Latin America Amateur Championship
The 2026 Latin America Amateur Championship was held at the historic Lima Golf Club in the heart of the capital of Peru. With towering skyscrapers bordering the course on all sides, often with their tops blurred with faint sea fog, Lima Golf Club proved a stunning setting for the 11th showing of this Championship.
During the four-day Championship, any rulings required typically involved relief from artificially surfaced paths, or assistance when proceeding under Rule 17 for a ball in a penalty area and options available to the player in question. However, there were a few more unique instances which required a player calling for help from the Rules Committee.
Matias Calderon, during his first round on the 11th hole, struck his tee shot on the long par-3 on a great line, but his ball came up just short of the green coming to rest on the grass bank of the greenside bunker. Calderon then walked to his ball and began to assess his next shot. While standing on the green between his ball and the hole, gravity proved too much for his ball, and it fell into the bunker. Calderon rightly called for a Referee and explained his actions leading up to the ball moving; he had looked at his next stroke from the bunker but had not taken any practice swings prior to the ball moving and testament from the player, his caddie and players in the group suggested that he had not undertaken any actions which would have caused the ball to move.
Therefore, as the known or virtually certain standard was not achieved for the player causing the ball to move, he was given no penalty under Rule 9.3 and it was deemed the ball was moved by natural forces, and Calderon played the ball from its new position in the bunker.
Lima Golf Club was in magnificent condition, with Bermuda grass greens running pure and true at just short of 11 on the stimpmeter. However, there were one or two queries from players raised during play relating to the condition of the holes. Bermuda grass root system grows horizontally in the upper layers of the turf, so when the hole is cut there is often crumbling on one side where roots have been damaged by the cutting process. However, this is normal with this grass type, therefore deemed natural wear of the hole under the Rules and players were not permitted to try and repair any damage in this manner (Rule 13.1c).
The aforementioned sea fog did drop a little lower for the final round and resulted in a delay of an hour and 37 minutes due to poor visibility, however this lifted and led to a thrilling finale. Mateo Pulcini of Argentina and Virgilio Paz Valdes of Venezuela battled it out down the stretch with some clutch putts being exchanged between the two, eventually ending in the two being unable to be separated and leading to a sudden death play-off on hole 18. A pair of pars on the first play-off hole were recorded, but on the second play-off hole the Venezuelan caught a flyer from the rough, the ball flew the green, bounced on the cart path and eventually finished under a tree close to a number of TV cables. Chief Referee Shona McRae, Director of Rules at The R&A, was on hand to advise the player the cables were movable obstructions and that if the ball moved during removal of these cables there would be no penalty and the ball would be replaced on the original spot. With the cables safely removed from the area of intended swing, Paz Valdes impressively chipped his ball onto the green, but the shot proved too difficult. par from Pulcini was enough to secure ownership of the Latin America Amateur Championship title for 2026 and gain exemption into the 2026 Masters Tournament, US Open and The Open.