Keegan Bradley and Webb Simpson will be looking for new tools soon enough. (Getty Images)

Golf is full of questions. How do I hit it farther? How do I break 90? What is wrong with Tiger Woods? Why are you such an idiot?

It's a game that will never be figured out in the millions of years people will play it, but it's fun to try to figure it out. Every week it'll be you guys who help us answer the in-depth (and ridiculously fun) questions about the game. Have a question? Fire them our way on Twitter to either @shanebacon or @eyeongolf with the hashtag "#eyeqs". We will pick out the best of the week, answer them as best we can and continue this throughout the rest of the year.

So we begin right here with our weekly Q and A with the readers …

A. My initial thoughts still hold true (I wrote this Wednesday, basically saying I thought the USGA and R&A had wasted their time on this while other things are "ruining" golf faster), but after a couple of days I'd like to add a few things.

-- First, nobody is going to call another amateur out for using a belly putter long after this rule becomes enforced. Recreational golf is supposed to be fun, and you should use whatever you want to make that happen (hot driver face, long putter, eraser, whatever). 

-- On top of that, I think Jim Furyk nailed it Thursday after his round at Tiger's tournament when he said the governing bodies should have acted on this sooner. Anchoring has been around for decades and it seems that the Keegan Bradleys and Webb Simpsons of the world winning majors pushed the USGA and R&A over the top. That mixed with all the juniors using only this method all their lives got the big dogs to bark, but it should have happened years ago. 

-- Your favorite PGA Tour player will be fine. Trust me, these guys are making putts not because of a method but because they have the right mentality to be incredible golfers. I guarantee you few guys will fall off the map because they're forced to use another method of putting. Bradley will still be able to pound the ball, Simpson will still be able to find a lot of greens and Adam Scott … well, he will still have that smile. They're going to be fine. 

-- And finally, the asterisks talk is nonsense. Guys won tournaments and majors previously under the guidelines and rules of the game. Bradley's Wanamaker is as legit as David Toms' and Shaun Micheel's and that isn't going to change. Saying these guys will have a historical check next to their name for doing this is absolutely ridiculous.

A. An extremely good question, but TaylorMade was the first company to say it still intends on selling belly putters and such, so I think for now you should be good. Maybe hold onto it, and in 20 years it'll be like that Ken Griffey Jr. Upper Deck card (that thing is still the hot baseball card, right? I haven't collected since I was in grade school).

A. Yep, use them as much as you want until we ring in that 2016 New Year. The word is that a lot of the guys, like Simpson, have been working with a shorter putter in anticipation of this, and I suspect guys who feel comfortable with a shorter putter will switch before this comes into effect. 

One thing to watch out for: If a player is using a belly putter well into December 2015, I'd bet a handsome amount of money they will be struggling to make cuts come the New Year.

A. Well at first glance my thought was WELL UNDER WHAT IS THIS GUY TALKING ABOUT! We had our first anchor major win ever in 2011, so it seems dumb to think that it will be more than three in three years. That is, until you remember that since Bradley won that PGA Championship a couple of years ago, we've had three anchored wins, with Simpson at the U.S. Open and Ernie Els at the British (and Adam Scott nearly won the British with a method that will be deemed illegal come '16). 

So, 3.5 over 12 majors? I still am going to take the under, but slightly. I think we will see 2-3 anchored wins in that span, so I think the line is more 2.5. That is, unless everyone changes to a short putter this year in a Gregg Popovich-style boycott of the USGA/R&A. 

A. I read the fine print a few times to make sure I wasn't missing anything, and by all accounts it will still be legal to anchor your beer to your A.) hand B.) belly C.) cart D.) playing partner.

The big question is, is it still going to be legal to drink Anchor Steam on a golf course in 2016? I'm nervous for one of my favorite beers in the world!