#tiger not DQ'ed from the Masters; but assessed a 2-stroke penalty, score now -1.
— Tony Fratto (@TonyFratto) April 13, 2013
RT @AP: AP PHOTOS: The drop that got Tiger Woods in trouble at the Masters: http://t.co/0mZ7kTCvRX http://t.co/AUpgpzF2WT
— Jim Roberts (@nycjim) April 13, 2013
The golfing world has been rocked by another Tiger Woods cheating scandal. After reviewing his drop on the 15th hole yesterday, the Masters tournament decided not to disqualify him.
Tiger's 3rd shot on 15 Fri. hit the flag, then results in one of most costly of his career: 1 stroke for going in water, 2 strokes next day.
— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) April 13, 2013
What! Tiger allowed to stay in the Masters! thats not right at a pro level http://t.co/tikNit6X8g …
— Vijay Sappani 2.0 (@VJsapps) April 13, 2013
Masters officials don't DQ Tiger Woods for illegal ball drop. Give him a 2-stroke penalty instead. Bandwagon bettors regain consciousness.
— WSJ Sports (@WSJSports) April 13, 2013
https://twitter.com/ajBelet55114/status/323072028963913729
Woods? Skirting the rules? Showing bad character? And getting away with it? Put on your shocked faces!
So tiger cheated…. Again. Been cheating his entire career to get where he is. It's all over now.
— Jake Pfeil (@WJPfeil) April 13, 2013
Tiger Woods cheated? I'm not shocked. He is used to having women handle his balls. No wonder he screwed it up.
— *Baseball Chickie!* (@baseballchickie) April 13, 2013
Elin can now feel a little better knowing that she isn't the only thing Tiger cheated on #themasters
— Mark Crowley (@NoReMarksNeeded) April 13, 2013
https://twitter.com/c__miller/status/323062062622334976
The Masters tournament is a business, of course. And it seems many were more worried about lost viewership than lost ethics.
I triple dog dare the @The_Masters to disqualify @TigerWoods. Have fun with your weekend ratings, CBS! #teameldrick
— Spence ? (@spencerhawes00) April 13, 2013
POLL RESULTS (600+ VOTES) If Tiger gets DQ'd, 54% say they WON'T WATCH the Masters this weekend http://t.co/6OwS1VLhOV
— Darren Rovell (@darrenrovell) April 13, 2013
If Tiger is DQ'd my weekend involves a whole lot less television. I'll pay attention but I won't really watch.
— christine golic (@NDmom) April 13, 2013
If this happens, the 2013 Masters becomes "who cares"
RT @SportsCenter Masters officials reviewing Tiger Woods' drop on 15, could be DQ'd
— Brad Ziegler (@BradZiegler) April 13, 2013
“If Tiger” and “DQ’ed” trended this morning:
Wrong or right ruling? What say you?
https://twitter.com/AWallner93/status/323069772659036160
The best part of this Tiger DQ/no-DQ debate is that sportswriters were prepared to be outraged no matter what the ruling was.
— Andy Bitter (@AndyBitterVT) April 13, 2013
Don't know how Tiger tees it up today. Wrong ruling. Wrong drop. He should be DQ.
— Brooks lee (@Brooksleegolf) April 13, 2013
This is the wrong ruling. There were only 2 choices, no penalty (my view) or DQ. #Masters #tiger
— Lee_Foster (@Lee_Foster) April 13, 2013
Whelp, on with the show!
No disqualification for Tiger Woods but a two-shot penalty. Common sense rules the day. Now I can watch Masters between NFL Draft calls.
— Chris Mortensen (@mortreport) April 13, 2013
So tiger gets a two stroke penalty. Ok we can watch him play today. Back to your regularly scheduled Saturday.
— BrentDanStuartMarcel (@ActionSportsJax) April 13, 2013
Everybody okay with calling this "The Ratings Ruling?" Without Tiger, ratings plummet. Now it becomes must-watch TV.
— Shane Bacon (@shanebacon) April 13, 2013
Update:
Will Tiger DQ himself?
If Tiger disqualifies himself now after this ruling, he'd be hailed a hero. It won't happen.
— Don Van Natta Jr. (@DVNJr) April 13, 2013
"Tiger should really sit down and think about this and what mark it will leave on his legacy." — @NickFaldo006
— David Dusek (@Golfweek_Dusek) April 13, 2013
The @GolfChannel commentators are trying to shame Tiger into disqualifying himself. Saying it's the right thing to do. Good luck with that.
— Don Van Natta Jr. (@DVNJr) April 13, 2013
@TwitchyTeam The committee is completely wrong. Tiger will man up and DQ himself. His knows the importance of this to his legacy & the sport
— Mr SCOTT (@AlanScott61) April 13, 2013
https://twitter.com/PattiThomson/status/323077701453885440
Heh:
"Actually, it's more of a guideline than a rule." — Bill Murray as Dr. Peter Venkman in "Ghostbusters" #masters
— Don Van Natta Jr. (@DVNJr) April 13, 2013
Update:
‘I didn’t know’: Tiger Woods takes to Twitter to speak out on rule violation and penalty
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