SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — Four of golf’s governing bodies released a joint statement Wednesday morning acknowledging plans to collaborate more than ever as they manage distance in the sport. In a rare display of harmony between golf’s governing families, each of the four bodies — the USGA, R&A, PGA Tour and DP World Tour — signed off on the statement, which could bring considerable ramifications to the equipment used in the sport.
While the USGA and R&A have, for years, been working toward a rollback of the golf ball — proposing new, limiting standards — Wednesday marked the first time that the PGA Tour and the DP World Tour joined the public conversation.
Following recent collaborations, the statement confirmed that, instead of a golf ball rollback arriving in phases — 2028 for professionals and 2030 for other golfers — a single-date implementation of January 2030 is best for all parties. The statement also suggested that the changes implemented on that January 2030 date may require more than just adjustments to the golf ball.
“The R&A and USGA will take the appropriate amount of time to assess a range of possible options and determine the path forward,” the statement reads. “Specifically, the governing bodies will work closely with key stakeholders — including the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and their respective members — to review, test and implement options that have a meaningful impact on distance at the elite level. These efforts will ensure the elite game does not become too one-dimensional while continuing to emphasize the importance of shotmaking.”
Until this point, the PGA Tour (as well as many of its leading players) has cast doubt on the original, proposed golf ball rollback aimed at curbing distance increases that have contributed to the obsolescence of some tournament golf courses and dramatically affected the way golf is played at the highest levels. It was during commissioner Jay Monahan’s 2023 return to work (following medical leave) that he declared the Tour could not support the Modified Local Rule the USGA was proposing.
The debate has roared up behind the scenes in 2026. Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley delivered a forceful defense for a rollback at his annual press conference in April, and Cameron Young was reported to be playing a golf ball that would conform to the USGA’s future specifications in May. Young is one of the top drivers in the game, and said at the PGA Championship that he did not notice much of a loss in distance — leading many to question if the proposed rollback would create its intended result.
Following the PGA Championship, the PGA Tour began quietly surveying its members for their thoughts on the distance debate. The 13-question survey asked players for their thoughts on what has most led to increases in distance over the years, and if it is a problem for the sport. It also asked players if the Tour should have its own rule-making process, rather than those laid out by the USGA and R&A.
Not long later, USGA CEO Mike Whan spent Tuesday of the U.S. Women’s Open across the country in Dublin, Ohio, at the Memorial Tournament, where he met with the 16-player Advisory Council on this topic. Whatever took place in that meeting clearly had some effect on the proceedings, leading to Wednesday’s endorsement from the Tour and its cross-Atlantic partner, the DPWT.
On the eve of the U.S. Open, the statement now leaves the distance debate in a bit of limbo. The runway has officially been extended and the parameters widened.