I don't think the Michelle Wie thing was video policing.
Wasn't it reporter (Michael Bamberger) policing?
According to the story on ESPN they reviewed the video the next day to make the final determination. If there was no video of her taking the drop then wouldn't they have to take her word for it, or that of a rules official alongside her?
Michelle Wie, 2005 Samsung World Championship
The situation: In her first pro tournament, Wie took a penalty drop from an unplayable lie in the third round. One day later, a reporter revealed to officials that he believed the drop was illegal because it placed her closer to the hole.
The penalty: After reviewing tape, officials found that Wie had indeed taken an illegal drop.
The result: As the round was already complete and Wie had signed her scorecard, she was disqualified for taking an incorrect score.
Been a long time, been a long time, been a long, lonely lonely lonely lonely lonely time...
but my recollection is the official walked out with Bamberger and Bamberger showed him the spot and divot. Still bugs me - not the ruling, but the fact that Bamberger waited. If you're gonna wait until a player could get DQ'd, just shut up. Speak early or not at all.
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Regarding selective enforcement, I call BS. It's not selective enforcement - they enforce it each time they can - it's selective reproduction of the facts. And guess what? All rules incidents are selective in this manner. If no one sees it, other than the player, it goes by; does it make more sense to ignore evidence that is present?