better.â
Her comments were not directed toward the final trio of Harris English, Andrew Novak, and Aldrich Potgieter per se but more toward everyone playing in the final round. Every group played at a glacial pace, and the final round turned into a slog. It was hard to watch.
On Wednesday, the PGA Tour announced that it had assembled a task force to investigate pace-of-play issues, according to Doug Ferguson of The Associated Press. One possible solution is to permit rangefinders at all tour events, but only the PGA Championship allows players to use distance-measuring devices.
But 10-time major winner Annika Sorenstam, a fast player herself, says this idea would cause more harm than good.
[Rangefinders] will slow it down because you will want to double-check the number now. Did I push the button right? Did I hit the flag, or did I hit the tree behind it, or did I hit a pole behind the green?â Sorenstam said to SB Nation.
âCaddies always want to have ground yardage because thatâs what they do. I donât think [rangefinders] are gonna help. Itâs more of a matter of keeping up with the group ahead and having a certain time. You know, the AJGA does a good job. When you play, and you get to Hole No. 4, you need to be at an hour, and then after 8 holes, maybe you need to be at 2 hours. We have to push it. If they donât want to do that, minimizing the field hurts other people.â
In November, the PGA Tour announced a flurry of changes for the 2026 season, which includes diminishing field sizes. The tour felt that eliminating spots in fields would help officials space out tee times and, therefore, improve the pace of play.
Yet, the real issue is that the PGA Tour and the LPGA do not enforce anyone who violates the pace of play policies.
âPlayers want rhythm, caddies want rhythm, tournaments want rhythm, fans donât just want to stand there,â Sorenstam said.
âIt needs to be addressed. There needs to be some kind of ramification or something that stinks, like, you know what, Iâm not going to do this again.â
Sorenstam then made a terrific analogy. She said that policing slow play should be like a child touching a hot stove. Once their hand feels the burn, they learn never to touch it again.
She feels the PGA Tour and the LPGA must follow that premise.
âThe way they go about it today, thereâs a warning, and then thereâs a timing â that process, number one, is too long, skip a step. If youâre behind, which as a player you see, itâs not like youâre oblivious out there, you see it,â Sorenstam said.
â[Officials] should say, âOkay, you gained time.â Then, from there, there shouldnât be another step, and it shouldnât be a fine. It should hurt more. A stroke, two strokes, whatever it takes. Maybe itâs some kind of suspension down the road or something, and then obviously, if it continues, you might want to consider a playerâs eligibility.
âItâs not good for the tour.â
Something needs to be done.
Even Sorenstamâs round on Thursday at the Hilton Grand Vacations Tournament of Champions, which features 32 LPGA pros and 51 celebrity amateurs, took much longer than needed. She played alongside World No. 1 Nelly Korda and former MLB pitcher Derek Lowe, two players who hit the ball a long way and play quickly. This group did not play slowly, yet it affected everyone.
But at the end of the day, as Pepper said at Torrey Pines, it comes down to respect. Something must be done, and implementing rangefinders is akin to slapping a band-aid on a gunshot wound. It wonât help.
Jack Milko is a golf staff writer for SB Nationâs Playing Through. Follow him on X @jack_milko.