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    Follow up includes yours truly nominating Rustic Canyon. Shocking, I know.

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    The highly anticipated second volume comes to America for more design analysis and stunning photography.

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    SI Golf Plus calls this the #1 golf book of 2008.

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    New and updated, including contributions from Ran Morrissett and Daniel Wexler.

Classics
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    A summer in Dornoch.

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    Beautiful images of the classic Irish links.

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    The Course Beautiful : A Collection of Original Articles and Photographs on Golf Course Design
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    The Missing Links: America's Greatest Lost Golf Courses & Holes
    by Daniel Wexler
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« "Do You Still Support Tiger?" | Main | Finchem Should Do Video Conferences More Often »
Friday
Dec182009

Tiger's Indefinite Leave Clippings, Vol. 8

I can just feel the news cycle turning. First Tiger wins athlete of the decade, and now my peers voted him player of the year. Add having to accept that award in front of 300 members of the media on Wednesday of Masters week to the list of reasons he might think twice about returning to golf at Augusta.

In less cheery news, the NY Times's Michael Schmidt and Juliet Macur followed up today with sources suggesting the FBI is in fact focusing on Dr. Anthony Galea giving professional athletes performance-enhancing (and illegal) drugs.

The complaint said that Catalano told authorities that she planned to meet with Galea after crossing into the United States. The complaint made no reference to whether Catalano told authorities that Galea had provided performance-enhancing drugs to professional athletes. But several people who spoke on the condition of anonymity said that she did.

Those who spoke about the matter said they did not want to be identified because they were discussing an active investigation.

Dan Herbeck in the Buffalo News (thanks reader Cardinal) has a source inside the investigation that says Tiger's name has not come up in anyway:

“I know of nothing that has come up in this investigation that would indicate Tiger Woods was using [performanceenhancing drugs], and I know of nothing that would put him into any trouble with law enforcement,” said one source close to the probe.

While Woods faces damaging fallout from recent revelations that he cheated on his wife with an assortment of mistresses, no evidence from the Galea investigation indicates that he cheated in his bodybuilding regime with steroids or human growth hormone drugs, four sources close to the investigation told The News.

And in an odd twist Galea's lawyer offered a non-denial denial related to Tiger and his former client:

“Any suggestion of any linkage to Tiger Woods is nonexistent,” Galea’s lawyer, Brian H. Greenspan, said outside a Toronto courtroom Friday. “I’m saying categorically it does not relate to anything that’s alleged before this court.”

I'm not sure anyone suggested Tiger was linked to the charges before the Canadian court, did they? Why offer that up?

Anyway, here are the details on the charges brought before the court Friday.

A few days ago, Rick Telander found Tiger guilty of using performance enhancing drugs:

The PGA, you know, never tested until a year ago for performance-enhancing drugs. And the tour's testing now is basically a joke. Old-schoolers have always dismissed the ludicrous notion that steroids or the like could help elite golfers, anyway. They used to say the same thing about major-league pitchers. Hi, Roger Clemens.

Woods has already displayed the quality of his ethical decision-making. And as a spiritual guide, his late dad, Earl Woods, now looks more like a Mike Agassi clone than a developmental saint.
Tiger Woods is your AP Athlete of the Decade, folks.

If he did use performance-enhancing drugs, wouldn't that be perfect?

Ken Belson on Tag Heuer limiting its Tiger Woods "exposure."

“The partnership with Tiger Woods will continue,” Jean-Christophe Babin, TAG Heuer’s chief executive officer, said in a statement. “But we will downscale the use of his image in certain markets for a period of time, depending on his decision about returning to professional golf.”

Babin did not define what “downscale” meant. Advertisements featuring Woods have been prominent in luxury magazines, as well as billboards and other outdoor advertising. Babin said the company would still support the charitable Tiger Woods Foundation.

The WSJ suggests Tiger is making at least $2 million a year from Tag Heuer:

In 2002, Mr. Woods stopped promoting Rolex's Tudor, a watch he had pitched for about five years, after securing a deal with Tag Heuer, which paid him an estimated $2 million annually for a three-year pact, according to people close to the company. The pact was then renewed; it isn't clear what the new terms were.

Brian Viner interviews Peter Alliss and he certainly isn't holding back:

"No, it's very sad. Of course, people say his advisers must have known what was going on, and should have put a stop to it, but he's the goose that lays the golden eggs. If you'd worked for one of the old press barons, would you have gone up to Beaverbrook and told him to stop misbehaving? This is no different.

