Professionals are making phone calls on the way home. She must report disqualification

Hannah Gregg’s phone number is wrong.
Then she dialed one.
In the game, it’s a mistake, a confession to a popular profession, and she recently revealed all of this on social media. Gregg has been competing in last week’s Amundi German Masters at the Ladies’ European Tour at Green Eagle Golf Courses, in the second round she marked par on the 149-yard 3 Par-3 and asked the question in it:
Gregg made a bogey four. On her way home from the tournament, she discovered the error while entering statistics.
She then called the officer, even though she said she knew she had passed 15 minutes to correct the scorecard error. She ended the match with disqualification due to a violation of the rules. (Let’s list of Gregg’s second round scores online, although another website reported 84.)
Not long after, Gregg went to social media. Here is her full post.
“Unfortunately, I had to do DQ from the game last night. I realized when I entered the stats on the way home, I signed a card saying I had 3 on the 14th hole and I actually had 4. I played this tour immediately and reported this error, but got DQ in my score because I was out of my score for more than 15 minutes before my score.
“While this won’t affect the outcome of the game, I’m disappointed that I didn’t pay more attention…and let my emotions get to my best in a tough round. I’ll use it as fuel for the next event and hope to turn the season around this season. Thank you for the friendly message”
In the post, Greg also answered some questions. One user wrote: “Now we’ve shot the meaning of super strict rating rules through lens data/score tracking. You really don’t need players to keep their scores anymore. That’s the same for women and men.”
This caused this response:
“We didn’t shoot data/score tracking on this tour. Just volunteer scorers and our own cards.”
Another user was easier, writing: “When I read this article quickly, I thought you said you had DQ on the way home, and I hope it was just for you and not for the frost situation rather than for frost.”
This caused this response:
“It just makes me laugh.”
This week, a 30-year-old from Sacramento is playing Let’s KPMG Women’s Irish Women’s Open. Also on social media, she revealed that she learned she was in the competition on Monday.
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