Jump to content
IGNORED

Brandel Gives Tiger an F/ Tiger's Agent Hints at Legal Action Against Chamblee


Note: This thread is 4038 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!

Recommended Posts

The anti-Tigers will always say that he couldn't help but see the ball move.

The pro-Tigers will say it never moved at all.

The sensible observers with any sort of good judgement (which includes most of us) will say yes the ball moved, but it probably was not apparent to Tiger in the heat of battle.  He should have called in an official after he saw the ball wiggle and this discussion would not be happening.  He shouldn't have gone off on the official when the penalty was assessed against him.  This is how I see it and how most sensible people see it.

No argument there. Once he was told it moved, he should have just said "Okay, it moved."

:ping:  :tmade:  :callaway:   :gamegolf:  :titleist:

TM White Smoke Big Fontana; Pro-V1
TM Rac 60 TT WS, MD2 56
Ping i20 irons U-4, CFS300
Callaway XR16 9 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S
Callaway XR16 3W 15 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S, X2Hot Pro 20 degrees S

"I'm hitting the woods just great, but I'm having a terrible time getting out of them." ~Harry Toscano

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Replies 761
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

The anti-Tigers will always say that he couldn't help but see the ball move.

The pro-Tigers will say it never moved at all.

The sensible observers with any sort of good judgement (which includes most of us) will say yes the ball moved, but it probably was not apparent to Tiger in the heat of battle.  He should have called in an official after he saw the ball wiggle and this discussion would not be happening.  He shouldn't have gone off on the official when the penalty was assessed against him.  This is how I see it and how most sensible people see it.

Slugger White, the RO who Tiger dressed down, said, "He knew there was movement there, but he was very adamant that is oscillated and it stayed there." so apparently, in their discussion, Tiger agreed there was movement. That doesn't tell us whether Tiger knew there was movement at the moment it happened or after he watched the video. But there is this: Tiger had to know there was "movement' of some kind at the moment because he immeduately stopped trying to move the impediment.

I know, in my experience, when this happens I always say to my playing partners, "Hey guys, the ball just moved." There is really no other ethical way to go about it, especially in a medal situation where you have to protect the field. But that's just me; I am not in a tournament with 7 figures on the line.

And I agree that it was poor judgement to go off on Slugger White. He is a well liked, well respected member of the PGA Tour family with no axe to grind. I honestly think that this is what may have set off some of the guys in the media like Chamblee and Bamberger.

Bill M

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

And I agree that it was poor judgement to go off on Slugger White. He is a well liked, well respected member of the PGA Tour family with no axe to grind. I honestly think that this is what may have set off some of the guys in the media like Chamblee and Bamberger.

If this is the actual motive, I agree with the editorial. It would be like going off on a cop after running a red light. Not such a hot idea.

He probably thought that he caught it in time, and he didn't. So, I still disagree with the cheating part.

:ping:  :tmade:  :callaway:   :gamegolf:  :titleist:

TM White Smoke Big Fontana; Pro-V1
TM Rac 60 TT WS, MD2 56
Ping i20 irons U-4, CFS300
Callaway XR16 9 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S
Callaway XR16 3W 15 degree Fujikura Speeder 565 S, X2Hot Pro 20 degrees S

"I'm hitting the woods just great, but I'm having a terrible time getting out of them." ~Harry Toscano

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Quote:

Originally Posted by phan52

Slugger White, the RO who Tiger dressed down, said, "He knew there was movement there, but he was very adamant that is oscillated and it stayed there." so apparently, in their discussion, Tiger agreed there was movement. That doesn't tell us whether Tiger knew there was movement at the moment it happened or after he watched the video. But there is this: Tiger had to know there was "movement' of some kind at the moment because he immeduately stopped trying to move the impediment.

I know, in my experience, when this happens I always say to my playing partners, "Hey guys, the ball just moved." There is really no other ethical way to go about it, especially in a medal situation where you have to protect the field. But that's just me; I am not in a tournament with 7 figures on the line.

And I agree that it was poor judgement to go off on Slugger White. He is a well liked, well respected member of the PGA Tour family with no axe to grind. I honestly think that this is what may have set off some of the guys in the media like Chamblee and Bamberger.

Originally Posted by Lihu

If this is the actual motive, I agree with the editorial. It would be like going off on a cop after running a red light. Not such a hot idea.

