Golf’s memorable moments in 2021 certain to have impact on future – usatoday.com

Posted: January 3, 2022 at 1:49 am

As we balance the ledger for 2021, it seems assured that a handful of the years most memorable moments will have impact that extends far beyond the confines of the calendar.

Like Hideki Matsuyamas Masters win, and its promise of inspiring a generation of Asian talent. Or Phil Mickelsons improbable major championship victory at age 50, setting a new benchmark for elderly excellence. Or Tiger Woods car wreck, which cast in stark relief the impermanence of lives and careers, and which summoned a raw appreciation both for what he has gifted us and for whatever his battered body will permit henceforth.

But 2021 was also a year in which even the most stubborn of ostriches had to lift their heads and concede that golf doesnt exist in a vacuum, that like every sport it is inextricably entwined with the wider world, and that reminders of this fact are often jarring. The painful lessons we learned in 21 will not conclude with the demise of December.

First came a reckoning with language. The year was nine days old when Justin Thomas missed a short putt in Maui and berated himself with a homophobic slur. His response was swifthe owned it with an immediate and fulsome apologybut swifter still were the factions who rallied around the controversy, one too quick to declare it a capital offense, the other contemptuously eager to dismiss any hurt as mere political correctness. The ugly episode served notice that the standards of speech and conduct demanded by todays corporations and consumers (an entirely flexible measure) also apply to this most hidebound of sports.

A few weeks later, the PGA Tour faced a reckoning with its new reality, even if the organization shows no outward sign of having grasped the importance of what happened that Sunday afternoon at Torrey Pines. It was hardly shocking that Patrick Reed acted as his own rules official on the way to winning the Farmers Insurance Open, lifting a ball he claimed was embedded before an actual rules official could arrive to deliver a verdict. Video evidence was inconclusive, but far from exculpatory, so PointsBetan official gaming partner of the Tourrefunded wagers.

The scrutiny that comes with legalized sports betting is at odds with the Tours generous attitude to questionable on-course conduct by its members, a benevolence long personified by the now-departed rules honcho Slugger White, the Mrs. Doubtfire of the nanny state. An insistence that concerned parties are gentlemen, or a reliance on artful wording about intent, is no defense against punters who are convinced that video evidence tells a different story. When it happens againand it willthe Tour is woefully ill-equipped for the firestorm. Reeds ball drop will have ramifications that linger well beyond that other ball drop next week in Times Square.

We also saw a reckoning with golfs shameful past. Lee Elders presence at the ceremonial tee shot opening the Masters was as close to an apology as well ever see from Augusta National. It was crudely symbolic that even the lone moment accorded Elder was soiled by Wayne Player, an opportunistic waster who, unlike Elder, owed his place on the tee solely to inheritance and parental indulgence.

Elders death seven months later was a glum reminder of how little real redress he was granted for what he endured, and how few honors he received for what he accomplished. There were tributes aplenty, but words are cheap. Elder died without being honored by the World Golf Hall of Fame, the Memorial Tournament or sundry other back-slapping bodies that are forever congratulating themselves on how far golf has come.

Elders legacythat it is necessary to take a moral stand against those who dehumanize othersis hardly less relevant with his passing. It lies at the heart of golfs reckoning with its future, the specter of which loomed large before 2021 and which will likely continue into 22 and beyond.

One thing changed this year with the Saudi Arabian governments effort to hijack professional golf. They recruited a front man, Greg Norman, who drops vapid jargon and false equivalencies as freely as his employer does missiles on Yemeni civilians. But two things havent changed: the proposed Super Golf League still hasnt signed any players, and the scheme is still solely about normalizing the image of a regime that exhibits contempt for human rights.

This reckoning will continue in 2022 and beyond. Oil grants the specter enviable staying power. If nothing else, the Saudis are offering a reminder that the values on which golf prides itselfintegrity, honor, respectabilityare not immutable, but must be defended against charlatans and chiselers, some of whom are card-carrying members of the PGA Tour.

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Golf's memorable moments in 2021 certain to have impact on future - usatoday.com

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