Daily Mail

LIV and let live as rebel poulter’s record silences boos

- by RIATH AL-SAMARRAI

See no evil, hear no evil, humdinger for eagle. What a strange time for golf and what a strange day for Ian Poulter, who entered these links to boos before leaving as a recordbrea­ker and a rebel with a promising cause.

Would there be a more awkward scenario for those in golf’s establishm­ent than an Open winner plucked from the breakaway bunch?

It is far too early for such prediction­s, of course, but those of a Machiavell­ian temperamen­t might have enjoyed seeing so many of Greg Norman’s mates covering the first page of the leaderboar­d.

Lee Westwood, Dustin Johnson, Poulter, Bryson DeChambeau and Talor Gooch — they all took the Saudi cash, triggering this civil war, and each was deep in the red after some compelling golf and punchy interviews. LIV and let die? Not quietly, they won’t.

And that takes us back to Poulter, who was on the tee at 7.08am and jeered as he went. Only a small number of the large gallery made that protest, but they made a decent noise, even if Poulter did later claim he didn’t hear a thing.

None of the other 24 defectors received such treatment, and none went on to have quite such a dramatic round, with Poulter promptly snap-hooking his iron off the tee. It went so far left he missed the widest fairway in major golf and was only five feet short of being out of bounds. From there he salvaged a par, picked up a birdie at the sixth and then yielded the roar of the day at the ninth, when he lined up a 162ft putt and holed for eagle. It was the longest made in profession­al golf, eclipsing the 111ft putt dropped by Craig Barlow at the Buick Open in 2008.

He eventually closed on three under, one shy of his Ryder Cup colleague from stabler times, Lee Westwood, who along with Johnson led the LIV charge. After his round Poulter insisted he had not heard the boos, saying: ‘I actually thought I had a great reception on the first tee. All I heard was clapping.’

The line was delivered with a smile but it did play to the feeling that those who have been central to golf’s ugliest row are selective in their hearing in this debate.

For his part, Poulter admitted he is now deliberate­ly avoiding the negative narratives of the saga, which includes the damning criticisms made this week by Tiger Woods and the R&A’s chief executive Martin Slumbers.

‘I don’t play very well distracted,’ Poulter said. ‘Separating myself away from that has obviously been a good thing.’

Westwood, who double-bogeyed the second but still carded an excellent 68, was in a spiky mood with reporters. After accusing the media of ‘stoking up’ elements of a situation created entirely by golfers, administra­tors, a state in need of reputation­al washing and Greg Norman, he was asked his view of comments made by Woods, who had said LIV players ‘turned their back on what allowed them to get to this position’.

‘He’s got a vested interest hasn’t he?’ said Westwood. ‘The LIV players will talk the LIV tour up, the PGA players who aren’t on the LIV tour will talk the PGA Tour up and

put down the LIV tour. I don’t pay too much attention to people’s opinions. Tiger is entitled to his opinion.’

That so many of the LIV golfers had a strong day went against the notion they are too old or ailing or irrelevant to have been a great loss to the traditiona­l tours. Johnson and Gooch proved as much in rounds of 68, and DeChambeau shot a 69. Paul Casey finished one under and Patrick reed, coated in LIV logos, was level par alongside the highest profile of them, Phil Mickelson.

If the leaderboar­d shows anything, it is that this issue is going nowhere.

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