concurring.
According to the Ohio Supreme Court in Thompson, “a player who injures another player in the course of a sporting event by conduct that is a foreseeable, customary part of the sport cannot be held liable for negligence because no duty is owed to protect the victim from that conduct.”1 I find this description of the scope of the reckless conduct standard to be more practical than the distinction between contact and non-contact sports. Although golf is not a contact sport in the same sense as football, ice hockey, or polo, a golfer obviously accepts the risk of *441coming in contact -with wayward golf shots on the links.2
Traditionally, courts have barred recovery for damages resulting from injuries occurring in an athletic competition under the theory that the participants voluntarily assumed the risk of dangers inherent in that activity.3 More recently, however, courts have held that participants in an athletic competition owe a legal duty not to injure another participant by conduct that is either deliberate, willful, or recklessly disregards the safety of the other participant.4 Although a participant in a game or sport assumes the risk of all of the dangers incidental to that particular activity which are obvious and foreseeable, he does not assume the risk of injury from fellow players acting in an unreasonable or unsportsmanlike manner with a reckless lack of concern for the safety of others participating.5 Recognizing the trend among state courts to allow injured athletes to recover for injuries sustained on the field, the federal court of appeals, in a Colorado case involving a professional football player who recklessly struck an opposing player in the back of the head, held that even on a football field all reason has not been abandoned.6 To implement this rule, the assumption of the risk doctrine requires the court to determine the nature of the risks that a willing participant in an athletic competition or recreational activity assumes.
Turning to Texas jurisprudence, I first note that our Supreme Court has abolished voluntary assumption of the risk as a defense to actions based on negligence, except in “cases in which there is a knowing and express oral or written consent to the dangerous activity or condition.”7 The dissent in Farley agreed that assumption of the risk should be eliminated as a separate defense to be considered by the jury in ordinary negligence eases, but argued that there are exceptional situations where it should be retained as a device for use by the court — such as in “implied consent” cases in which there should be no recovery even though the plaintiffs conduct might be regarded as reasonable under the circumstances.8 In Connell v. Payne the Dallas Court of Appeals acknowledged that, after Farley, the fact-finder considers the reasonableness of the injured party’s conduct in confronting a known risk only as an element of contributory negligence in an ordinary negligence ease.9 Without explaining why the rule should be limited to contact sports, the court held, “A participant in a competitive contact sport expressly consents to and assumes the risk of the dangerous activity by voluntarily participating in the sport.”10 The Amarillo Court of Appeals in Hathaway extended the reasoning of Con-nell to the game of golf, although the opinion stops short of classifying it as a contact sport.11 Instead, finding that “the risk of being inadvertently hit by a ball struck by another competitor is built into the game of golf,” the court held that “for a plaintiff to prevail in a cause of action against a fellow golfer, the defendant must have acted recklessly or intentionally.”12 Subsequently, the Austin Court of Appeals declined to apply *442the reckless-disregard standard to a nonparticipant who had entrusted a parasail to the plaintiff without providing adequate supervision or instruction.13 The Austin court held that, although the plaintiff may have consented to the possibility of the unusual dangers inherent in the activity, there was no evidence that he was aware that the parasail might have been negligently attached to the tow rope.14
Because “shanking” the ball is a foreseeable and not uncommon occurrence in golf, I believe that a golfer’s consent to assume the risk of being struck by such a ball may be implied from the golfer’s participation in the game.15 This implied, assumption of the risk differs from the voluntary assumption of the risk doctrine that has been merged into our system of comparative negligence.16 A plaintiff who voluntarily encounters a known danger, but does not act unreasonably in doing so, cannot be found contributorily negligent.17 Because golfers enter freely and voluntarily into the game, they are deemed to have consented to the known risk of being injured by wayward golf balls.18 Unlike voluntary assumption of the risk, implied assumption of the risk is not an affirmative defense whereby a defendant seeks to prove that he has been relieved of the future duty to act with reasonable care. Instead, implied assumption of the risk is a useful doctrine for determining what duty the defendant owes to the plaintiff.19 Imposing a duty on all golfers to avoid shanking the ball would place unreasonable burdens on the free and vigorous participation in the sport.20 A golfer should not, however, be deemed to have consented to an unreasonable risk.21 What constitutes an unreasonable risk under the circumstances must be delineated with reference to the way the particular game is played — the rules and customs that shape the participants’ ideas of foreseeable risks in the course of a game.22 By voluntarily participating in the game, Allen impliedly assumed the risk of being struck by a shanked ball, but not a second tee shot hit by Donath without warning. Thus, whether Donath recklessly failed to warn Allen that he intended to hit a second shot was the question for the jury.
In this case, there was sufficient evidence to raise a fact issue concerning whether Allen expressly consented to Donath hitting a “mulligan” from the third tee box or whether Donath was reckless in hitting the second tee shot without warning. If Allen expressly consented to the second shot, he assumed the same risk of being hit by a mulligan as he had assumed with regard to the first shot. He remained in substantially the same precarious position fifteen to twenty feet forward of Donath. Allen testified that he would have been watching Donath had he known of his intent to hit a second shot. If in fact, however, Allen did not expressly consent to the mulligan, a jury could have found Donath’s conduct in hitting a second tee shot without warning to be reckless.
