
Seeing as how it was going to be on his terms, the Golf Writers Association of America decided to boycott Tiger Woods’ public appearance on Friday.
From Golf.com:
The reasons for the boycott were two-fold. First, the insistence by Woods and his handlers to limit media access to a pool of reporters. Second, Woods’s decision not to field any questions. But there were also deeper feelings in play, and complicated ones, too. This is an association filled with members who had covered Woods, by almost all counts, fairly and with respect, chronicling his golfing feats even as he bristled at times at his media obligations.
The Woods story has gone everywhere and nowhere in the last three months, and it is impossible to know how the story will end. Eventually, the GWAA will be back behind the scenes, where it has been for much of its 64 years of existence, as an organization whose original goals included “an improvement in press facilities” and “interviews with players.”
That’s all the GWAA wanted Friday, an interview with Tiger Woods. He won’t give it. So the GWAA won’t be there.
I’ve never been to a golf event as a media member, so I don’t know what it’s like to try and track Tiger down to do an interview. But I can only imagine how much of a pain he could be when it comes to being accessible to the media so I’m all for the boycott. If he was crass and cold to a group that helped make him one of the most popular athletes in the U.S., then he deserves to be shunned when he embarrasses himself and then wants to establish the rules for making a public appearance.
Don’t get me wrong – I’ve stated several times on this site that Tiger doesn’t owe the media or us anything. But I see the GWAA’s point here. They’ve played by his rules for a long time and even when he’s entrenched in an embarrassing scandal, he still wants everything to be on his terms. I don’t blame the GWAA for thinking, “You don’t control the situation any more, Tiger.”
Of course, as soon as he takes his first steps back into golf, the media will be there just as they always have. He’s arguably the most recognizable athlete in America and this little boycott by the GWAA won’t go any further than today. But I like the fact that at least a small media contingent told him to shove it, much like I’m sure he’s done to them over the years.
Photo from fOTOGLIF




