Golf vs KPMG Women's PGA Championship — Same Game, Different Rules
Same sport, different leagues. See exactly where PGA TOUR and PGA of America rules diverge.
| Attribute | Golf | KPMG Women's PGA Championship |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Individual Sports | Individual Sports |
| Organization | PGA TOUR | PGA of America |
| Players | 1–72 | 1 |
| Location | outdoor | outdoor |
| Season / Version | 2026 PGA TOUR Player Handbook and Tournament Regulations | 2026 KPMG Women's PGA Championship — Hazeltine National Golf Club, June 25-28, 2026 (field of 132 players) |
| Verification | 🏛️Official — PGA TOUR | 🏛️Official — PGA of America |
Comparison Summary
Golf and KPMG Women's PGA Championship share 9 rule topics. All 9 have different rules.
Key differences in: Caddies, Format, Officials, Pace of Play, Section 2: Equipment and 4 more.
These sports also have different player counts.
Shared Rules — Side by Side(9 shared topics)
Caddies
Rules differEach player is entitled to one caddie at a time. The caddie may carry the bag, give advice, and assist within the limits of the Rules of Golf.; Caddie conduct, registration, apparel (the tournament bib), and the "behind the line" restriction on standing behind a player at the start of a stroke ar...
One caddie per player during each stipulated round; no additional caddies permitted; Caddies wear a tournament-supplied bib displaying the player's name and number; Caddie conduct is subject to the championship-specific Notice to Players
Format
Rules differA standard PGA TOUR event is a 72-hole individual stroke-play competition played over four rounds on consecutive days (Thursday through Sunday for a typical week). The player who completes the 72 holes in the fewest total strokes is the champion.
72-hole stroke play over 4 rounds; Cut at 36 holes — typically top 70 and ties advance to the weekend (subject to championship-specific Notice to Players); The player with the lowest 72-hole total wins the championship and the Wanamaker Trophy
Officials
Rules differPGA TOUR Rules Officials: Trained officials stationed around the course rule on Rules of Golf questions, administer relief, monitor pace, and time groups.; Competition Committee / Tournament Director: Responsible for course set-up, the Notice to Competitors, starting times, the cut, suspension an...
PGA of America Championship Committee on site for the championship; Rules officials on each hole and in mobile carts during play; LPGA Rules Officials provide pre-round ruling, on-course rulings, and post-round score verification, working alongside the PGA of America committee
Pace of Play
Rules differThe PGA TOUR enforces a Pace of Play Policy. Groups are expected to keep position on the course; a group out of position may be put "on the clock."; When a group is being timed, each player is allotted a maximum time to play a stroke (with an extra allowance for the first to play). Exceeding the ...
First bad time: warning; Second bad time: one-stroke penalty; Third bad time: two-stroke penalty (additional)
Section 2: Equipment
Rules differThe PGA TOUR Anti-Doping Program prohibits listed performance-enhancing substances and methods. Players are responsible for what is in their bodies and may be tested in and out of competition; the program is part of the integrity framework that surrounds equipment and play.
The KPMG Women's PGA enforces the One-Ball Rule during a stipulated round: the player must use a ball of the same brand and model. Breach is a stroke-play penalty of two strokes per hole at which the breach occurred, with a maximum penalty of four strokes per round.
Section 3: Playing Area
Rules differA PGA TOUR event is contested over an 18-hole golf course, almost always set up to a par of 70, 71, or 72. Total yardage for a TOUR set-up commonly falls in the range of roughly 7,100 to 7,600 yards, varying by course, elevation, and conditions.
The 2026 KPMG Women's PGA is contested at Hazeltine National Golf Club (Chaska, Minnesota) — a Robert Trent Jones / Rees Jones design that has hosted multiple major championships including the Ryder Cup, U.S. Open, and PGA Championship.
Section 5: Rules of Play
Rules differA standard PGA TOUR event is a 72-hole individual stroke-play competition played over four rounds on consecutive days (Thursday through Sunday for a typical week). The player who completes the 72 holes in the fewest total strokes is the champion.
The PGA of America pace-of-play policy operates similarly to the USGA and LPGA frameworks, with championship-specific implementation: 72-hole stroke play over 4 rounds; Cut at 36 holes — typically top 70 and ties advance to the weekend (subject to championship-specific Notice to Players); The pla...
Section 6: Scoring
Rules differThe score for each hole is the number of strokes taken plus any penalty strokes; the round score is the total for 18 holes, and the championship score is the total for all rounds played.; Scores are commonly expressed relative to par (for example, "10 under par").; In stroke play, a marker (typic...
The KPMG Women's PGA Championship uses a sudden-death playoff: if players are tied after 72 holes, they play extra holes on pre-designated playoff holes until a single player wins a hole outright. The playoff holes are listed in the Notice to Players.
Section 8: Safety Considerations
Rules differThe competition committee monitors weather, particularly lightning, throughout tournament week using on-site meteorology.; When a dangerous situation exists, the committee sounds the immediate-suspension signal and players must stop play at once, even mid-hole. A separate signal is used for a nor...
The three-tone air horn signals immediate suspension of play, typically for lightning. Players must stop play immediately, mark the ball position, and proceed to designated shelter.
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