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Vijay Playing a Korn Ferry Tour Event?  

22 members have voted

  1. 1. Do you support Vijay Singh playing in a Korn Ferry Tour event?

    • Yes
      12
    • No
      10


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Posted

I think his playing in it would enhance the interest and attendance in the event. His is only one name in the "maybe he cheated" hat, many are on the tour today. I don't see demand for lifetime bans for any of them.

 

Moot point, he withdrew.


Posted
On 6/1/2020 at 11:54 AM, Herkimer said:

When one of the greatest golfers of the modern era decides to play in a tour designed for young golfers struggling to earn a living and make their mark, and thereby takes one of their spots, I call that a shit move.  Just because he has the right to play in that tour doesn't make it right.  If he were not taking someone spot, I would have no problem at all with him playing there.  I'm glad he changed his mind.

Those people CHOOSE to make a living this way. What if a self-made multimillionaire decides to sell his business and get serious about golf. Should he be kept off the KFT? Should trust-funders be allowed to play the KFT, or just the disadvantaged?

Vijay is 57 years old. I would think anyone of those guys on the KFT would love to be teamed up with him and play.

 

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Note: This thread is 2171 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

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    • Haiduk - Archdevil        
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    • I'm currently recuperating from surgery, so no golf, but have been thinking about this quite a bit. This and the don't overbend the right arm thing. It's hard for me to even pose the position, so I'm not 100% sure, but I feel like it's impossible to have the right humerus along the shirt seam and not overbend your right arm, unless your hands are down near your hips. If the left arm is up at or above the shoulder plane and your right arm is bent less than 90 degrees, then your right humerus has to raise or your hands will get pulled apart. Your left hand can't reach your right hand unless either the right upper arm is up or the right arm is overbent. Is that right? If it is, then focusing on not overbending the right arm would force you to raise the humerus. And actually thinking further on it, if you do overbend your right arm, then you're basically forcing your upper arm down or forcing your left arm to bend. Since (for me at least) bending the left arm too much is not something I think I need to worry about, it means that the bend in the trail arm is really the driving force behind what happens to the right humerus. 
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