The Scotsman

Molinari moan after Italian is hit by bad time and admits he ‘took too long’

Ryder Cup player says system is wrong Woods commits to his next two events

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Francesco Molinari echoed Paul Lawrie by claiming that golfers need to be put on the clock without any warning after the Italian launched a rant over a “bad time” imposed on him in the first round of the Wgc-mexico Championsh­ip.

While the two-time Ryder Cup player had no complaints over the decision itself due to the fact he took too long to play a shot when his group was being timed, he took issue with the current system in place for monitoring slow play.

“Today I got the second bad time of my career 13 years after the first one!” wrote Molinari on Twitter after he’d opened with a level-par 71 in Mexico City, where former Open champion Louis Oostuizen led by a shot following his 64.

“Incredible how 62 seconds when you have 50 to hit the shot cost you a bad time and then people taking two minutes over a shot are ok.”

The four-time European Tour winner wasn’t hit with a penalty as a first bad time only constitute­s a warning. A second bad time in the same round would incur a shot penalty and two bad times in a season results in a monetary fine.

“No reason to appeal the bad time. The rules are clear and I took too long,” added Molinari. “The problems is: players dramatical­ly changing their routine when the referee is timing them (I clearly didn’t as I don’t feel I need to). Let’s time players with no warning and see what happens.

“I know I took too long. This has happened twice in 14 years. I have been on the clock a lot of times in between these bad times. But I have never seen a slow player take a bad time.”

In recent weeks, JB Holmes, Patrick Cantlay and Kevin Na have all escaped scot free despite blatant examples of slow play and Molinari’s coach, Denis Pugh, is accusing the PGA Tour of picking on foreign players.

“Fair to say it (is) never going to be an American player,” claimed the Englishman before saying of notoriousl­y slow Australian Jason Day: “Watch out, your time will come.” He added: “As you were Na, Cantlay, Holmes, [Webb] Simpson, [Ben] Crane etc etc, you are all American ok.”

Molinari’s moan comes hot on the heels of Lawrie lambasting both Englishman Aaron Rai and Max Kieffer of Germany after being paired with them in Oman and Qatar in recent events. “Getting pretty fed up playing with guys who cheat the system by playing as slow as they want until referee

“Today I got the second bad time of my career 13 years after the first one. Incredible how 62 seconds when you have 50 to hit the shot cost you a bad time and then people taking two minutes over a shot are ok”

 ??  ?? Francesco Molinari plays a shot on the fourth in the first round of the Wgc-mexico Championsh­ip.
Francesco Molinari plays a shot on the fourth in the first round of the Wgc-mexico Championsh­ip.

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