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Nash, who has been golfing for about three years, said a friend spent the night at his house before the tournament and left a 5-wood club, and he put it in his bag, not realizing it made a total of 15.
Wood said Nash made him and the club proud.
"I think most people -- not just kids -- would have tried to justify in their mind having the extra clubs in their bag and not using them as an excuse to not call and disqualify themselves," Wood said.
Nash's father said his son is a regular teenager -- he talks back to his parents, picks on his brothers -- and was a bit surprised the teenager didn't consider, just for a moment, keeping the mistake to himself. But he said he did the right thing and he and his wife were proud.
"When I first heard it, when he told me the whole story, I thought, 'Wow, you are doing the right thing,'" Bob Nash said. "You have to keep doing what's right. But in the back of my mind, I'm thinking, 'If you didn't say anything, the standing wouldn't change.'"
The boy's honest deed was first reported by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
Nash started his freshman year Wednesday at Waterford Union High School and plans to go out for the golf team.
He played in another tournament on Tuesday -- and counted his clubs three times. The faux pas has made him a better golfer, he said.
"It kind of got me to be more aware of all the rules, especially 4-4," he said.
[Associated Press;
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