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"The more I practice, the luckier I get"


BEN HOGAN
 
 

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17.11 Reglene kan være strenge:
Ulovlig med to caddier
Men var det slik denne regelen var ment å ramme en spiller?

Denne historien er tre år gammel, men vi bringer liv i den igjen for å vise at man bør passe godt på, slik at ingen går i fella - nå som det nærmer seg jul.

Det var nok mange som mente at avgjørelsen om å diskvalifisere spilleren i denne saken var temmelig streng. Rick Reilly er en av den. Følgende historie er hentet fra Sports Illustrated hvor han skriver, og noen vil kanskje ha sett den før. Men likevel. Her er hva Sports Illustrated skrev; Kanskje en historie å vise til i juleselskapene fremover. Golfspillere liker jo å snakke om golf i enhver sammenheng - nesten:

Fra Sports Illustrated:

The Official Fools of Golf

Av: Rick Reilly

There is small. There is petty. Then there is the Arizona Golf Association.

On Father's Day, Mark Johnson, a 43-year-old lieutenant colonel in the Army, came to the last nine holes of the Arizona Mid-Amateur at Ocotillo Golf Club in Chandler with an 11-shot lead. His caddie, son Seth, was celebrating his 14th birthday. Mark had carried his own bag for the first two days, but Seth wanted to be there for the win, and Mark wanted Seth to be a part of it, even if Seth does walk a little slowly and has a lazy eye that doesn't do much for his depth perception. It was kind of a gift to each other.

Right about then the AGA kicked them both out of the tournament.

Back at the par-3 3rd hole, Seth's 12-year-old best buddy, Derek, whom Seth had invited to walk with him, had taken Mark's putter out of the bag as the group walked off the tee box and carried it down the fairway, both boys trailing behind the unsuspecting Mark. At the green Mark turned and saw young Derek holding his putter and knew he was in trouble. A rules official, 69-year-old Doc Graves, was seated in his cart nearby. "We got a technicality here," Graves said, after Mark had putted out. "You can't have two caddies."

Mark turned to the boys and said, "Derek, Seth's the caddie, not you. You can't touch this bag, O.K.?" Derek said O.K. Seth said O.K. Not certain of the penalty, Graves radioed back to the clubhouse to confer with other tournament officials. Mark played on.

Six holes later, the lieutenant colonel and the boys were in Mark's truck, driving the 2 1/2 hours back home to Sierra Vista, Ariz. Seth was crying; Derek was crying; Mark wanted to kick a cactus.

Officially, it's rule 6-4 in the USGA's Rules of Golf: A player may have only one caddie at any one time. You can change caddies anytime you want. You can change caddies every hole if you want. But you can't have two caddies helping you at once. Penalty: DQ.

Of course, Rule 6-4 was never meant to cover a boy walking one hole with a putter and without the player's knowledge. That's known as a casual act of someone assisting a player, such as a caddie absentmindedly asking a fan to run a glove 100 yards back to his player, or another caddie bringing somebody his eight-iron from across the green (Rule 6-4/4.5). No penalty.

So why did the AGA give Mark Johnson the electric chair for spitting on the sidewalk? "We had to respect the integrity of the event," says the AGA's director of rules and competitions, James Waitt.

"There's no gray area in the Rules of Golf," says the AGA's executive director, Ed Gowan.

"We had to protect the field," says Graves.

Oh, stick it in your ball washer. The "integrity of the event"? When they DQ'd a man for something a boy did innocently, the event immediately had all the integrity of Cheez Whiz.

"No gray area"? There's more gray area in golf than in a year's worth of Wall Street Journals. Did you mean to hit that ball, or was it just a practice swing (18-2a/20)? Is the snake still alive (outside agency) or is it dead (loose impediment, 18/4)?

"Protect the field"? Name me one possible competitive advantage that Johnson gained. Did the jelly stains on Derek's face inspire him?

Golf takes itself so damn seriously it makes me want to ralph on a burrowing animal. The rules say you can't fix a spike mark, but if you can find enough people to help, you can roll a 1,000-pound boulder out of the way (23-1/3). John Daly can slap at his ball 24 times on one hole and nobody says boo, but Padraig Harrington forgets to sign his card after Thursday's round at the Benson & Hedges and he's DQ'd on Sunday with a five-shot lead.

But the AGA bottoms everything. I've covered golf for 22 years, and this is the most nitpicky, mean-spirited ruling I've ever heard of. Graves should've simply mentioned it to Johnson. Instead, he shot a mosquito with an elephant gun.

To his credit, the lieutenant colonel took the AGA's decision with more honor than it deserved. Johnson took full blame. "I guess I'm going home," he said, before gathering the sobbing boys. Not a word was said the whole way back to Sierra Vista. Father and son opened their presents, but, as Seth says, "It didn't feel very good." His mom's crying probably didn't help the mood any. Derek still feels bad.

A man named Jack Burke was handed the Graves Cup. That's what the winner of the Mid-Amateur gets -- the Graves Cup, named after the very same rules official, Robert (Doc) Graves.

Hope the guy uses it for a spittoon.




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