Toronto Star

Security worries par for course

Golfers taking precaution­s to deal with off-course threats

- KAREN CROUSE THE NEW YORK TIMES

AKRON, OHIO— His day of practice done at Firestone Country Club, Brooks Koepka headed to his courtesy car in the players’ parking lot, which was cut off from the public by temporary fencing covered with banners.

Before disappeari­ng behind the fence, Koepka rebuffed an autograph seeker who had a pin flag to sign, explaining that he was not feeling well. He drove 5 kilometres to the hotel where many golfers were staying.

Koepka, the U.S. Open champion, did not give a second thought to the fleeting encounter until his girlfriend used the car later that day. Upon returning, she said a man had approached to ask if she would persuade Koepka to sign his pin flag. The man matched the descriptio­n of the fan Koepka had encountere­d earlier.

The incident, which occurred this past week, before the Bridgeston­e Invitation­al here, unnerved Koepka. He wondered: How did the man know it was Koepka’s car, and what if the man had been carrying a knife or gun?

The threats facing the world’s best golfers were driven home at the British Open last month, when the rental home of the defending champion, Henrik Stenson, was burglarize­d while he was playing his first round. Someone broke a window in the backyard garden and made off with money, jewelry and much of his wardrobe.

Stenson said this past week that the thief or thieves had not been caught, and that he was convinced he had been targeted.

In retrospect, he can see that he unwittingl­y left a trail of clues to where he was staying. He let Sky Sports film him walking into the rental house holding the Claret Jug. He took a photograph with fans in front of the house, and he parked his courtesy car, with Open Championsh­ip markings on the side doors, in the driveway.

“I guess it was a bit of an eye-opener in terms of when we’re at some of these big events, we do make easy marks for criminals who are quite clever at what they do,” Stenson said.

It used to be that the worst crime that players feared was the theft of bags from the trunks of their cars. The arrival of the internet and the escalation of prize money have upped the ante.

The players’ competitiv­e schedules are widely circulated, and at any PGA Tour stop, it’s as easy to learn exactly what time the golfers are playing as it is know when the buses or trains are running.

Their earnings also are a matter of public record, and with 36 players having earned at least $2 million this season, their wealth makes them attractive targets. Home addresses are at everybody’s fingertips, just a few clicks away, rendering the golfers’ bubble existence far from impermeabl­e.

After a round at the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al in Orlando, Florida, in March, Jason Day said he received a call from his wife, Ellie, who had stayed at home in Ohio with the couple’s two young children. She told him that she had heard a prowler.

Day advised her to leave at once with the children, and he phoned a friend who is a police officer. The friend drove to the Days’ residence and, according to Day, found a man in dark clothes hiding in a tree on the property.

“Now if I’m gone, I have cops stay at the house,” said Day, who also plans to add a German shepherd to the family as a guard dog.

“What is really good is that the PGA Tour security does a fantastic job each and every week of trying to handle certain threats, and you don’t hear about them,” Day said.

The tour employs a director of corporate security, Steve Olson, and has a group of consultant­s, many of them private investigat­ors or retired FBI agents, who work closely with tournament officials to ensure the players’ safety.

“Our long-standing policy is that we do not provide specifics on matters of security related to players and tournament­s,” Laura Neal, vice president of communicat­ions, said in a statement.

The security team may keep a low profile, but its fingerprin­ts are apparent in the new placement of the players’ parking lot here, near the first tee and protected by a makeshift barrier. This tournament and the Memorial outside Columbus two hours away — centrally located and with high-profile fields — are widely seen by players as events where autograph hunters, many of whom procure signatures to sell on the internet, pose the greatest hazard.

Adam Scott, the 2013 Masters champion and former world No. 1, breathed easier when he saw a police officer patrolling the lobby of the hotel where he is staying, he said.

“That’s the first time I’ve seen that,” said Scott, who is playing in the tournament for the 15th time.

He is perhaps warier than most. Several years ago, he said, he enlisted the help of PGA Tour security when a stalker was pursuing him.

“Not to sound like a complete wuss,” Scott said, but the police presence “is quite comforting.”

 ?? STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? U.S. Open champion Brooks Koepka was unnerved when a fan he had refused an autograph later approached his girlfriend with the same request.
STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO U.S. Open champion Brooks Koepka was unnerved when a fan he had refused an autograph later approached his girlfriend with the same request.

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