The Local Knowlege

Bubba Watson Apologizes for Elkington Incident

AVONDALE, La. -- Les bon temps did not roule Friday afternoon at the Zurich Classic when Bubba Watson and Steve Elkington had a catfight on the back nine of the TPC Louisiana. Apparently, what happened was this:

Bubba detected some movement while he was trying to play his approach shot from the right rough on the 10th hole. He felt it wasn't the first time Elkington was moving at inappropriate times and unleashed a torrent of expletives, a portion of which was captured by the Golf Channel's microphones.

Afterward, Elkington and Watson settled their differences in the scoring hut. They were playing with Shigeki Maruyama who emerged from the glass-walled tent with his usual smile, bobbing and weaving like Sugar Ray Leonard. "Big problem," Shigeki said as he walked away.

Elkington, who finished the day three shots off Briny Baird's lead of eight under par, left without speaking to the media. Watson, on the other hand, apologized to virtually anyone who wasn't moving, as it were. He said he and Elkington had "hugged it out."

"I want to apologize to everybody in the tournament," Watson said. "Everybody who heard it, whoever saw it, especially Steve and Shigeki and their caddies. I heard something and I took it out on them and shouldn't have done it. I apologize to the tournament, to anybody that's involved in this tournament, all the volunteers, all the caddies, the spectators, the kids that came out here. I'm not like Charles Barkley. I'd love to be a role model. I make mistakes. My mistake was I got angry today.

"Everything's good. He's not mad. He's looking at me like this is like his son, basically. I'm a lot younger, he took me aside and said, 'Look, be strong in what you're doing and make sure you don't do that.' I apologized to him as best I could."

--Jim Moriarty

Comments

Archived Comments (2) Click to expand

There you go. That is how you sort out issues. Whichever side you want to take and try and place the blame on someone’s shoulders, the fact of the matter is in the heat of the moment a lot can be said which might be regretted later. It is hard to expect these guys to be the perfect ambassadors when they are competing at such a high level. What is important although is to make sure that the issue is sorted out and apologies handed out.

Perhaps there is a lesson in this for Tiger Woods who lashed out last week at a photographer who made the mistake of clicking in the middle of his swing. Wood’s threatened to break his neck. While you can empthasie with Tiger because a championship was at stake what is hard to understand is Wood’s unwillingness to come out with an apology specially considering the fact that he is idolized by millions of kids and an apology will not hurt his pride.


http://www.golfswingsecretsrevealed.com/blog/2008/03/17/does-tiger-deserve-to-be-that-good/

Posted by andybrown March 28, 2008 10:21 PM

Don't confuse Tiger Woods with a gentleman. Low scores do not determine the quality of the individual. Woods' repeated profane language and temper have never been and will never be seen in the real gentlemen of the game (Nicklaus, Palmer, Player, etc.). Can you imagine any of these player using the language Woods' uses on national television? Can you imagine ANY of these gentlemen EVER saying something "pis_ed them off" in a nationally televised interview? This is not the a role model for our youth of today.

Posted by Nasdaq40 April 5, 2008 8:00 AM
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