Check your Mail!

CNN/SI Home PGA Championship Home Other Golf News Leaderboard Player Profiles Almanac Hole-by-Hole Photo Gallery

Try GolfPlus!


 
1999 PGA Championship

'Pay-for-play is not an issue'

Player charities will receive revenue from Ryder Cup

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Saturday August 14, 1999 04:51 PM

  Jim Awtrey Jim Awtrey attributed Ben Crenshaw's outburst to the Ryder Cup captain's competitive nature. AP

MEDINAH, Ill. (AP) -- The PGA of America should have a plan in place by year's end to distribute Ryder Cup revenues to charities of the players' choice, chief executive officer Jim Awtrey said Saturday.

The issue cast a shadow over the PGA Championship this week, causing a rift between U.S. captain Ben Crenshaw and team members like Tiger Woods and David Duval, who believe players should be able to designate a charity to receive some of the money.

After a Tuesday meeting to clear the air, Crenshaw lashed out the next day, saying he was disappointed at the comments of some players who favored compensation. Those players were later identified as Duval, Woods, Mark O'Meara and Phil Mickelson.

"The captain is competitive and the team is competitive," Awtrey said in a television interview with CBS Sports. "Pay-for-play is not an issue."

But, he said that distributing the money to charities is.

Awtrey said the PGA will "form a plan by the end of the year to distribute money to the players' charities."

Awtrey did not say what that plan might entail or whether it would be retroactive to this year's matches, in which the PGA of America is expected to turn a net profit of about $17 million from gross revenues estimated at $63 million.

The PGA Tour set a precedent in the Presidents Cup when $100,000 was given to a charity of the players' choice.

"I firmly believe we'll probably get something for charity, and I think that's great," Fred Couples said earlier in the week. "We'll all deserve it, and it will be a moot subject."

Crenshaw later apologized for his outburst, but not for the way he feels about the Ryder Cup.

"I'm from a different generation where the Ryder Cup means a lot to us," Crenshaw said. "I'm upset people aren't jumping over the moon about it."

This year's Ryder Cub is Sept. 24-26 at The Country Club in Brookline, Mass.


 
Related information
Stories
Ryder Cup uproar grabs the headines from major
Crenshaw upset over pay-for-play issue
No pay, no boycott, no problem for Ryder Cup
Duval goes from mystery man to lightning rod
Multimedia
Click here for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day

Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call your cable operator or DirecTV.

Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



To the top

Copyright © 1999 CNN/SI. A Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.