Woods 'cheating' insinuation a mistake

Golf analyst Brandel Chamblee has backtracked over a column he wrote comparing Tiger Woods' rules violations to his own school maths cheating episode.

FP - Golf Channel analyst Brandel Chamblee has admitted it was mistake to compare Tiger Woods' rules violation to his own episode of cheating on a school math test.

And Chamblee, a former PGA Tour player, said on Wednesday he would stop writing for the website where his column appeared.

"I said Tiger Woods was cavalier about the rules. I should have stopped right there," Chamblee said Wednesday night in his first appearance on Golf Channel since his column was posted to golf.com nearly two weeks ago.

"In comparing those incidents to my cheating episode in the fourth grade, I went too far," he said.

"Cheating involves intent. Now, I know what my intent was on that fourth-grade math test. But there's no way that I could know with 100 per cent certainty what Tiger's intent was in any of those situations. That was my mistake."

His comments came two days after Woods and his agent Mark Steinberg put pressure on Golf Channel to do something.

"All I am going to say is that I know I am going forward," Woods said on Monday before an exhibition in China.

"But then, I don't know what the Golf Channel is going to do or not. ... So the ball really is in the court of the Golf Channel and what they are prepared to do."

Steinberg had indicated he was considering legal action.

Woods was hit with a number of penalties this year, most notably at the US Masters, when he flirted with disqualification over an improper drop.

He was penalised for an improper drop at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship and incurred a two-shot penalty for moving his ball at the BMW Championship.

Chamblee last week apologised to Woods on Twitter for "this incited discourse" over his clumn, though he didn't back away from his criticism, and he didn't apologise outright to Woods during his brief segment on Golf Channel.

In his column, Chamblee wrote of being caught cheating in the fourth grade, and how the teacher had crossed a line through his "100" and given him an "F." He then wrote, "I remember when we only talked about Tiger's golf. I missed those days. He won five times and contended in majors and won the Vardon Trophy and ... how shall we say this ... was a little cavalier with the rules." He then gave Woods a "100" with a line through it, followed by the "F."

He said an editor at golf.com asked him to rewrite the ending.

"I wish I would have listened to him," Chamblee said.

Chamblee was a contributor to SI Golf Plus whose columns appeared on golf.com. He said he would no longer write for the publication.

"Tiger and his camp, they're upset at Golf Channel. They specifically called Golf Channel out," Chamblee said. "And to me, they're barking up the wrong tree. This column appeared on golf.com. Nobody here at Golf Channel knew anything about it.

"But all of this has made me realise that there is a conflict and confusion when you work for one company and write for another company."


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Source: AAP


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