Blog.

“IF THEY WANT TO HUMILIATE ME IN FRONT OF THE WHOLE WORLD, THEY’D BETTER HAVE PROOF!”🔴 Akshay Bhatia angrily retorted after the shocking accusations

“IF THEY WANT TO HUMILIATE ME IN FRONT OF THE WHOLE WORLD, THEY’D BETTER HAVE PROOF!”🔴 Akshay Bhatia angrily retorted after the shocking accusations

lowimedia
lowimedia
Posted underFootball

The 2026 Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando, Florida, delivered everything the tournament is famous for: dramatic shot-making, high-stakes pressure, and the spirit of Arnold Palmer’s bold, attacking style of play. On March 8, 2026, 23-year-old Akshay Bhatia authored one of the most memorable comebacks of the season, erasing a five-shot deficit over the final nine holes to force a sudden-death playoff against Daniel Berger. Both players finished regulation at 15-under-par 273.

In the playoff on the par-4 18th, Berger bogeyed after a poor chip from thick rough, while Bhatia calmly two-putted from 19 feet for par and the victory. The $4 million first-place check from the $20 million purse, the iconic red cardigan, and a spot in the record books as the youngest three-time playoff winner in PGA Tour history seemed like the perfect Hollywood ending.

But the ending turned chaotic almost immediately.

Throughout the final round, Bhatia’s putting had been nothing short of sensational. He led the field in strokes gained: putting for the week (+7.82), holed clutch par putts from 12, 15, and 18 feet on the back nine, and drained a crucial 25-footer for birdie on the 13th to ignite his charge. The club responsible for much of that magic? His 44-inch Odyssey Jailbird 380 broomstick putter — a long, anchored-style design Bhatia switched to in late 2023 after years of conventional putting woes.

The whispers started quietly in the player lounge during Saturday’s rain-delayed third round. By Sunday evening, those whispers had become outright accusations — and the loudest voice belonged to the man Bhatia had just beaten in the playoff: Daniel Berger.

In a post-round interview clip that spread like wildfire across social media and golf podcasts, Berger — visibly frustrated after blowing a wire-to-wire lead that once stood at five shots — said: “Everyone saw how steady those putts were on these greens. If that thing [the broomstick] isn’t giving him some kind of unfair anchor or tech advantage, then I don’t know what is. It’s not sour grapes — it’s just what we all watched.”

Golfer Akshay Bhatia Dedicates Third PGA Tour Victory to His Late Niece

The comment, delivered with a mix of disappointment and pointed skepticism, lit the fuse. Within minutes, clips were dissected on X, Reddit’s r/golf exploded with threads titled “Berger calls out Bhatia’s broomstick — cheating?”, and #BroomstickGate trended alongside #ArnoldPalmerDrama. Fans and analysts debated the legality of the long putter under the 2016 anchoring ban (Rule 10.1b), which prohibits anchoring the club against the body but allows broomstick styles when swung freely without body contact.

Critics argued Bhatia’s posture and stroke appeared to press the grip lightly against his midsection or shirt for added stability — an optical gray area that has divided the pro game for years.

The controversy reached boiling point in the winner’s press conference inside the Bay Hill media center. Bhatia, still wearing the red cardigan but with his jaw clenched and eyes flashing, stepped to the podium after a brief victory speech. When the moderator opened the floor and the first question referenced Berger’s remarks, Bhatia didn’t wait for the sentence to finish.

“If they want to humiliate me in front of the whole world, they’d better have proof!” he exploded, voice rising above the murmur of clicking cameras. “I’ve worked my entire life for this. Every missed cut, every bad round, every time I questioned whether I belonged — that’s real. You don’t get to question my integrity, question my win, question everything I just fought for, without one shred of evidence. You want to talk about technology? Fine.”

In a moment that stunned the packed room into silence, Bhatia reached into his golf bag, yanked out the Odyssey Jailbird 380, and slammed it down on the table with a resounding crack that echoed through the microphones. The long shaft bounced once before settling. “Here it is,” he said, pointing directly at the putter. “Inspect it. Right now. Call the rules officials in here. Measure the length, weigh the head, check the grip, check for anything — anything — that isn’t 100% legal.

If there’s one illegal modification, one hidden device, one thing that doesn’t conform, I’ll hand this trophy back myself and walk off this stage. But if it’s clean — and we all know it is — then stop trying to tear me down.”

Reporters froze. Some started typing furiously; others exchanged wide-eyed glances. Bhatia continued, voice steady but edged with fury: “This isn’t about the putter. It’s about jealousy. I was five back with nine to play. I made the shots. I holed the putts. If that bothers someone enough to accuse me of cheating on national television, that’s their problem. Not mine.”

PGA Tour rules officials were summoned within minutes. In full view of the media — and live-streamed on the Tour’s digital channels — they performed an impromptu equipment check: shaft length (44 inches, conforming), head weight (380 grams, standard), grip size (oversized but legal), no added weights, no electronic components, no modifications. The officials issued a concise statement on the spot: “Mr. Bhatia’s putter conforms to all Rules of Golf. No violation has been identified.”

The moment became instant viral gold. Clips of Bhatia slamming the putter down racked up tens of millions of views across platforms within hours. Supporters flooded social media with praise: “Kid’s got ice in his veins — put up or shut up,” “That’s how you defend your name.” Detractors called it theatrical and defensive, questioning why he felt compelled to stage the inspection rather than let officials handle it quietly.

Daniel Berger later released a brief statement: “My comments came from frustration after a tough day. I have no evidence of wrongdoing and I congratulate Akshay on a tremendous comeback and win. Golf is hard enough without extra noise.”

The incident has reignited a long-simmering debate in professional golf: Are broomstick putters — used successfully by players like Matt Kuchar, Webb Simpson, and now Bhatia — creating an unfair advantage? Should the USGA and R&A revisit the anchoring ban in light of modern interpretations? Several anonymous players admitted the controversy has been bubbling for years, with some feeling the long putter provides a stability edge that borders on unethical even if technically legal.

For Bhatia, the victory — and the fiery defense — may mark a turning point. At 23, he has already proven he can win under pressure (three playoff triumphs) and now shown he will fight back publicly when his character is attacked. “I’m not here to be liked,” he said in closing. “I’m here to win golf tournaments. And I’ll keep doing it — with this putter, with this game, and with zero apologies.”

As the PGA Tour caravan moves to THE PLAYERS Championship at TPC Sawgrass next week, the golf world carries two enduring images from Bay Hill: Akshay Bhatia lifting the Arnold Palmer trophy under a Florida sunset, and the same young champion slamming his putter on a table, daring the doubters to prove him wrong.

The putter was clean. The questions linger. Was this a witch hunt fueled by envy, or a legitimate plea for clarity in golf’s evolving equipment landscape? One thing is undeniable: Akshay Bhatia won’t be silenced.