shakes wrote:
He's a national commentator paid to have opinions on the spot, he's not paid to mull it over for 24 hours and wait for new information to appear the next morning from the rules committee.
Agreed, but he hates Tiger so much, that he got his head out in front of his skis. He never passes up an opportunity to take a shot at Tiger. Sometimes, he will look foolish doing so, like this weekend. As an avid viewer of golf, and fan of Tiger, I enjoyed watching Faldo backpedal. I'm not limiting this to Faldo. I am including the clowns on The Golf Channel, like Frank Nobilo.
shakes wrote:
He's not the only person who felt Tiger should DQ himself when the story first surfaced, other pros like David Duval said so as well. And even Ugie stated that he felt Tiger should DQ until he heard the full explanation THE NEXT DAY. So how did Faldo act any differently from any of those guys or millions of others who felt that was as well?
Are you really still considered a pro when you are ranked #1449 in the world? David Duval is whiny little Caller Bob, who should spend more time practicing his swing, than being a bitch on twitter. Instead of crying about how he didn't get invited to a tournament, or sobbing about how Tiger isn't his friend anymore, he should hit the range. He is probably the one who called Augusta.
It doesn't matter how many people agreed with Faldo's original thought, if it was wrong from the start. The rule was changed a couple years back after a viewer called in a possible infraction on Padraig Harrington. Ignorance is no excuse. A commentator, and former player, should know the rules. Certainly when you are as opinionated as Faldo is.
shakes wrote:
I don't really give a shit about Faldo and I'm a Tiger fan, but the outcry in this thread about Faldo is hypocritical at best and idiotic at worst.
I think you are grossly exaggerating the outcry towards Faldo. But, when one carries himself as an arrogant, smug prick, like he does, he can't be surprised by any backlash he receives when he is wrong, as in this case. Hypocrisy is a perfect word to describe Faldo. The guy who cheated on his wife, is going to question the integrity of others? Keep it.
He can learn from Johnny Miller how to stay reasonably objective about a person who you clearly don't like.