He probably thought that he caught it in time, and he didn't. So, I still disagree with the cheating part.

I didn't say it was cheating. Let's call it an unfortunate judgement call. Cavalier, as some may say... ;-)

Bill M

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Brandel couldn't prove that Tiger saw it move, so it would be dumb to write that too.-I meant what I said above-My problem is almost 100% because he went to the "cheater" word-Not a problem with questioning TIger and the rules infractions (THREE) this year.

See, the "cheater" word isn't such a big deal for me. Not because I don't think it's a serious accusation within the golf world, but because dressing up the same basic opinion in any sort of "Tiger's got some explaining to do" or "Tiger's got an attitude problem with the rules" language just amounts, IMO, to the same thing. It's implying that he did something conscious - but with an element of evasion that is disingenuous.

For me - the correct standard for any commentator would be this. If you don't think he saw the ball move, then by all means come right out and say there was no question of cheating, and no issue of damage to reputation etc. One of the other arguments linked from here did just that. The only issue left for Tiger to deal with his whether he's managed the PR side of things wisely.

But if you want to talk about collateral damage, reputation, trust, integrity and so forth - then I think you have to be saying that out of a belief that he DID or SHOULD HAVE seen the ball move. And that kind of talk is tantamount to calling him a cheat, whatever words are used.

Slugger White, the RO who Tiger dressed down, said, "He knew there was movement there, but he was very adamant that is oscillated and it stayed there." so apparently, in their discussion, Tiger agreed there was movement. That doesn't tell us whether Tiger knew there was movement at the moment it happened or after he watched the video. But there is this: Tiger had to know there was "movement' of some kind at the moment because he immeduately stopped trying to move the impediment.

I know, in my experience, when this happens I always say to my playing partners, "Hey guys, the ball just moved." There is really no other ethical way to go about it, especially in a medal situation where you have to protect the field. But that's just me; I am not in a tournament with 7 figures on the line.

And I agree that it was poor judgement to go off on Slugger White. He is a well liked, well respected member of the PGA Tour family with no axe to grind. I honestly think that this is what may have set off some of the guys in the media like Chamblee and Bamberger.

I think Tiger's reaction to, and treatment of, Slugger White is part of the reason I don't trust him on this. I know that there was a 2 shot penalty at stake, but I think if Tiger has accepted the officials' judgement with better grace, I'd have a much easier time giving him the benefit of the doubt on the original violation.


Nope-He could have seen it oscillate and stopped before it "moved" (Rules of Golf definition). PErfetctly reasonable to think that.[quote name="phan52" url="/t/70622/brandel-gives-tiger-an-f-tigers-agent-hints-at-legal-action-against-chamblee/630#post_916989"] But there is this: Tiger had to know there was "movement' of some kind at the moment because he immeduately stopped trying to move the impediment. [/quote] They're not the same shirly.-Tell yourself that all you want the Tour guys Ive talked to all say you dont call someone a cheater on the PGA Tour. Guys wont even put the label on Gary Player and Colin and Vijay and theres a LOT more evidence that they out and out cheated than there is to Tiger.-Cheat implies willful violation of the rules not just accidental. Not the same thing.-But youre not in golf so you have an uninformed opinion of the weight it truly carries. Brandel doesnt. [quote name="birlyshirly" url="/t/70622/brandel-gives-tiger-an-f-tigers-agent-hints-at-legal-action-against-chamblee/630#post_917005"]See, the "cheater" word isn't such a big deal for me. Not because I don't think it's a serious accusation within the golf world, but because dressing up the same basic opinion in any sort of "Tiger's got some explaining to do" or "Tiger's got an attitude problem with the rules" language just amounts, IMO, to the same thing. It's implying that he did something conscious - but with an element of evasion that is disingenuous. [/quote]

"The expert golfer has maximum time to make minimal compensations. The poorer player has minimal time to make maximum compensations." - And no, I'm not Mac. Please do not PM me about it. I just think he is a crazy MFer and we could all use a little more crazy sometimes.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

They're not the same shirly.-Tell yourself that all you want the Tour guys Ive talked to all say you dont call someone a cheater on the PGA Tour. Guys wont even put the label on Gary Player and Colin and Vijay and theres a LOT more evidence that they out and out cheated than there is to Tiger.-Cheat implies willful violation of the rules not just accidental.

Not the same thing.-But youre not in golf so you have an uninformed opinion of the weight it truly carries. Brandel doesnt.

