Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Tim Schmitt

Golf gone wild? Ryder Cup, PGA Tour stories show golf might be missing a little civility

An old line in sports is that golf is a four-letter word. That saying is no doubt from all the words you might hear on a golf course from all the golfers in the world hitting bad shots.

But the new adage might be that golf is a five-letter word. And that word is chaos. Nowhere has the chaos that is engulfing the golf world been more obvious than in the last month.

What once was a sport with a reputation for sportsmanship, civility and good fellowship is showing cracks at the professional level. Sniping, name-calling and greed seem to have taken over.

Ryder Cup money

Team USA captain Zach Johnson talks with golfer Justin Thomas, golfer Scottie Scheffler, and golfer Brooks Koepka (right) on the 18th hole during day one fourballs round for the 44th Ryder Cup golf competition at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club. (Photo: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

Was the U.S. Ryder Cup team a house divided? At least one of the players involved has denied this, but both Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele have been connected in stories (including one interview with Schauffele’s father) about wanting to be paid for their Ryder Cup participation.

The point is made that the PGA of America makes a ton of money off the Ryder Cup, and perhaps the money should be shared with the players. This is nothing new, since in 1999 several U.S. players including Tiger Woods, Mark O’Meara and David Duval were involved in a pay-for-play controversy that eventually produced money for a player’s designated charity. But there was acrimony then and apparently acrimony now.

Caddie issues

Joe LaCava, caddie for American Patrick Cantlay, gestures with his cap on the 18th green during the Saturday afternoon fourball matches at the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf Club in Rome, Italy. (Photo: Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

A Ryder Cup caddie got involved with an opposing player. What exactly Joe LaCava thought he was doing taunting opposing fans while standing in the way of Europe’s Rory McIlroy sizing up a putt is anyone’s guess.

But it spilled over into a parking lot where McIlroy and NBC commentator and former high-profile caddie Jim “Bones” McKay were involved in a shouting match. Some people think it is adorable that a caddie stood his ground. Others wonder how an experienced caddie allowed himself to get suckered into the fray.

If we can’t have a Ryder Cup without opposing caddies and players getting into it verbally, then why are we bothering to contest this event at all?

LIV backlash

Team USA golfer Brooks Koepka putts on the seventh green during the final day of the 44th Ryder Cup golf competition at Marco Simone Golf and Country Club. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

Even as Brooks Koepka was posting a 1-1-1 record, better than most of his U.S. teammates, some argued that Koepka’s presence on the U.S. team was an insult because he has played on the LIV tour for two years and is suspended from the PGA Tour.

The Ryder Cup is not a PGA Tour event, of course, but those who point to Koepka being greedy and a mercenary might now have the same opinions about Cantlay and Schauffele.

Koepka did make a mistake early in the week saying not many players would mean it if they said they wanted to play the anchor match. Would Koepka mean it?

No PGA Tour deal?

Yasir Al-Rumayyan, head of the sovereign wealth fund of Saudi Arabia, looks on from the 18th green during day two of the LIV Golf Invitational – DC at Trump National Golf Club on May 27, 2023, in Sterling, Virginia. (Photo by Rob Carr/Getty Images)

Speaking of the LIV tour, the money behind that tour, the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia, has a framework deal for a new organization that would include the PGA Tour. But that deal was announced in June, and here we are in October with still very few details revealed about the new organization.

Now Bloomberg is reporting the PGA Tour is looking for additional investors, perhaps in an effort to reduce the backlash over the PIF and Saudi Arabia. It now appears a new structure won’t be in place by the start of the 2024 season.

And does the PIF really want other investors in this deal? Money, greed and power struggles are popping up again, it appears.

Lexi in Vegas

Lexi Thompson lines up her putt on the 14th hole during the final round of the 2023 Walmart NW Arkansas Championship at Pinnacle Country Club in Rogers, Arkansas. (Photo: Alex Slitz/Getty Images)

Lexi Thompson, who bristled at being asked about a cold-stone shank chip shot during the Solheim Cup, will become the seventh woman to play in a PGA Tour event at the Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas on Oct. 12-15. There will be far more scrutiny on her game in Las Vegas than there was in Spain at the Solheim Cup. Can she handle that?

That’s just two weeks of news in a sport that generally generates positive stories. And some of these stories might still be positive, like a strong result for Thompson in Las Vegas, or a negotiated peace at the Ryder Cup or even a palatable solution to the PGA Tour-PIF framework.

But maybe it would be best if the game could just, well, calm down a bit for a few weeks.

Larry Bohannan is the golf writer for The Desert Sun. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at @larry_bohannan. 

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.