Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Reed’s caddie out after confrontat­ion with fan

-

MELBOURNE, Australia — The caddie for Patrick Reed will not be on the bag for the final session of the Presidents Cup after shoving a spectator who he felt was encroachin­g too close to Reed while cursing him.

The tour announced the decision after Saturday’s dual session, which ended with the Internatio­nal team holding a 108 lead. Reed said in a statement he respected the decision and that everyone was focused on winning.

Kessler Karain, the brotherinl­aw of Reed, says he heard heckling for three days at Royal Melbourne, some had taken it too far and he’d had enough.

Reed was a singular target of the American team this year because of a rules violation last week in the Bahamas. He twice removed a clump of sand from behind his ball in a waste area at the Hero World Challenge. When he was shown the incident on video, Reed accepted the twoshot penalty.

Reed failed to make a birdie in fourballs Saturday morning as he and Webb Simpson lost for the third straight time.

“Riding on the cart, guy was about 3 feet from Patrick and said, ‘You (expletive) suck.’ I got off the cart and shoved him, said a couple things, probably a few expletives,” Karrain said in a statement to “Fore Play,” a podcast operated by Barstool Sports.

Karrain said security arrived and he left in the cart.

“I don’t think there’s one caddie I know that could blame me,” Karrain said.

“Unless his bones break like Mr. Glass, the most harm done was a little spilled beer, which I’m more than happy to reimburse him for.”

Among the possibilit­ies to replace him as Reed’s caddie is Kevin Kirk, his swing coach.

U.S. captain Tiger Woods said the situation involving Reed, one of his four picks, was not a distractio­n.

“We came here as a team. We rallied around our teammate and we’re excited about tomorrow,“Woods said.

He placed Reed in the No. 3 spot in the lineup, after Els had gone first and put C.T. Pan in that spot. That avoided the chance of Reed facing one of the three Australian­s on the team.

Reed didn’t help his cause Friday when he made a birdie putt, cupped his ear and then pretended to use his putter as a shovel. He enjoys mixing it up with the gallery in these team competitio­ns, but the rules violation in the Bahamas was blatant on the video and sensitive to players who hold the rules in high regard. Reed claimed his club was some 8 inches behind the ball. Video did not indicate that.

Els said he felt bad for the caddie and the fan, and he made a point of saying the gallery was not nearly as bad as what the Internatio­nal team faced two years ago in New Jersey.

“The caddie must have been very hot, obviously fed up with what he heard, probably,” Els said. “I feel for the fan. He came to watch golf, and that’s probably the last thing he thought was going to happen. So I feel for both of them.”

Reed created the wrong kind of memories at the Ryder Cup last year when he did an interview with The New York Times right after the U.S. loss, criticizin­g Jim Furyk for sitting him out two matches and Jordan Spieth ending their partnershi­p.

 ?? Andy Brownbill / Associated Press ?? Patrick Reed and his caddie, Kessler Karain, left, play a practice round for the President’s Cup in Melbourne. Karain, the brotherinl­aw of Reed, will not be on the bag for the final session of the President’s Cup after shoving a spectator on Saturday.
Andy Brownbill / Associated Press Patrick Reed and his caddie, Kessler Karain, left, play a practice round for the President’s Cup in Melbourne. Karain, the brotherinl­aw of Reed, will not be on the bag for the final session of the President’s Cup after shoving a spectator on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States