OK. If you're saying that there's an unwritten rule that applies to players, and to Brandel specifically because he's a former player, then I can accept that.

I've looked at this as BC as a journalist, and judging him as a journalist, I think what he wrote was legitimate comment.

But if you want to argue that his comment carries extra weight because of his status as an ex-tour player, and that therefore "player rules" rather than "hack rules" apply, then I can at least see the logic of that.


Good we can agree on that-Itd be one thing for Rich Lerner to say it, it is another for a 15-year vet to say it. And even tho his article was lousy otherwise the cheater part is the only part that done pissed me off and crossed the line.[quote name="birlyshirly" url="/t/70622/brandel-gives-tiger-an-f-tigers-agent-hints-at-legal-action-against-chamblee/630#post_917053"]OK. If you're saying that there's an unwritten rule that applies to players, and to Brandel specifically because he's a former player, then I can accept that. I've looked at this as BC as a journalist, and judging him as a journalist, I think what he wrote was legitimate comment. But if you want to argue that his comment carries extra weight because of his status as an ex-tour player, and that therefore "player rules" rather than "hack rules" apply, then I can at least see the logic of that. [/quote]

"The expert golfer has maximum time to make minimal compensations. The poorer player has minimal time to make maximum compensations." - And no, I'm not Mac. Please do not PM me about it. I just think he is a crazy MFer and we could all use a little more crazy sometimes.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Do you think this will negatively impact BC then (putting aside the more extreme sanctions like his being sacked by the Golf Channel)?

I have never seen him broadcast, so I don't really understand his commentary role that well.

Does he depend on having access/good relations with current players? And would you expect this be affected by a loss of goodwill?  Or can he continue to get by, sitting in a booth and harking back to his previous job, and being controversial?


Do you think this will negatively impact BC then (putting aside the more extreme sanctions like his being sacked by the Golf Channel)?

I have never seen him broadcast, so I don't really understand his commentary role that well.

Does he depend on having access/good relations with current players? And would you expect this be affected by a loss of goodwill?  Or can he continue to get by, sitting in a booth and harking back to his previous job, and being controversial?

He's an analyst as such he's likely seen as an idiot by those he critiques frequently and liked by those he's more complimentary of.   Short term, some (those that dislike him calling Tiger a cheater) may be less accessible to him or less forthcoming with information.  Overall this will all pass and will have zero impact on BC long term, unless he get's fired.

Joe Paradiso

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Golfingdad and fourputt - I hear what you're saying about consulting with a RO, but in the BMW situation, what can Tiger possibly say? The RO can only ask Tiger, do you think your ball moved or not? If the answer's no - then there's nothing to talk about. If the answer's yes, then there's a penalty and a replace. I don't think Tiger can hedge his bets by saying "I don't THINK it moved, but if video evidence turns up that proves me wrong, then at least I've flagged it." The whole "call-ins" issue is designed to take us away from that sort of scenario, and let decisions be made on the ground.

There's no way for Tiger to subcontract the original factual question of whether the ball moved, in the same way as he can (legitimately) where there's a question of how a rule should be interpreted.

It would have covered any second guessing.  The RO's ruling is final if he has all of the facts known at the time.  He may well have told Tiger that under Rule 18, any doubt is resolved against the player, so Tiger would have been required to go through the motions of trying to "replace" the ball under just a one stroke penalty.  Any doubt would have been eliminated and we would have had to find something else to entertain ourselves with for the last 36 pages. :blink:

Rick

"He who has the fastest cart will never have a bad lie."

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Do you think this will negatively impact BC then (putting aside the more extreme sanctions like his being sacked by the Golf Channel)?

I have never seen him broadcast, so I don't really understand his commentary role that well.

Does he depend on having access/good relations with current players? And would you expect this be affected by a loss of goodwill?  Or can he continue to get by, sitting in a booth and harking back to his previous job, and being controversial?

Maybe THIS is a part of the difference in perception between you and most of the folks on this thread who HAVE seen Brandel broadcast for years and HAVE seen his constant attacks on Tiger's decision regarding his attempts to improve his game.  According to Brandel Tiger never should have changed his swing after 2000.  And he has been relentlessly critical of Tiger's decisions all along the way.  If Tiger wins a tournament he will be looking at the stats and say that he really didn't play well because his approach shot from 75-125 yards weren't that good, or some other it-picky point.  So when he calls Tiger a cheater it is not in a vacuum, it is in the context of someone who hasn't really tried to hide (despite his "the lady doth protest too much" claims that he likes Tiger) his dislike of Tiger and his need to find any basis to criticize his game and his decisions.