"We're supposed to feel sorry for his family. But I don't know his family. She [Elin] might be a cow to live with, I don't know. What I do know is that the jokes will go on for 20 years. 'In the hole, Tiger' has a whole new connotation now, and will he be able to put up with that? If he can, if he does go on to win another five majors to move ahead of Nicklaus, I think everything he's done in the last 12 years will pale into insignificance. It will be a huge achievement. Of course, you can gain forgiveness in America even from those who would like to whip you with thorn bushes or whatever. You can go on Oprah. You can own up to things, like Jimmy Swaggart, the evangelist. But that won't stop the jibes. And Tiger's a proud man. He'll hate the jibes. But he's got to re-enter society sometime."

Walter Pacheco of the Orlando Sentinel notes this change in the Arnold Palmer Invitational's website banner:

The New Yorker's John Cassidy notes this about Tiger's continued disappearance from visibility of any kind.

From the first day, when he refused to come out and say anything about his car wreck, Tiger has made a series of terrible moves, culminating in his decision to take an “indefinite” leave from professional golf. By pulling a Howard Hughes and disappearing from view, Tiger has left the field open for others, few of who have his best interests at heart, to shape the narrative in ways beneficial to them. What started out as a serious problem for Tiger has evolved into a career-threatening crisis. Unless he reverses course and tries to seize control of the story, his days as the world’s premier athlete-celebrity may be over.

And he notes that as a former senior editor at the New York Post...

where I helped to direct the coverage of the O.J. trial and other juicy yarns. Even back then, before the growth of the Internet, tabloid stories of a certain magnitude were capable of taking on a life of their own. Today, with TMZ.com, OMG!, People.com, Gawker, and who-knows how many other Web sites offering real-time coverage, the self-perpetuating nature of stories involving mega-celebrities is even more evident.

Rumors continue to circulate about Tiger's whereabouts, with the Palm Beach Post reporting on Privacy's location as of Thursday night.

And finally, Chelsea Handler lands the first interview with Tiger...



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Reader Comments (25)

You're welcome, Geoff. I just want to clarify that the Buffalo News article is based on comments from FOUR people close to the investigation, not just one: "While Woods faces damaging fallout from recent revelations that he cheated on his wife with an assortment of mistresses, no evidence from the Galea investigation indicates that he cheated in his bodybuilding regime with steroids or human growth hormone drugs, four sources close to the investigation told The News."
12.18.2009 | Unregistered Commentercardinal
p.s.: Two of the sources confirm that other professional athletes -- not Tiger -- are implicated in the investigation: "Two of those sources said other professional athletes — but not Woods — could potentially wind up in trouble as a result of the federal investigation of Dr. Anthony Galea of Toronto."
12.18.2009 | Unregistered Commentercardinal
Arnold is such a pussy...
12.18.2009 | Unregistered CommenterMarina Condo's
Where is Tiger?

a. Orlando

b. Rehab at Wickenburg (sp) AZ

c. Aboard Privacy (name painted over) in St. Barts

For bonus points, is he with Uchitel?
12.18.2009 | Unregistered CommenterTighthead
Where is Waldo...ooops I mean Tiger? St. Bart's? The Meadows? Perkins?
12.18.2009 | Unregistered CommenterSteven T.
What if he never reappears?
12.18.2009 | Unregistered CommenterRandom Variable
There are media commentators, and then there's Pete Alliss. Always 2.1 standard deviations from the norm. I think in 2010 we are in for the strangest year of golf in living memory. But if bookmakers in England have him odds-on to appear in the Ryder Cup at Celtic Manor, then their judgment is useful. These guys are sharp and don't part with cash easily. We shall see.
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterTim in Hoylake
Tim in Hoylake...

What are the odds the bookmakers are giving him to play the Masters?
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterMRP
These jokes just right themselves: Is he "Player of the Year" or "Playa' of the Year?" Or Both...
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterThe O
He's on secret location with Phil ( it all part of the game) Knight, they're shooting their new commercial, JUST DO ME!!
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterBarbados Bob
Barbados Bob...great line. To quote Earl, "Let the list of jokes grow!" (Are you in Barbados? How's Royal Westmoreland?)

Also, i like Tighthead's Quiz. I venture "Privacy."

Here's my quiz:

Who has been in the bunker in the last four weeks?

