I am curious - of the people that have a big issue with the fact that Michelle Wie was DQd...how many of you have played serious competitive golf? I don't mean the club championship, high school golf team, interclub Ryder-cup style matches, or local junior circuits, I mean AJGA, College golf, or major amateur or professional competitions?
My suspicion is that anyone who has a lot of experience in true competitive tournament golf is more likely to have the position of "How hard is it to know the rule and follow it?" sort of like MargaretC has noted with her kids.
I confess that the reason I am so much in that camp is my experience in tournament golf (admittedly 4 years of college and a few major regional junior amateur qualifiers golf counts, but it's thinner than many others on this site) and wonder how many have been in a similar position to this (where rules are given and the penalty for disobedience is death) yet still think an exception should be made by the LPGA (for MW or for any other player)
Ryan, I've played in a State Amateur after medalling at my qualifying site. I've played in local events a lot. Once I was in the lead group of one and had TV cameras following to get footage for the evening news. Is that significant enough? I don't think it matters. You've missed the point of my comments, which have been echoed by others. It doesn't matter what level golf someone played.
The rule is that you need to sign your card and return it, and once you do that it is final. An LPGA addendum is that you need to do this within a box in front of the scorers table. If I'm following all this, sometimes there is a line, sometimes there is an imaginary one.
The hard part, and it obviously is hard or she wouldn't have had this problem, is that it really is different all the time. In the last few years Wie has played in USGA qualifiers, the men's APL, the Women's Open, several LET events, some LPGA things, the PGA Tour, European Tour, Nationwide Tour, and on and on and on.
If the LPGA wanted to make it easy on non-members (which I believe Wie is), they'd set up an easy policy. They don't, so they don't.
Ever see the Jamie Kennedy Experiment episode where the started the gameshow but didn't explain the rules to the mark? That was funny.
This isn't.