But then again, what the hell do I know?

Rich - in name only

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

It would have covered any second guessing.  The RO's ruling is final if he has all of the facts known at the time.  He may well have told Tiger that under Rule 18, any doubt is resolved against the player, so Tiger would have been required to go through the motions of trying to "replace" the ball under just a one stroke penalty.  Any doubt would have been eliminated and we would have had to find something else to entertain ourselves with for the last 36 pages.

Agreed. There would have been no debate in that situation - although there would have been the interesting spectacle (which we now know would probably have been captured on camera) of trying to replace a ball and recreate a fractionally altered lie amongst loose impediments. We might also then have had "hidden camera" footage showing Tiger calling a penalty on himself which would otherwise never have been picked up. Imagine the positive PR of a video being released showing "Look - here's Tiger in the bushes where he thinks no-one else can see him. But nevertheless, he's calling a penalty on himself - and look how tiny the movement of his ball was."

However that scenario still requires the player to have first declared that his ball has moved. I don't think there's any scope for a player to discuss whether he has caused the ball to move - unless the player wants to argue that any movement was caused by an outside agency rather than the player himself.

Maybe THIS is a part of the difference in perception between you and most of the folks on this thread who HAVE seen Brandel broadcast for years and HAVE seen his constant attacks on Tiger's decision regarding his attempts to improve his game.  According to Brandel Tiger never should have changed his swing after 2000.  And he has been relentlessly critical of Tiger's decisions all along the way.  If Tiger wins a tournament he will be looking at the stats and say that he really didn't play well because his approach shot from 75-125 yards weren't that good, or some other it-picky point.  So when he calls Tiger a cheater it is not in a vacuum, it is in the context of someone who hasn't really tried to hide (despite his "the lady doth protest too much" claims that he likes Tiger) his dislike of Tiger and his need to find any basis to criticize his game and his decisions.

Sure that's fair comment. I was pretty clear early on that I wasn't familiar with BC's CV - and that I was taking that article at face value. I can see that BC's history might undermine the credibility of his opinions. Equally though, I'd argue that credibility and accuracy don't always walk hand in hand. And lastly, I just happen to think that attacking someone's argument by attacking their motives or good faith is a relatively weak (and often disreputable) tactic. However, it's not always irrelevant, and it's sometimes necessary.

Off-topic I know - but for what it's worth and borderline relevant to the "Tiger hater" tag I've acquired, I think that Tiger's willingness to rework and rebuild is one of his most admirable traits. It's harder to talk about him these days as a role model - but in this sense, I'd go there quite happily. Whether it has served him well is another debate - but the intent is good IMO.


Agreed. There would have been no debate in that situation - although there would have been the interesting spectacle (which we now know would probably have been captured on camera) of trying to replace a ball and recreate a fractionally altered lie amongst loose impediments. We might also then have had "hidden camera" footage showing Tiger calling a penalty on himself which would otherwise never have been picked up. Imagine the positive PR of a video being released showing "Look - here's Tiger in the bushes where he thinks no-one else can see him. But nevertheless, he's calling a penalty on himself - and look how tiny the movement of his ball was."

I'd agree with this, but the (second) bolded part is unnecessary.


Quote:

Originally Posted by Fourputt

It would have covered any second guessing.  The RO's ruling is final if he has all of the facts known at the time.  He may well have told Tiger that under Rule 18, any doubt is resolved against the player, so Tiger would have been required to go through the motions of trying to "replace" the ball under just a one stroke penalty.  Any doubt would have been eliminated and we would have had to find something else to entertain ourselves with for the last 36 pages.

Agreed. There would have been no debate in that situation - although there would have been the interesting spectacle (which we now know would probably have been captured on camera) of trying to replace a ball and recreate a fractionally altered lie amongst loose impediments. We might also then have had "hidden camera" footage showing Tiger calling a penalty on himself which would otherwise never have been picked up. Imagine the positive PR of a video being released showing "Look - here's Tiger in the bushes where he thinks no-one else can see him. But nevertheless, he's calling a penalty on himself - and look how tiny the movement of his ball was."

