viscount17
Money List Winner
He is just a fat fud.
Wow! Name calling according to size..... how low.
no sense of direction some people! it's how wide!
He is just a fat fud.
Wow! Name calling according to size..... how low.
lie detectors are notoriously ineffective, to pass you only have to believe what you're saying.
if Saltman believes that the way he marks the ball is right then he will also believe that he hasn't cheated.
Its not for 2 fellow players to 'pull him up' at all, and particularly NOt during their round, when any confrontation would only serve to wreck their own round too.
I think they acted entirely correctly, but as we dont know the full story, its hard to know.
If the stories about 'how he marked his ball' are true, then any Pro would know its clearly incorrect, so hes a 'Cheat'.
The fact that he had got away with it until now is the more surprising aspect to it perhaps.
Bollox.
More chance of a huge dispute if its tackled the first time you see it, but after 2 have seen it 5 times, it can hardly be disputed can it.?
Its quite clear by the lenient sentence that the European Tour are even undecided about the situation, if it was clear cut he'd have been banned for life not a token 3 months.
Its quite clear by the lenient sentence that the European Tour are even undecided about the situation, if it was clear cut he'd have been banned for life not a token 3 months.
I don't think that's the case at all.
The European Tour admitted during the process that their own procedures and regulations weren't as good as they should be to comply with legal requirements and are updating them.
Coupled with the fact that there was no televisual evidence just the word of two of his competitors against his.
Bearing in mind we are talking about less than an inch and the potential conflict of interest as they potentially stood to gain financially from his failure, a decent QC would have had a field day with his two playing partners in court.
If they had banned him for 5 years, 10 years or for life, they would be effectively finishing his career. With substandard disciplinary rules, they would be open to legal challenge and, potentially, huge damages for loss of earnings, sponsorship and damages.
Can you imagine the potential career earnings for a Tour Pro? A loss in court could run into millions and millions in damages.
They have opted for a safe ban length which made it unlikely for him to take them to court but enough of a ban to say we believe that he cheated. It also gives them time to introduce proper disciplinary procedures to allow the Tour to handle such cases better in the future.
The stigma of being found guilty of cheating is huge in golf and will already deny him tournament invites for years to come as well as put off those companies who might have been interested in sponsoring him.
Make no mistake, whilst his ban may be relatively short, the consequences for his career will last his lifetime.
Its quite clear by the lenient sentence that the European Tour are even undecided about the situation, if it was clear cut he'd have been banned for life not a token 3 months.
I don't think that's the case at all.
The European Tour admitted during the process that their own procedures and regulations weren't as good as they should be to comply with legal requirements and are updating them.
Coupled with the fact that there was no televisual evidence just the word of two of his competitors against his.
Bearing in mind we are talking about less than an inch and the potential conflict of interest as they potentially stood to gain financially from his failure, a decent QC would have had a field day with his two playing partners in court.
If they had banned him for 5 years, 10 years or for life, they would be effectively finishing his career. With substandard disciplinary rules, they would be open to legal challenge and, potentially, huge damages for loss of earnings, sponsorship and damages.
Can you imagine the potential career earnings for a Tour Pro? A loss in court could run into millions and millions in damages.
They have opted for a safe ban length which made it unlikely for him to take them to court but enough of a ban to say we believe that he cheated. It also gives them time to introduce proper disciplinary procedures to allow the Tour to handle such cases better in the future.
The stigma of being found guilty of cheating is huge in golf and will already deny him tournament invites for years to come as well as put off those companies who might have been interested in sponsoring him.
Make no mistake, whilst his ban may be relatively short, the consequences for his career will last his lifetime.
I'll refer you to my first post in this thread then sir, with regards to stigma!
Again you miss the point Craw - why should 2 Pro's effectively ruin their own rounds with a big scene out on course, which undoubtably there would have been.
Observe & report is totally understandable, which is what they did.
Ok, we'd do differently, but then we arent playing for our living are we ?