Last Wednesday, Max Homa spoke in front of a room full reporters at the RBC Heritage, where he implicitly called out the likes of Sergio Garcia and others after their outbursts at Augusta National. “I don’t like when people break clubs. I don’t like when people beat up the golf course because we deal with it,” Homa said. “I think breaking clubs makes us look very, very spoilt.”

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At the time, Homa’s words rang true enough, but time makes hypocrites of us all, and on Sunday at Harbour Town the six-time PGA Tour winner was seen violently whipping his club into one the course’s native areas after a poor shot.

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Golf’s receipt keepers were quick to point out the hypocrisy, and once Homa cooled down after his round, he took to Instagram to own up to the ugly moment.

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Credit: Max Homa / IG

“I mentioned in this interview that we as pros should be held to a high standard and we should be kept accountable,” Homa wrote on his Instagram story accompanying a video of his press conference quotes and subsequent club throw. “I’m thankful so many people have held me accountable on this. Bad look. Not proud. Looking forward to bettering myself.”

In the end, Homa’s apology isn’t exactly surprising or, on its own, praise-worthy. We’ve seen this playbook before from countless athletes across countless sports through the years. What matters now is whether Homa holds himself accountable on the golf course moving forward. Golf can be an extremely frustrating and emotional game and nobody is perfect, so no one (sane, at least) is asking Homa to suddenly become a saint out there. But if he takes his own words to heart and doesn’t repeat his Harbour Town meltdown, then apology accepted.