However that scenario still requires the player to have first declared that his ball has moved. I don't think there's any scope for a player to discuss whether he has caused the ball to move - unless the player wants to argue that any movement was caused by an outside agency rather than the player himself.

I slightly disagree with the two phrases I put in bold.  He may not be calling a penalty on himself, his intent may be nothing more than just wanting to be certain of the rule, to know exactly how he should proceed.   He may still be just as certain that the ball only oscillated.

You don't have to be certain of anything to call in a rules official.  We are there to help the players with information on the rules, to explain any options.  Then it is up to them to make their own decisions.  In such a case, if he has issues with the ruling, the player can still play a second ball under Rule 3-3 and he and the RO and any other witnesses can take the dispute to the committee and let them make the ruling.  Many times the pros will call in an official just because he is easily available, to be sure that they cover all the angles.

Rick

"He who has the fastest cart will never have a bad lie."

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

I'd agree with this, but the (second) bolded part is unnecessary.

It's not necessary - but isn't honesty even a little more admirable in circumstances where you're not under scrutiny? Many sports seem to operate on the tacit understanding that if the referee doesn't see it, it didn't happen. Golf is obviously different in that regard.

I slightly disagree with the two phrases I put in bold.  He may not be calling a penalty on himself, his intent may be nothing more than just wanting to be certain of the rule, to know exactly how he should proceed.   He may still be just as certain that the ball only oscillated.

You don't have to be certain of anything to call in a rules official.  We are there to help the players with information on the rules, to explain any options.  Then it is up to them to make their own decisions.  In such a case, if he has issues with the ruling, the player can still play a second ball under Rule 3-3 and he and the RO and any other witnesses can take the dispute to the committee and let them make the ruling.  Many times the pros will call in an official just because he is easily available, to be sure that they cover all the angles.

OK. I see what you're saying, and agree - especially with the part about RO providing options, and the player being responsible for the decision making.


Maybe THIS is a part of the difference in perception between you and most of the folks on this thread who HAVE seen Brandel broadcast for years and HAVE seen his constant attacks on Tiger's decision regarding his attempts to improve his game.  According to Brandel Tiger never should have changed his swing after 2000.  And he has been relentlessly critical of Tiger's decisions all along the way.  If Tiger wins a tournament he will be looking at the stats and say that he really didn't play well because his approach shot from 75-125 yards weren't that good, or some other it-picky point.  So when he calls Tiger a cheater it is not in a vacuum, it is in the context of someone who hasn't really tried to hide (despite his "the lady doth protest too much" claims that he likes Tiger) his dislike of Tiger and his need to find any basis to criticize his game and his decisions.

I just will never understand why you assume that he "dislikes" Tiger because he is critical of his approach. It is his job to analyze what he sees on the PGA Tour. Tiger is the biggest draw on the PGA Tour, hence he gets the most attention, including by Chamblee. Chamblee has constantly stated that he thinks Tiger is the best player who ever teed it up, and he just thinks that he should have stayed with the swings that gave him his biggest runs of success.  I see nothing wrong or hateful about that, it is his opinion, and I don't see why it means that he "dislikes" him. It is always about Tiger and rightly so, so Chamblee (and everybody else) happens to focus on Tiger and his world more than anything else (read: ratings).

I believe that the reason he is currently being critical about the rules violations is because he is disappointed in the World #1 player's approach to what happened at the BMW. Chamblee made a huge mistake with the way he presented it, and has said as much, but I give him credit for not walking back his points because of the pressure from the Tiger camp. He thinks it was dubious and, if so, it is his job to say as much.

JMO.

Bill M

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Maybe THIS is a part of the difference in perception between you and most of the folks on this thread who HAVE seen Brandel broadcast for years and HAVE seen his constant attacks on Tiger's decision regarding his attempts to improve his game.  According to Brandel Tiger never should have changed his swing after 2000.  And he has been relentlessly critical of Tiger's decisions all along the way.  If Tiger wins a tournament he will be looking at the stats and say that he really didn't play well because his approach shot from 75-125 yards weren't that good, or some other it-picky point.  So when he calls Tiger a cheater it is not in a vacuum, it is in the context of someone who hasn't really tried to hide (despite his "the lady doth protest too much" claims that he likes Tiger) his dislike of Tiger and his need to find any basis to criticize his game and his decisions.