A) Steiny, Najame & Lavely ("Legal Eagles")

B) The Entourage: Byron Bell, Chang, etc. ("The Frat House")

C) Arnold, Jack and Greenspan ("The Intervention")

D) Sir Charles & Michael ("The Role Models")

E) Bill Clinton, Elliot Spitzer & Greg Norman ("The We've-Been-There, Done-Her Dream Team")

* The titles at the end for the groups are the episodic names for the reality show. I'm pitching it to Versus, VH1 and ESPN. Also, is there a channel dedicated to the frat house demographic? Something called "Dudes," or "Guyz"?
12.19.2009 | Unregistered Commenterstyled
MRP - Tiger is 5/2 favourite with William Hill to win the Masters.
12.19.2009 | Unregistered Commentertitleist38
Greenspan is one of Canada's top criminal lawyers. He is the one the well and very well heeled, hire.

If his client has something on Woods, though not directly connected to the current criminal charges, but say on later charges in the US, he'll give Woods up in a heartbeat if it will serve his client's case.
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterDGS
I find it bizarre/impressive that with the full tabloid machine humming, Tiger's whereabouts are a mystery. I wonder if he was shuttled out of Isleworth in someone's trunk, or in the back of a service van.
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterTighthead
I wonder if the Golf Channel will still run their annual Tiger Week between Christmas and New Years. It was pretty much a non-stop Tiger love-in.
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterMel
Can't believe Arnie took Tiger off the site, especially after all the catting around he's done.
12.19.2009 | Unregistered Commenteryoungmanbirdie
Nike's hiding their wounded tiger, until they give him up. The best is yet to come.
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterTwinkle
Arnold Palmer and Tiger Woods both won four Masters, drove Cadillacs, and....
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterTwinkle
Betting Woods at 5-2 to win the next Masters is a sucker play, imo. I want 10-1 odds.

What Woods probably should do is go on Oprah, make a simple, declarative statement that he was wrong, that he has learned a great deal from this, etc.

Oprah then can feed him the prearranged softballs about the matter and then they can go on to other things, with the birdbrained audience sympathetically applauding on cue.
12.19.2009 | Unregistered Commenterdbcooper
“Lady, a man is divided up into two parts, body and spirit.”

The old woman clamped her gums together.
You can always, without fail, tell when a general-beat sports columnist like Rick Telander (of the Chicago Sun-Times) gets in over his head and starts writing about golf. Those writers always mention "the PGA." Oblivious to the differences between the PGA of America and the PGA Tour. (And, probably, making fact-checkers everywhere scratch their heads when they can't find confirmation from the PGA of America that they have ever had a commissioner named Finchem. Fortunately for the Sun-Times, they probably did away with fact-checkers in a cost-cutting move in about 1996.)

It very nearly makes me sypathetic to the Tour's website and promotional stuff in which they knock themselves out capitalizing PGATOUR. I used to be annoyed. Now I know; it is net-speak, for screaming at Rick Telander -- "It's not 'the PGA', you idiot! It is the PGA TOUR!"
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterChuck
Chuck - a writer in the Globe and Mail, which is Canada's top paper, wrote that Tim Finchem would make sure nobody from NBC got to play in the Masters pro-am.
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterTighthead
LOL. I remember a British writer describing Asian-made merchandise available in The Tented Village at an Open Championship, including a hat that was embroidered: "US Open - Augusta." That one's become less funny in recent years.
12.19.2009 | Unregistered CommenterChuck
nike will never drop tiger over this stuff. he created their golf business out of nothing. plus, nike's association with tiger does not depend on him being a good family man or anything except the greatest golfer currently playing and arguably the greatest ever. none of the bad stuff that has come out about tiger touches any of the reasons why he is valuable to nike. i'm not even sure that credible allegations that tiger used peds would do it.
12.20.2009 | Unregistered Commenterthusgone
Palmer's history aside, Palmer distancing himself from (relative neighbor) Tiger with his tournament is
A) Smart
B) Timely
C) Good Business

Tag Heuer (Gee I really lusted for their watches!!) will let him fade, not thud, less bad publicity that way. Tiger will be left with only Nike by his side, and I can tell you not many if any women are buying their men golfers Tiger Woods branded golf gear for Christmas or Kwanzaa. haha heehee on that one, wish there were odds on that one to bet.

Tiger's escape to Maryland ought to make a good made-for-TV movie. NBC will do it, they need the Neilsons.
12.21.2009 | Unregistered CommenterGolfFan

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