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The Week: Rumors Ruin A Great Year

Davis Love III's best season on the course has been his worst off it

By Gary Van Sickle


After his fourth victory of 2003, Love defended his wife. William R. Sallaz
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ILLUSTRATED: Golf PlusDavis Love III, at 39, is enjoying the best season of his 18-year career, with four wins by mid-August and one shot remaining to win a major -- this week's PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club, in Rochester, N.Y. Love's latest W, at the International, was his 18th on Tour and his most dominating. He led wire-to-wire at Castle Pines, and his 12-point margin of victory over runners-up Retief Goosen and Vijay Singh is the largest in the event's history.

    "Davis hammered everybody," said Mike Hulbert, a part-time Tour player who worked the tournament as an announcer for the USA Network. "I felt it was over after one round -- one round! -- when Davis scored 19 points on Thursday in windy conditions. Then he comes right back the next day and makes three eagles in 10 holes."

    The win vaulted Love to the top of the Tour's 2003 money list with $5.1 million, gave him $25.1 million in career earnings (only Tiger Woods, with $37.9 million, has made more) and made him, after Jim Furyk and Mike Weir, the next leading contender for the player of the year award. Additionally, Love is now in position to have the kind of dominant season that only Woods (with eight, nine, five and five wins, respectively, since 1999) and Nick Price (six in '94) have had in the last two decades. Love isn't riding a hot streak. He's been at a consistently high level all year, thanks to drives that now go long and straight.

    Love's best year has also been his most troubled, however. During his postround interview with CBS on Sunday, Love, his voice choking with emotion, stared into the TV camera and dedicated the win to his wife, Robin. "Things are going to get better for you and me, and this is going to pass," Love said. "I love you."

    There were many reasons for Love's emotional outburst. In May his brother-in-law and business manager, Jeffrey Knight, committed suicide after learning that an FBI investigation had determined that he had embezzled about $1 million from Love. More recently Love has had to cope with scurrilous rumors about his wife.

    "It's been tough to have this in the middle of my best year," Love said at his press conference on Sunday evening. "To have these crazy, vicious things said about her that are untrue -- on top of the death of her brother -- is not fair. She's been very strong and has had to pick up the pieces for her family and for our businesses so I could keep going. I wanted to dedicate the win to her because if I didn't know everything was fine at home, I couldn't come out and play this well. I've had friends say, 'You're not going to believe what they're saying about you.'"

    A couple of hours later Love addressed the malevolent gossip more specifically. "There were rumors about Robin's infidelity, our marriage breaking up, her being arrested for indecent exposure on a beach, using drugs," Love told SI. "You can pretty much make up anything you want, because I've heard about every rumor imaginable. This same thing happened when I was playing well in 1992. I had a chance to talk about it on national television, so I couldn't pass it up. I had had enough."

    The air needed to be cleared, Love said, so he could focus on the PGA. He's had enough of rumors, but the new favorite to win the PGA -- and the player of the year award that would come with it -- hasn't had enough of winning. Not even close.

    O.B.: The Lessons of History

  • In the September issue of Golf Magazine, Seve Ballesteros zings the European tour officials and players who first disqualified him from May's Italian Open and then fined him £5,000 for refusing to accept a slow-play penalty. "It is very sad. I was treated with disrespect," Ballesteros tells Golf's Peter Kessler. "It was hard to sleep, and I cried because the players' committee judged me without regard for the big picture and my contributions to the European tour."

  • Matt Kuchar, wallowing at 162nd on the Tour's money list, recently teed it up at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta with Carlton Forrester, his best friend and former teammate at Georgia Tech. Kuchar shot an even-par 72, but lost $50 when Forrester, an investment advisor at Credit Suisse First Boston, shot a course-record 63. "I'll use the money to buy Matt a present for his wedding in October," says Forrester, who is scheduled to play in next week's U.S. Amateur at Oakmont Country Club outside Pittsburgh.

  • In preparation for the Amateur and the 2007 U.S. Open, 1,000 mature pine and oak trees have been removed from Oakmont, and the course has been lengthened by 300 yards, to a beastly 7,229.

  • After three-putting his final hole on Saturday at the Nationwide tour's Omaha Classic, Bo Van Pelt learned that his eight-month-old son, Tyler, had a 104° temperature and needed to be rushed to a hospital. On Sunday, Tyler's fever having been brought under control, Van Pelt made two eagles and shot a 10-under 62 to get his first Nationwide win and celebrate his fourth wedding anniversary in style.

    Issue date: August 18, 2003

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