Matt Wallace is known for having a temper on the golf course, and he put it on display during the third round of the Valspar Championship in Florida - with footage of the Englishman and his caddie Sam Bernard arguing later going viral.<br /><br />On the 18th hole of Innisbrook's Copperhead course in Palm Harbor, Wallace's ball was on a cart path and the player himself wanted to swing from there - while his caddie thought it'd be best to intervene and try to convince him to reconsider his strategy. <br /><br />It has been reported that Bernard would've preferred for his boss to take a drop to the right of the path, which seemed to have rattled the four-time DP World Tour winner's flow. <br /><br /><br />Video from NBC's coverage of the PGA tournament shows Wallace and Bernard in a heated argument after the golfer ended up swinging from the path - but landed his shot 30 yards short of the green.<br /><br />In the clip, Wallace appears to tell his bagman: 'Shut up and stop trying to get involved... stop trying to get involved', before handing him his glove and club. <br /><br />In response, Bernard appears to tell the 32-year-old: 'I don't want to be involved'. <br /><br />Afterward, analyst Paul Azinger said on the NBC broadcast that the pair 'should've been mic'd up.' <br /><br />It appears that the duo has put their spat behind them, at least for now, as NBC’s on-course reporter Cara Banks had the chance to catch up with them after the round.<br /><br />'I can confirm that the partnership is all well,' she said. 'They will be back together [for Sunday's final round]. Matt was simply frustrated after his bogey on 17 and hitting that errant drive on 18.<br /><br />'He was frustrated that Sam questioned whether he or not should take a drop before that second shot.' <br /><br />Wallace ended up making par and carded a 70. By the end of Sunday, he ranked tied seventh, along with Americans Webb Simpson and Cody Gribble.<br /><br />American Taylor Moore came out on top, ahead of Jordan Spieth and Tommy Fleetwood, who both finished tied for third. He surged into the mix with a 9-iron to 5 feet for birdie on the 15th hole and a 25-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole, followed by two tough pars for a 4-under 67.<br /><br />Moore's win on Sunday was his first-ever on the PGA Tour and was worth $1,458,000. It also moved him to No. 9 in the FedEx Cup standings. Along with the Masters, he gets in the PGA Championship. He moved from No. 103 to just inside the top 50 in the world.<br /><br />Meanwhile, Wallace's latest public outburst isn't the first time that the Englishman has openly shown his frustration while playing competitive golf. <br /><br />In 2019, the world's current No. 175 blew up on his former looper Dave McNeil at the BMW International Open, facing much backlash afterward. <br /><br />Wallace also buried his putter to the ground while playing the 18th hole at Hillside during the 2019 British Masters. <br /><br />In 2021, he threw clubs around the Wales Open in Newport.