Never mind what Karl Rove said to “Scooter” Libby that may have
been heard by Judith Miller who would do 80 days in jail for
something Bob Novak would put in print with impunity. And who
spells Flame with a “P,” anyway? The name that is important here is
none of the above. It is Michelle Wie. Yes, the 16-year-old
(barely) golfer whose professional debut was marked, and marred, by
one of those lessons in life that must be attended by each and
every one of us before this mortal coil is shuffled. But such an
early shuffle!
Wie had finished a respectable fourth in a field of the Samsung
World Championship led by the indomitable Annika Sorenstam. For
this Wie was to have received $53,000 and change and the plaudits
of a sports world that had wondered at her abilities for months
leading up to her baptism among the ladies who play for pay. But
no. Wie had not reckoned on the intervention of one of those people
who do not play but who make a living watching others who can, a
professional voyeur. One Michael Bamberger, a senior writer for
Sports Illustrated, thought he had seen a miscue of Wie’s
on the day before the tournament ended. Wie was to be undone.
Bamberger, gifted with not only a writing ability but also the
global positioning capacity of a satellite, summoned Robert O.
Smith, the LPGA Tour rules official, and they trouped back out to
the seventh green Sunday evening to reconstruct a drop from an
unplayable lie Wie had made on Saturday. After two trips to the
green and re-enactments by Wie and her caddy, the lass was
disqualified. It was determined that the drop from which she played
her ball was closer to the hole than the point from where she had
lifted and placed it. A rules violation and disqualification.
The eagle-eyed Bamberger had been some 15 yards away on the
fateful day. After Wie had holed out, he stayed behind and paced
off the distances, from where the ball first landed and from where
the drop was made. He contacted the tour rules guy, Smith, the next
day, saying he’d become more uncomfortable the more he thought
about it, and rules officials said Wie had in fact dropped the ball
about 12 inches nearer the hole, still 45 yards away. Wie says if
it was truly closer it may have been three inches nearer.
The lessons learned? Always get a tour official to oversee a
drop, and arbitrate an unplayable lie. Your caddy won’t do; he is
on your side. The gallery is no help, either.
And remember that for each of us, someday, somewhere, there
waits a Bamberger.