I just will never understand why you assume that he "dislikes" Tiger because he is critical of his approach. It is his job to analyze what he sees on the PGA Tour. Tiger is the biggest draw on the PGA Tour, hence he gets the most attention, including by Chamblee. Chamblee has constantly stated that he thinks Tiger is the best player who ever teed it up, and he just thinks that he should have stayed with the swings that gave him his biggest runs of success.  I see nothing wrong or hateful about that, it is his opinion, and I don't see why it means that he "dislikes" him. It is always about Tiger and rightly so, so Chamblee (and everybody else) happens to focus on Tiger and his world more than anything else (read: ratings).

I believe that the reason he is currently being critical about the rules violations is because he is disappointed in the World #1 player's approach to what happened at the BMW. Chamblee made a huge mistake with the way he presented it, and has said as much, but I give him credit for not walking back his points because of the pressure from the Tiger camp. He thinks it was dubious and, if so, it is his job to say as much.

JMO.

I agree with Phan on this.  Prior to this issue, I've always viewed Brandel as simply very critical of Tiger, and I've said this a couple of times ... He comes across, to me, as a teacher or father disappointed in his star pupil or son because he thinks he's been underacheiving.  He strongly believes that had Tiger done things his way, he'd be much more successful.  That doesn't at all mean that he dislikes Tiger.

Now a lot of people, including myself, strongly disagree with Brandel's opinion on this, but I still don't agree that that opinion equates to a "dislike."  It's possible he disliked him, but I don't think he did.  (He may now though ;))

Heck, I don't even think that the article points to a dislike of Tiger either.  More like his big fat ego got in the way of his better judgment, and he was too arrogant to consider the consequences of his actions.  (OK, wait, am I talking about Brandel or Tiger there??? I forgot ;))

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Note: This thread is 4038 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!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Want to join this community?

    We'd love to have you!

    Sign Up
  • TST Partners

    PlayBetter
    TourStriker PlaneMate
    Golfer's Journal
    ShotScope
    The Stack System
    FitForGolf
    FlightScope Mevo
    Direct: Mevo, Mevo+, and Pro Package.

    Coupon Codes (save 10-20%): "IACAS" for Mevo/Stack/FitForGolf, "IACASPLUS" for Mevo+/Pro Package, and "THESANDTRAP" for ShotScope. 15% off TourStriker (no code).
  • Popular Now

  • Posts

    • As a supporter of the European team even though I chose to live in the US, this is kind of good news. I'm pretty close to Bethpage, but won't be going at these prices. Neither will the crazy drunk NY sports fans who would have made this a very difficult place to play as a Euro. The tickets will go to the city types who are entertaining clients and don't care about the money. Many of them are going to sit there and watch, not get all raucous. I am not dumb enough to believe that this is going to be like a Sunday afternoon stroll in the park for the Euros, but I think it will be significantly more subdued as a result of the prices. Even at $250 I would probably have been watching on the TV anyway so no real skin in the game. 
    • First, it is on free TV. NBC is free to anyone with an antenna, and is on almost any TV in the U.S. with a minimal amount of effort. Charging "a bargain price" would be incredibly dumb. They charged $750 and the event sold out almost immediately. You could better argue they should have charged MORE, not less. What happens if you charge less: ticket scalpers buy up even more of the tickets because they see value: if tickets were $250, they'd clearly have sold for $1k or more on the secondary market. That's tremendous value. Fans would end up paying the same or more, or just not being able to go. Sure, a few who happened to be online at the precise moment on a fast connection and didn't fumble with their credit cards might have gotten tickets for $250, but the secondary market and ticket brokers would have scooped up the vast majority with automated processes and bots and scripts, then re-sold them later on. This way, fans get to purchase the tickets, and the PGA is earning that revenue, not the secondary ticket brokers. Econ 101. Supply and Demand. Nope.
    • Tiger Woods on Ryder Cup pay: 'I hope they would get $5 million each and donate it all to charity' Edit - the link has no title, but basically Tiger wants $5 million for each US player to “donate to charity”   They could put the Ryder Cup on free to air tv, and charge the fans a bargain price to get in.  If you have to  give the players $60 million, that’s why the tickets are $750. 
    • Wordle 1,264 3/6 ⬜⬜⬜🟨⬜ 🟨🟩⬜🟨⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to TST! Signing up is free, and you'll see fewer ads and can talk with fellow golf enthusiasts! By using TST, you agree to our Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy, and our Guidelines.

The popup will be closed in 10 seconds...