The broad-form submission, mandated by Rule 277, inhibits our ability to ascertain whether the jury believed (1) that Donath was not reckless, (2) that his reckless conduct was not a proximate cause of the injury, or (3) that Allen failed to meet his burden of proof.23 The court’s charge to the jury defined “negligence” in accordance with Texas *443Pattern Jury Charge 2.0124 and “reckless conduct” according to Section 500 of the Restatement of Torts Second (with slight modifications to account for the “reckless conduct” of the plaintiff as well as the defendant). Section 500 of the Restatement defines “reckless disregard of safety” as follows:
The actor’s conduct is in reckless disregard of the safety of another if he does an act or intentionally fails to do an act which it is his duty to the other to do, knowing or having reason to know of facts which would lead a reasonable man to realize, not only that his conduct creates an unreasonable risk of physical harm to another, but also that such risk is substantially greater than that which is necessary to make his conduct negligent.25
Comment g to section 500 suggests that reckless conduct differs from negligence in several important particulars:
It differs from that form of negligence which consists in mere inadvertence, incompetence, unskillfulness, or a failure to take precautions to enable the actor adequately to cope with a possible or probable future emergency, in that reckless misconduct requires a conscious choice of a course of action, either with knowledge of the serious danger to others involved in it or with knowledge of facts which would disclose this danger to any reasonable man. It differs not only from the above-mentioned form of negligence, but also from that negligence which consists in intentionally doing an act with knowledge that it contains a risk of harm to others, in that the actor to be reckless must recognize that his conduct involves a risk substantially greater in amount than that which is necessary to make his conduct negligent. The difference between reckless misconduct and conduct involving only such a quantum of risk as is necessary to make it negligent is a difference in the degree of the risk, but this difference of degree is so marked as to amount substantially to a difference in kind.26
It was undisputed at trial that shanking a ball is a foreseeable common occurrence in golf. Had the trial court submitted the charge requested by Allen — inquiring whether the negligence of either party proximately caused “the occurrence in question” — the jury, nevertheless, would have been duty-bound to consider whether the injury was proximately caused by Donath’s negligence in shanking the ball. And if the jury had returned an affirmative answer to the requested negligence question submitted in broad-form, we would have been unable to ascertain whether the jury believed that Do-nath negligently shanked the ball — a finding which would not support recovery by Allen— or that he recklessly failed to warn Allen of his intent to hit a mulligan — a finding that would support recovery because Allen cannot be deemed to have assumed the unforeseeable risk of injury caused by such reckless conduct.
Donath owed no duty to his fellow golfers to avoid hitting the ball incompetently or unskillfully. Therefore, the court properly denied Allen’s request to submit an ordinary negligence question. More importantly, the reckless conduct question properly limited the jury’s deliberations to whether Allen’s injury was caused by a breach of Donath’s duty to warn the other players of his intent to hit a mulligan. Because I agree that the trial court properly applied the reckless conduct standard of care to this case, I concur with the holding of the majority.
. Thompson v. McNeill, 53 Ohio St.3d 102, 559 N.E.2d 705, 707 (1990).
. See id. at 709.
. See, e.g., Gaspard v. Grain Dealers Mutual Insurance Co., 131 So.2d 831, 834 (La.Ct.App.1961).
. See Nabozny v. Barnhill, 31 Ill.App.3d 212, 334 N.E.2d 258, 261 (1975).
. Bourque v. Duplechin, 331 So.2d 40, 42 (La.Ct.App.1976).
. See Hackbart v. Cincinnati Bengals, Inc., 601 F.2d 516, 521 (10th Cir.1979).
. See Farley v. M M Cattle Co., 529 S.W.2d 751, 758 (Tex.1975).
. Farley, 529 S.W.2d at 760 (Walker, J., dissenting).
. Connell v. Payne, 814 S.W.2d 486, 488 (Tex.App.—Dallas 1991, writ denied).
. Id. at 488-89 (emphasis added) (citing Marchetti v. Kalish, 53 Ohio St.3d 95, 559 N.E.2d 699, 703-04 (1990) (holding that before a party may proceed with a cause of action involving injury resulting from a recreational or sports activity, reckless or intentional conduct must exist because participants assume the ordinary risks of the activity)).
. Hathaway v. Tascosa Country Club, Inc., 846 S.W.2d 614, 617 (Tex.App.—Amarillo 1993, no writ).
. Id. at 616-17.
. Bangert v. Shaffher, 848 S.W.2d 353, 356 (Tex.App.—Austin 1993, writ denied).
. Id.
. See Thompson, 559 N.E.2d at 709.
. See Joe Greenhill, Assumed Risk, 20 Sw. L.J. 1, 1 n. 1 (1966).
. See W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 68, at 485 (5th ed. 1984).
. Id. at 485-86 & n. 54.
. See Farley, 529 S.W.2d at 760 (Walker, J., dissenting).
. See Marchetti, 559 N.E.2d at 703.
. See Keeton, supra note 17, at 485 n. 50 (“Perhaps with the exception of professional hockey, the players should not ordinarily be deemed to have consented to unsportsmanlike rule violations, not part of the game, that may recklessly or intentionally result in injury.”).
. Thompson, 559 N.E.2d at 708.
. See Tex.R.Civ.P. 277.
. 1 State Bar of Texas, Texas Pattern Jury Charges PJC 2.01 (1991).
. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 500 (1965).
. Id. cmt. g (emphasis added).