'Embarrassed' Karrie Webb blasts Golf Hall of Fame over Laura Davies induction ... - SB Nation
The World Golf Hall of Fame showed disrespect for new member Laura Davies by scheduling her induction ceremony so soon after the U.S. Womenâs Open finale and not arranging transport for the 4-time major champion.
British Open week kicked off Monday evening with a star-studded World Golf Hall of Fame induction ceremony at which legends of the game gathered to honor four new members of the august body.
Thing is, due to poor planning that seemed to ignore travel issues facing the one woman in the HOF class of 2015, Dame Laura Davies missed her own investiture. Renowned golf writer Ron Sirak termed it a "snub" of one of golfâs global luminaries, who played at last weekâs U.S. Womenâs Open outside Philadelphia and knew â" as did the organizers of Mondayâs affair â" that getting to Scotland in time would be tight even if she encountered no mechanical difficulties.
Unfortunately, such problems did arise for Davies, who finished T47 after making the cut at Lancaster Country Club. She was at the Philadelphia airport in time for her 10 p.m. red-eye from Philadelphia to Scotland Sunday night but the flight was delayed four hours, according to Doug Ferguson.
When the ceremony went off as planned, at 6 p.m. in Scotland, without Davies, her peers voiced their anger.
"They knew the risk and should have sent a private plane," four-time major winner and 2013 U.S. Solheim Cup captain Meg Mallon told Golfweek. "And put all her mates on, too!"
Several of Daviesâ LPGA Tour compatriots were outraged about the royal screw-up that had many women shaking their heads over yet another indignity that they believe would not have befallen a male inductee in a similar situation.
"That's just not right," Webb told Sirak about organizers scheduling the event the day after a womenâs major championship. "This mean so much to Laura and they don't even care if she can make it. They've taped an acceptance speech from her in case she's not there."
Webb was particularly upset about the situation, which could have been avoided by more careful and respectful planning or by some millionaire chartering a plane for Davies like the one that whisked Jordan Spieth from the John Deere Classic in Moline, Ill., to St. Andrews in time for a Monday practice round.
It appeared as if the latter had occurred when word spread across Twitter Monday morning that Arnold Palmer had sent his private plane to fetch Dame Laura.
Alas, the rumor turned out to be just that. So Daviesâ many friends and family members attending the induction had to settle for a pre-recorded video message from the winner of four major titles and 65 LPGA and Ladies European Tour contests.
This was the first time an induction ceremony occurred outside the U.S., and the timing â" apparently with little or no thought given to an inductee competing a day before and 4,000 miles away â" seemed insensitive, at best, to Webb.
"U can quote me if u want," she said in a direct message on Twitter to Sirak after Davies' flight was grounded. "I've had enough of discrimination in my sport. And supposedly my world golf HOF!"
Davies eventually landed in Edinburgh but had to scramble to pull together appropriate attire for the post-induction reception when her luggage went missing, said Ferguson.
''I was quite upset,'' Davies told him. ''At the end, it was getting quite distressing.â'
Davies finally made it to St. Andrews for the end of the reception, but that doesnât really get the WGHoF officials off the hook.
"Lauraâs absence from the Hall of Fame induction ceremony is unfortunate. Laura is a competitor and we expected her to play well into the weekend at the U.S. Womenâs Open, which she did," the HoF said in a statement. "As soon as her last putt dropped Sunday, the World Golf Hall of Fame and others onsite made every effort to get Laura to St. Andrews. Unfortunately mechanical issues with her plane and other international travel logistics made it impossible for her to arrive on time."
Mallon, for one, was not mollified.
Other members of Daviesâ HoF class were major champions Mark OâMeara and David Graham and architect A.W. Tillinghast.
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