When you come to think of it that is the secret of most of the great holes all over the world. They all have some kind of a twist. C.B. MACDONALD
"It was the arrogance to say, ‘I’m pulling her off the course.’"
/What These Wild And Crazy (Ad Agency Guys) Will Do For Adidas Golf!
/"Groove rule confusion leads to misguided DQ"
/I Demand A Restoration…
/"As the use of golf carts became universal, par threes lost their major appeal—shorter walking distances."
/“Where there was competition, there was no degradation in audience."
/"And he calls himself a proud Australian.
/Nick Tabakoff in the Herald Sun looks at Greg Norman's handling of his design office closure and questions about termination pay for his staff.
The ex-employee also said that while the Sydney office had fewer than 15 staff, it was "part of a larger company that employs about 40 people globally".
Norman was at the top of the latest BRW Sports Rich List, earning $15 million last year, largely because of the successful golf course design company.
Fair Work Australia guidelines specify redundancy payments are required to be made to terminated staff of a company with "15 or more employees".
Many Australian companies have historically chosen to pay four weeks' redundancy pay for every year of service, which would have allowed Norman's longest-serving ex-member of staff to be paid 40 weeks' redundancy.
Even baseline new national employment standards provide for a minimum 12-16 weeks' redundancy for staff of companies of 15 staff or more.
But Mr Steven said he received a "letter of termination" delivered in person by company vice-president, Jason McCoy, on April 30 - the day he was made redundant.
"It said I would just get statutory entitlements," he said. "It didn't even state I was being made redundant. It just said my termination was effective immediately."
"Oh, so five more weeks until we pretend to be excited about the FedEx Cup?"
/"If Seve cannot come to us, we must go to him."
/Congressional Opens To Reviews
/AP's Ben Nuckols writes about the re-opening of Congressional and its new greens. I thought this was interesting:
Ben Brundred Jr., co-chairman of Congressional's U.S. Open committee, declined to say how much the changes cost. He did say that members paid to rebuild the greens and that all other costs were split between Congressional and the USGA.
"Only, and I mean only, at St. Andrews."
/And To Wrap Up The 2010 Open Championship
/Images from Darren Carroll's blog...

